THE PENJDEH INCIDENT—BROWNE’S APPOINTMENT AS Q.H.G. IN
INDIA—HIS VIEWS ON THE POSITION OF AFFAIRS.
THE urgency of the work described in the two preceding
chapters has been strongly and repeatedly expressed, but it may be useful to
state more explicitly the causes of the anxiety. They were twofold: first,
the actually threatening movements and the false and treacherous statements
of the Russians in the neighbourhood of Merv; and second, the weak attitude
of Lord Granville and the British Government The more recent measures and
the position of the Russians in Turkestan must be first described. Hitherto
they had already been present in some force on the Tejend oasis. But now
their engineer, Lessar, had been reconnoitring ahead, to examine into the
alleged difficulty or obstacle in the farther progress of the Russians, said
to lie in an extensive rocky range, an alleged “ Parapomisus." He had found
that this was a myth and that there was no physical obstacle of any gravity
existing to the onward move of the Russian force. So now the Russians took
possession of Merv and followed up the step by reconnaissances farther
ahead.
All this was in clear violation of the existing agreement and
understanding between Russia and England, which in three successive stages
had definitely drawn the limit of the Russian advance at a line from Khoja
Saleh to Sarakhs, and had affirmed the deserts beyond it to be Turkoman
territory, and outside their own zone. But now comes in the Russian practice
of a Government composed of apparently disconnected and independent, but at
the same time thoroughly autocratic, sections of administration or
authority. The diplomats said one thing and used their own maps, the
commanders in the front had theirs—quite different—while the Russian staff
at headquarters had still another set, which, in spite of M. de Giers’
statements to Lord Granville, laid down the boundary of the zone far south
of Sarakhs, on the banks of the Murghab, where they were able to begin
tampering with the Salik Turkomans of Penjdeh. All this aggressive action
led, as usual, to Lord Granville giving up point after point, and then in
April, 1884, when Browne was at the end of his first half-year’s experience
of the work of the Hurnai, arranging for a formal meeting at the disputed
site, to settle the matter, in the following October.
General Lumsden, with a suitable escort and staff, was to be
in charge of the English party for the work of delimitation, and the point
or area from which most anxiety was felt was said to be between the rivers
Hurirud and Murghab. But the Russians pressed for the first steps being at
Khoja Saleh; and though Lumsden and his party and the Afghan representatives
were all ready by the appointed time, the Russian local authorities, General
Zelenoi, Dondou-koff, and Korsakoff, put off the matter time after time, on
the score of illness and other pretexts, so as to postpone it till after the
winter of 1884-5. The object of this was revealed in due course. It was in
order to give time for the arrival in the immediate neighbourhood of large
reinforcements, so as to bring superior military strength to bear on the
question of the position of the boundary that was to be laid down; and the
first sign of this definite intention was shown in the seizure of the
position of Pul-i-Khatun, and the advance to Penjdeh, which was Afghan
territory. A glance at the map will show how this position stands in
relation to Sarakhs, the avowed limit of the Russian advance.
Then during all January, 1885, the Russian, the Afghan, and
the British detachments continued to occupy the positions they were holding
at the end of 1884 preparatory to the start of the demarcation of the
Russo-Afghan boundary, for which they had been gathered. But in February a
party of Cossacks of the Russian force, eluding the Afghan detachments,
crossed the prescribed boundary, advanced three miles beyond it, and held
the point thus attained. Then additional Cossack detachments occupied some
other neighbouring posts in advance, and were followed on March 16th by a
body of Russians. In spite of these glaring insults and breaches of
agreement, Mr. Gladstone accepted the position; the natural result being
further treacherous movements of the Russians, leading, on March 30th, to
the conflict at Penjdeh between the Russians and the Afghans, the Russians
being under the command of General Komaroff.
This outrage exceeded the limits of even Mr. Gladstone’s
complaisance; the question was acknowledged to be one not of debatable
frontiers, but of national honour, and the declaration of war seemed
imminent. The Czar declined to allow any investigation into Komarof's
conduct, but proposed the arbitration of a friendly sovereign. This was
accepted, and the result - was an adjournment, to which the Ameer heartily
agreed. But even after this the Russians on the spot continued aggressive,
and it is quite uncertain how the matter might have ended; but fortunately
the Gladstone Ministry resigned and Lord Salisbury accepted office. His firm
tone and his resolute character entirely changed the attitude of the Czar
and his satellites, and his dictum sufficed. Russia dropped the game of
brag, Lord Salisbury’s ruling and alignment were accepted, and all
differences ended in the demarcation being forthwith begun and carried out,
partly in that year, 1885, and partly afterwards. Hitches, of course,
occurred at various points from time to time, but the Russian attitude was
changed, and all was eventually settled amicably, successive difficulties as
they arose being smoothed away by the good temper and shrewdness of the
Ameer and by his personal presence on the spot.
Meanwhile the Penjdeh incident of March 30th, 1885, by which
time Browne had been hard at work on the Hurnai for eighteen months, had
roused Lord Dufferin, Sir Donald Stewart, and the Indian Government into
prompt and vigorous action. Preparations were made for the movement of large
forces to the assistance of Afghanistan, both by the Khyber and by Candahar.
Lord Roberts was summoned for this purpose from his command at Madras; the
Cutchee Plain and the roads to Quetta and onward were filled with troops and
transport; and both the road and the railroad through the Bolan were pressed
vigorously, and a permanent addition of 20,000 men to the British army in
India was also arranged for.
The attitude of the country was now very different from what
it had been in Lord Lytton’s time. The present movement was in support of a
native power and not an attack on it; and the real sense of the situation,
as felt by the Government, was evinced by their free admission of Russian
officers, then travelling in India, to the army manoeuvres at Delhi early in
1886.
Before this, while Browne had been carrying on his work on
the Humai, and the events that have been described had been taking place,
Lord Ripon had left India, and his successor, Lord Dufferin, supported by
Sir Donald Stewart, had been working in full concert with the Ameer at the
preparations for such immediate and prompt action as might be necessary for
opposition to Russian aggression. They had been joined by Lord Roberts from
the Madras command; and, while a sharp outlook was being kept up at Peshawur,
and the Humai line was being carried on with desperate energy, troops were
being gathered and all the necessary preparations were being made about
Quetta for an advance thence to Candahar. The Quetta railway Engineers were
vigorously at work, and an ordinary road, with the bridges needed for the
numerous crossings and vagaries of the Bolan River, was being rapidly pushed
by the energetic Engineer of Quetta, Colonel Tomkins. And while all this was
going on we were again at loggerheads with that very unsatisfactory monarch,
the King of Burma. Browne’s old commander in Egypt, Sir Herbert Macpherson,
had at first the charge of the operations against him, but died before they
were completed. They were, however, speedily carried out with thorough
success by his successor, Sir Harry Prendergast, RE.
By the time that Browne had finished the Humai most of the
troubles noted were at an end; but the movements of Russia, however much
they had been affected by Lord Salisbury’s vigour, had not only created a
state of matters that required a thorough settlement, but had laid bare, in
an unmistakable manner, the weaknesses of the British India position, and
led to the unavoidable conclusion, even to a Gladstonian Cabinet, of the
need of a thoroughly sound and effective system of material defences and
military preparations, as well as measures of policy, on the north-west
frontiers of India
The last chapter mentioned Browne's appointment to the post
of Quartermaster-General when the end of his furlough was approaching, and
also how greatly he was occupied during the whole time he was in England
with important subjects connected with India. Among those with whom he was
brought into close contact, at one time or another, were Lord Roberts, the
Commander-in-chief in India, and Sir George Chesney, his colleague as
military member of the Council. And both of them were anxious that he should
become Quartermaster-General of the army when General Chapman, who at that
time held the post, vacated it in ordinary course.
Such an appointment would, it may be observed, be an entire
innovation, upsetting all traditional usages under which the post had lain
in what may be styled the closest of close boroughs, and had been obtained
only by rising, as Lord Roberts had himself done, through the several
successive grades of the department till the highest post in it was reached.
But Browne’s career had marked him out as an exceptional character, more
especially during the last few years.
These particular antecedents may be noted. Towards the end of
1887 many inquiries and schemes that had been incubating for some years came
to a dose or to a decisive stage. One of these was the work of the Defence
Committee of India, and another the special question of the defence of the
Quetta frontier towards Candahar. Browne had been closely connected with
both these inquiries; and latterly, while still on the Hurnai, he had been
specially consulted in regard to the problem of the Quetta frontier. The
ground involved was the field in which he had been engaged in Biddulph’s and
Sir Donald Stewart’s advance to Candahar, including as it did the two
passes—the Khojak and the Gwaja—through what was known as the Khwaja Amran
range. Sir G. Chesney and Browne had visited the spot together and seen the
progress of the tunnel that had been started on the Khojak; and now, when
they were both in London, they had tackled the subject again, but from other
points of view. Lord Roberts had already consulted Browne, as above noted,
while he was still at the Hurnai, and had elicited from him the following
opinions.
His theory was clear. He fully recognised the absolute
necessity of fortifying some position which an invading enemy could not
avoid, and which could be made an obstacle of such strength and such
expansion that it could neither be captured nor turned. He agreed with the
positions proposed; but in regard to the general scheme he objected to the
use of huge forts or extensive fortifications, preferring a system of
extemporised works, taking advantage of natural obstacles, defensive lines,
and the interlacing of roads and railroads for facility of communication. So
that an enemy should find on its path extemporised Plevnas, when least
expected.
“Study the country,” he added, "I have your positions
selected, and the moment it is necessary, run up extemporised
entrenchments.” With rocky ground, such as abounded there, he would prepare
galleries in the rocks ready to be turned into embrasures of batteries,
invisible until wanted and brought into use. Nor, he thought, need this be
costly; for his experience of tunnel work gave him a much truer knowledge of
the expense of such preparations than could be possessed by mere theorists.
Forts, he held, placed at other than absolutely obligatory points, had
merely to be avoided or circumvented. They simply told an enemy “what not to
do and where not to go.”
Advantage also was taken at the same time of his intimate
local knowledge to discuss and settle many points respecting routes and
passes, such as the Khojak, the Machai, and others.
Besides the measures for the Khojak, Browne had also very
strong views on the necessity of making Nushki an obligatory point on the
railway to Candahar, if only to enable a concentration of troops and
munitions to be made there in the event of any flank movements from the
elbow of the Helmund, as its great bend is called.
The Nushki position and the ridge of the Khwaja Amran range
would be readily fortified, with posts to command the passes, with good
military roads connecting the several points and the railways, in rear, and
concentrating all the resources of India in support An enemy, on the other
hand, would have to traverse a barren plain, about eighty miles in width,
wholly destitute of forage or the means of supporting a large number of
troops—and in which any large movements of troops could be discerned from
the range at the distance of about twelve miles; the range would be
impregnable.
The importance of Nushki he held to be the paramount feature
of the scheme; as without some such complete measures as those advocated
there would be grave possibilities of an enemy’s approach, when very serious
consequences might ensue. But with such arrangements carried out, as above
proposed, the facilities for further measures, and the fidelity of
Beloochistan, would be ensured. The local proverb is that “ the Helmund
district is the waist of Beloochistan,” and nothing could be imagined to
clasp it more strongly than a railway girdle from Nushki, with an entrenched
camp in advance.
In support of these views Browne said in another document
that, while recognising the importance of the Khojak Tunnel, he held the
Nushki line to be of equal, in fact of paramount necessity. He pointed out
further, in support of this, that the speed of the construction of the
Nushki line could be counted on with much greater confidence than that of
the Khojak Tunnel, and he adduced other reasons in support, which need not
be mentioned here. Hearty unison with the Beloochees and the securing of
their entire confidence was one of the strongest bases of his views. It
could act and be sufficient of itself, but would also tend to facilitate
similar good-will from the Afghans.
The importance and correctness of these views became evident
in later days, when, as a fact, the details of the frontier position beyond
the farther end of the Khojak Tunnel caused much unpleasantness with the
Ameer—an unfortunate matter, as raising doubts on the propriety of our
action. For the Ameer had not been a touchy or over-sensitive ally when the
aspect of our relations with Russia had been very threatening.
In all these discussions and arguments Browne enunciated his
own views, whether they did or did not agree with the report of the Defence
Committee; and it may be reasonably assumed that his views had much to do
with his selection for the post he was now to hold. |