الحاجة إلى الرعاية الطبية لسلاح الجو الملكي البريطاني في واحة البريمي p.3

FO 371/109938 1954
This is not so simple as it looks. I understand
that Mr. Buckmaster has spoken to Mr. Mixshell about the
threat in the last paragraph of the Air Ministry's
letter that we might have to pay for the extra doctor,
and that Mr. Mikchall thinks it is worth trying to
persuade the Air Ministry to pay, on the grounds that
they paid for Flt.Lt. Duncan and his predecessors. I
agree that it is worth trying but I have no hope that
it will succeed. The first difficulty therefore is
that we shall almost certainly have to put to the
Treasury a case for establishing a doctor at Buraimi
for purely political purposes.

2. The next difficulty is that if, as we hope, we
reach agreement with the Saudis to refer the frontier
dispute to arbitration, we shall be obliged to with draw all British forces from Buraimi and substitute a
police group of fifteen men. It might be difficult for
us to retain a service doctor even though we disguised
him as a civilian or as a policeman. The Saudis would
presumably object to his presence on the grounds that
the dispensation of free medical treatment would amount
to unfair influence being exercised upon the inhabitants
Nor should we be able to make much capital, I fear, out
of a Saudi objection to the presence of our doctor:
they would no doubt say that the Syrian doctor whom they
have established in the oasis was sufficient. Mr.
Burrows in his telegram No. 360 (EA 1081/291) makes no
mention of this difficulty.

wwever, despelé
3. I think that in these difficult circumstances, the
best thing that we can do is to send the draft

/ submitted