However, the Technical Committee, which submitted its report in November 1938, declared that the Bill's proposal was not practical. The British government agreed and called for a round table conference held in London in February and March 1939. But it was a failed conference, just as the two separate conferences with the Arabs and the Jews were one after the other. The conference included Arab representatives from all Arab countries, such as recognizing that Palestine was of importance to all Arabs. The Arab revolution began to gradually fade in the first months of 1939. Following the Munich crisis of 1938 and the imminent threat of war, Britain was able to send more troops. The long and unsuccessful conflict has left the Arabs of Palestine exhausted and humiliated. The British government was primarily concerned with the approach of the World War, which seemed to be the time. The priority was to at least provide negative support to the Arabs, who constituted the vast majority of the population in the strategically important Middle East region (including Palestine, where they still accounted for about 70 percent of the population). It was assumed that the Jews would inevitably be alongside Britain in any war against