Aubrey Herbert's book is just one from my collection that I had not read for quite some time. Extraordinary accounting of his negotiations alongside T.E. Lawrence during the surrender of the British Division at Kut in 1916.
Herbert had a somewhat unique experience during WWI. First served at Mons where
he was injured and sent out of theater. Following his recovery, he was sent to
the Dardanelles where he served as an interpreter and
de facto intelligence
officer, based on his knowledge of Turkish. Lastly he served in Mesopotamia,
arriving on the eve of the capitulation of Kut, where he (along with Lawrence
and others) served in the negotiating party looking to secure the beleaguered
British division's release.
The book is unique in many aspects. While the
prose leaves something to be desired, his diary covers a lot of the horror(s) of
each front, particularly with his coverage of the Dardanelles campaign, where
his peers, and fellow soldiers were shot all around him, and he lived to tell
the tale.
What I found most interesting, while others such as Lengel did not,
was his albeit brief narrative of his time in Mesopotamia. He served along with
T.E. Lawrence and Col Beach as the negotiators with the Turks over Gen
Townshend's division, holed up at Kut. There is very little that has been
written about the negotiations surrounding the ultimate unconditional surrender
of British forces at Kut, and Herbert has given us a unique perspective.
Some
of the people that Herbert ran across during his brief time in Mesopotamia read
like a who's who of the campaign: aside from all of the senior military officers
of that time, he met Lt Col Leachman and Gertrude Bell, both who played an
important behind the scenes role in the Mesopotamian Campaign. Additionally, he
spent a great deal of time with CAPT Nunn, who headed British Naval forces in
Mesopotamia.
A great quick read; and like many of the other books written at
the time in Mesopotamia, ending quite abruptly.
Would welcome anyone's thoughts on the subject.