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Introduction: The End of Secret Diplomacy In late November 1917, the newly established Soviet government in Petrograd initiated a diplomatic offensive that would shake the foundations of the Entente alliance and fundamentally alter the political trajectory of the Middle East. Following the Bolshevik seizure of power earlier that month, Leon Trotsky, the People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs, authorized the seizure of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ archives. His objective was not to conduct diplomacy, but to dismantle the “bourgeois” system of international relations that had precipitated the Great War. Trotsky ordered the publication of the secret correspondence and treaties…
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Introduction: The 67 Words That Redrew the Map On November 2, 1917, the British Foreign Secretary, Arthur Balfour, dispatched a private letter to Lord Rothschild, a figurehead of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation. The text contained within the letter was brief—comprising a mere 67 words of operative policy—but its implications were instrumental in dismantling the geopolitical framework established by the Sykes-Picot AgreementSykes-Picot Agreement Full Description:The 1916 secret pact between Britain and France that partitioned the Ottoman Empire’s Arab provinces into colonial zones of influence. Exposed by the Bolsheviks in 1917, formalized by the San Remo…

