The De Bunsen Committee

After the Ottoman Empire entered World War I, Great Britain, France, Russia, and eventually Italy — the Entente Powers — undertook consideration of future options concerning the Empire; whether the goal would be to break it up or maintain it some fashion.

The De Bunsen Committee was the first committee established by the British government to consider its policy toward the Ottoman Empire during and following the war. The committee was established on 8 Apr 1915 by British Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, and was headed by Maurice de Bunsen.

The report produced by the Committee considered four options: (1) partition, (2) zones of interest, (3) status quo, or (4) maintaining the Ottomans with a decentralized system. It recommended the last option as the best solution for meeting the British Empire’s defense needs.

The question of Palestine arose in a number of contexts within the report with one paragraph addressing it in particular.