THE REOCCUPATION OF NORTHERN AFRICA 343
gressive, and incompetent. During the administration of
Marshal Redjet Pasha, Minister of War under the Young
Turk régime from 1898 to 1908, some progress was made.
But, with the exception of sanitary reforms in the sea-
ports and improvements in the methods of taxation, his
efforts were mainly directed to the reorganization of the
military forces. Being suspicious of the growing interests
of Italy in Tripoli, he increased the Turkish garrison to some
20,000 men, constructed forts at Ghadames, Ghat, and
Murzuk, and attempted to raise some 12,000 native troops
by compulsory military service. But in spite of all these
efforts, the Turkish military contingent never passed be-
yond the stage of service represented by the protection of
caravans and the collection of tribute. This policy was
continued by Ibrahim Pasha, who ruled the country two
years from the middle of 1910, and who substituted enlist-
ment by lot for compulsory military service. In addition,
he united the various native elements and rallied them to
his support by a firm administration and the organization
of a system of public relief during the famine of the year
1911.
Ever since the occupation of Egypt by England, and that
of Tunis by France in 1881, Italy had kept an anxious eye
upon Tripoli. While other powers were marking out vast
colonial empires for themselves in Africa, she had to content
herself with the two insignificant and barren tracts of
Eritrea and Somaliland. At length nothing remained un-
occupied, outside of Abyssinia and Liberia, whose in-
tegrity is guaranteed by the powers, except Morocco and
Tripoli; while the events of 1910-11 indicated clearly that
Morocco would soon pass under the direct control of France.
As a Mediterranean and a naval power, it is a matter of
considerable economic importance and genuine national
pride that Italy should share in the partition of the African