LORD MAYO’S RULE—RUSSIAN MOVEMENTS—LORD MAYO’S FRONTIER
POLICY—SETTLEMENT OF THE FRONTIER.
IN the last chapter we left Browne closing his work in the
north of the Punjab—and, more than this, closing with it his employment in
the ordinary work in the Engineer Department of India.
Henceforward, as he had now made his mark as a brilliant
practical Engineer and indomitable public servant, and as Lord Mayo had been
starting a widespread policy for Public Works, Browne felt that he was
certain to be employed in higher-class engineering, and wisely resolved to
prepare himself thoroughly for it, and for this object to go on furlough and
study the great undertakings of Europe and America
As a preliminary to Browne’s own proceedings to that end, it
is expedient to describe first what Lord Mayo had begun to do, premising
that, before he made his start, there had been a very scandalous succession
of failures in the work of the Engineer Department of the State.
Lord Mayo’s rule of India was, as regards its earlier part,
contemporaneous with Browne’s charge of the Kangra Valley road, and after
it, with his absence on furlough. During the Kangra Valley episode he was so
fully absorbed with it, and in such a comparatively isolated locality, that
he took less heed than usual of what was going on elsewhere, and during his
holiday he had other matters to think of. Hence Lord Mayo’s sway in India
has been, as yet, but barely alluded to in these pages. But, as a matter of
fact, it overflowed with acts and arrangements of the deepest moment,
greatly affecting and influencing Browne’s subsequent career; and Lord
Mayo’s measures and proceedings, covering so wide a range as they did and
emanating so much from his own personal insight, will be now briefly
described.
His first great measure was to start a wide expansion of
railways and other works needed for the material development of the country,
for the proper treatment of the needs of the British troops, and for the
communications and defensive preparations required on the north-west
frontier and on the neutral ground between India and Afghanistan.
Next, as his assumption of the viceroyalty had been
coincident in time with the settlement of the troubles in Afghanistan and
the assumption of its rule by Shere Ali, henceforth the Ameer, he invited
him to a durbar to be held in his house and in recognition of his
sovereignty. The Viceroy’s regal bearing and the heartiness of his demeanour
won the Ameer’s heart and led to his continuing in the very best relations
with England during all Lord Mayo’s viceroyalty, in spite of the failure of
some of his own aspirations.
It may be here remarked that although Russia had not yet
begun to show her teeth, experts who had been watching her knew that her
movements in our direction had begun. She had, ostensibly, been wholly taken
up with the northern part of Central Asia, but latterly on trying to move
southwards had found the region impracticable, and had consequently now
started on another line of advance towards Afghanistan, from the south of
the Caspian, through the Turkoman country towards Merv and Herat. Also a new
departure, a clear development of its policy and indication of its permanent
aims and intentions had been given by the appointment of Kaufmann to the new
and high position of Governor-General of Turkestan; though some time was
still to elapse before he began to attract serious attention.
Referring back, however, to Shere Ali, it is expedient to
show more fully what he had been doing and what Lord Mayo’s policy and
attitude towards him had been. When Shere Ali had visited India to see the
Viceroy, he came with five distinct objects in view. He desired, in the
first place, a treaty; next, he hoped for a fixed annual subsidy; and
thirdly, for assistance in arms or in men, to be given “not when the British
Government might think fit to grant, but when he might think it needful to
solicit it”; in the fourth place, for a well-defined engagement, “laying the
British Government under an obligation to-support the Afghan Government in
any emergency; and not only that Government generally, but that Government
as vested in himself and his direct descendants, and in no others." Finally
he cherished a desire that he might obtain some constructive act of
recognition by the British Government in favour of his younger son, Abdulla
Jan, whom he brought with him, and whom -he wished to make his heir to the
exclusion of his elder son, Yakoob Khan, who had helped him to win the
throne.
But in not one of these objects was the Ameer successful. The
first four were distinctly negatived; the fifth did not enter into the
discussions. Lord Mayo adhered to a programme which he had deliberately put
in writing before he left Calcutta. Yet, by tact and by conciliatory
firmness, he sent the Ameer away satisfied, and deeply impressed with the
advantage of being on good terms with the British Power.
Lord Mayo’s foreign policy was this: “Surround India,” he
wrote shortly after the Umballa durbar, “with strong, friendly, and
independent states, who will have more interest in keeping well with us than
with any other Power, and we are safe.” “Our influence,” he says in another
letter, “has been considerably strengthened, both in our own territories and
also in the states of Central Asia, by the Umballa meeting; and if we can
only persuade people that our policy really is non-intervention and peace,
that England is at this moment the only non-aggressive Power in Asia, we
should stand on a pinnacle of power that we have never enjoyed before.”
To go farther afield than Afghanistan, Lord Mayo hoped to
open conciliatory relations with Russia by honestly explaining the real
nature of the change which had taken place. He accepted Russia’s splendid
vitality in Central Asia as a fact neither to be shirked nor condemned, but
as one which, by vigilant firmness, might be rendered harmless to ourselves.
But he thought it might be advantageous that an unofficial interchange of
views should take place between the high officers connected with the actual
administration of Asiatic affairs. He did not, apparently, know—at any rate,
he did not accept or act on—Lord Palmerston’s view of Russia’s ways.
He carried out his views, and in strict accordance with
customary Russian diplomacy, appeared to succeed; the result being the
formal acceptance of his theory that the best security for peace in Central
Asia consisted in maintaining the great states on the Indian frontier in a
position of effective independence. Unfortunately it was not an adequate
security of itself. Efforts were also made to prevent the recurrence of
those unauthorised aggressions by Russian frontier officers which had kept
Central Asia in perpetual turmoil. Of these efforts it may be briefly said
that they were successful, but only for the moment—i.e. during the term of
Lord Mayo’s viceroyalty.
It was now agreed that Russia should respect—as
Afghanistan—all the provinces which Shere Ali then held, that the Oxus
should be the boundary line of Shere Ali’s dominions on the north, and that
both England and Russia should do their best to prevent aggressions by the
Asiatic states under their control. Lord Mayo lost no time in securing for
Shere Ali the guarantee of a recognised boundary against the Ameer’s
neighbours in Central Asia. In 1871 the Russians, however, raised grave
objections to Badak-shan being included within the Afghan line. This
question was settled by friendly negotiations in 1872. In January, 1873,
Count Shouvaloff arrived in London to express personally the Emperor’s
sanction to the disputed territories being recognised as part of
Afghanistan. Subsequent delimitations have given precision to the frontier.
But practically it may be said that Afghanistan, as territorially defined by
Lord Mayo in 1869, remained substantially the Afghanistan of the following
twenty years. But what did that mere fact matter to its rulers, if its real
independence and safety were being all along undermined by insidious
aggressions? A formal settlement of that boundary or frontier was made in
1873, the particulars being as follows.
The territories and boundaries which Her Majesty’s Government
considered as fully belonging to the Ameer of Cabul were stated thus:
“(1) Badakshan, with its dependent district of Wak-han, from
the Sir-i-kul (Woods Lake) on the east to the junction of the Kokcha River,
with the Oxus (Panjah) forming the northern boundary of this Afghan province
throughout its entire extent.
“(2) Afghan Turkestan, comprising the districts of Kunduz
Khulm and Balkh, the northern boundary of which would be the line of the
Oxus, from the junction of the Kokcha River to the post of the Khoja-Sale
inclusive, on the high road from Bokhara to Balkh—nothing to be claimed by
the Afghan Ameer on the left bank of the Oxus below Khoja-Sale.
“(3) The internal districts of Akcha, Siripul, Maimana,
Shiberghan, and Andkui, the latter of which would be the extreme Afghan
frontier possession to the north-west, the desert beyond belonging to
independent tribes of Turcomans.
“(4) The Western Afghan frontier between the dependencies of
Herat ana those of the Persian province of Khorassan is well known, and need
not here be defined."
Therefore, on January 31st, 1873, Prince Gortchakoff
definitely announced the Czar’s acceptance of the northern frontier of
Afghanistan, as defined by the British Cabinet, and thereby formally agreed
to a limitary line which neither England nor Russia should cross. As this
final settlement—so arrived at— constitutes one of the most important
agreements between the two Powers concerning Central Asian affairs, and as
it is the keystone of the present political situation, the Russian
Chancellor’s letter is given in extenso. It was addressed to Baron Brunnow,
by whom it was communicated to Earl Granville on February 5th, 1873, and was
as follows:
“We see with satisfaction that the English Cabinet continues
to pursue in those parts the same object as ourselves, tnat of ensuring to
them peace, and, as far as possible, tranquillity.
“The divergence which existed in our views was with regard to
the frontiers assigned to the dominions of Shere Ali.
“The English Cabinet includes within them Badak-shan and
Wakhan, which, according to our views, enjoyed a certain independence.
Considering the difficulty experienced in establishing the facts in all
their details in those distant parts, considering the greater facilities
which the British Government possesses for collecting precise data, and,
above all, considering our wish not to give to this question of detail
greater importance than is due to it, we do not refuse to accept the line of
boundary laid down by England.
“We are the more inclined to this act of courtesy as the
English Government engages to use all her influence with Shere Ali in order
to induce him to maintain a peaceful attitude, as well as to insist on his
giving up all measures of aggression or further conquest. His influence is
indisputable. It is based not only on the material and moral ascendency of
England, but also on the subsidies for which Shere Ali is indebted to her.
Such being the case, we see in this assurance a real guarantee for the
maintenance of peace.”
But, to turn to another direction, the Russian annexation of
Samarkand and the Zarafshan Valley created considerable excitement in
England; consequently Lord Clarendon, the British Minister for Foreign
Affairs, felt that something had to be done to allay the uneasiness of the
British and Indian public. With this object he recommended “ the recognition
of some territory as neutral between the possessions of England and Russia,
which should be the limit of those possessions, and be scrupulously
respected by both the Powers.”
Prince Gortchakoff sent an answer to the proposals of the
British Foreign Minister, in which, after expressing his satisfaction at the
friendly sentiments of the English Government, and after referring with true
diplomatic insincerity to the “profound wisdom” of Lord Lawrence’s policy of
“masterly inactivity," he gave “the positive assurance” that “His Imperial
Majesty looks upon Afghanistan as completely outside the sphere within which
Russia may be called upon to exercise her influence.”
Further, before his death, Lord Mayo had laid the foundation
of another great feature in the consolidation of British rule on the
frontier, a feature which very shortly came closely under Browne’s own ken,
the pacification and settlement of the Beloochistan territory. He laid the
foundations of this politic measure; but, owing to matters which will be
duly noted, it was not effected till later days. But this subject is here
mentioned because, though Browne was not cognisant of these or other
contemporaneous matters during his furlough, he was very soon to be brought
into close contact with them.
These will therefore be more fully dealt with in the special
Beloochistan chapter, but the point that may be here specially referred to
is the fact of the comparative muddle that had already arisen there owing
(1) to the departure of Sir Henry Green, who had ruled that district so long
and successfully after it had lost John Jacob; (2) the squabbles and
interference with the old Bombay authorities, on the part of Captain
Sandeman and the Punjab officials, who, now that the Indus Valley Railway
was in progress, affected to claim a voice in the supervision of the
district, and were at issue with Merewether, Jacob’s successor, on the
Scinde frontier; and (3) the aggressive aims, against the other Belooch
chiefs, of the Khan of Khelat, the primus inter pares of that community. |