Frankly, Lawrence
Frankly, Lawrence 1---669
Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) said about himself in his famous book (The Seven Pillars of Wisdom):
If the Allies were to win, Britain's promises to the Arabs would only be ink on paper. If I were an honorable man and an honest advisor, I would be frank with them about this, disband their armies, and spare them from sacrificing their lives for the sake of people who do not respect them.
...As for honor, I lost it the day I assured the Arabs that Britain would keep their promises
....I am most proud that English blood was not shed in the battles I fought because all the countries subject to us were not worth, in my view, the death of a single Englishman. ...I risked deceiving the Arabs because I believed that their help was necessary for our cheap victory in the East because I thought that winning the war by breaking our promises was better than not winning.

Conclusion: No one should be surprised or denounced by what was said above by this idiot... This deceitful and traitorous fox died to those who sheltered and fed him, but his people, except the English of Mullah Ain, planted dozens of Lawrence’s descendants among the Arabs... and they are still ruling, drawing, stealing and killing the peoples of the region. They shed blood and kill the free and honorable in the name of (democracy) the empire on which the sun never sets.
Lawrence of Arabia died while riding his bike in a traffic accident, and there are those who say that the accident was planned, for fear that his memoirs would be published.


Source: The Book of the Seven Pillars of Wisdom. Author: Thomas Edward Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia).