Persian Gulf States - Historical Setting
Persian Gulf States
THE FIVE COUNTRIES covered in this volume--Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar,
the United Arab Emirates, and Oman--are all Arab states on the Persian
Gulf that share certain characteristics. But they are not the only
countries that border the gulf. Iran, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia share the
coastline as well, and they too shared in the historical development of
the area. Of the five states covered in this volume, Oman has a
particular culture and history that distinguish it from its neighbors.
It also is the state with the shortest coastline along the Persian Gulf.
Most of Oman lies along the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea.
The main element that unites these countries is the nature of their
involvement with people and nations beyond the region. The gulf has been
an important waterway since ancient times, bringing the people who live
on its shores into early contact with other civilizations. In the
ancient world, the gulf peoples established trade connections with
India; in the Middle Ages, they went as far as China; and in the modern
era, they became involved with the European powers that sailed into the
Indian Ocean and around Southeast Asia. In the twentieth century, the
discovery of massive oil deposits in the gulf made the area once again a
crossroads for the modern world.
Other factors also bring these countries together. The people are
mostly Arabs and, with the exception of Oman and Bahrain, are mostly
Sunni Muslims. Because they live in basically tribal societies, family
and clan connections underlie most political and economic activity. The
discovery of oil and the increasing contact with the West has led to
tremendous material and social changes.
Important distinctions exist, however, among the five countries.
Bahrain is an island with historical connections to the Persian Empire.
Kuwait is separated from the others by Saudi Arabia. In Oman high
mountain ranges effectively cut off the country's hinterland from the
rest of the region. Moreover, various tribal loyalties throughout the
region are frequently divisive and are exacerbated by religious
differences that involve the major sects of Islam -- Sunni and Shia
--and the smaller Kharijite sect as well as Muslim legal procedures.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - TRADE IN THE GULF
Persian Gulf States
The Persian Gulf lies between two of the major breadbaskets of the
ancient world, the Tigris-Euphrates area (Mesopotamia, meaning
"between the rivers") in present-day Iraq and the Nile Valley
in Egypt. Mesopotamia, a part of the area known as the Fertile Crescent,
was important not only for food production but also for connecting East
to West.
Rivers provided the water that made agriculture possible.
Agriculture, in turn, enabled people to settle in one area and to
accumulate a food surplus that allowed them to pursue tasks besides
growing food, namely, to create a civilization. They chose leaders, such
as kings and priests; they built monuments; they devised systems of
morality and religion; and they started to trade.
Mesopotamia became the linchpin of ancient international trade. The
fertile soil between the Tigris and the Euphrates produced a arge
surplus of food; however, it did not support forests to produce the
timber necessary to build permanent structures. The region also lacked
the mineral resources to make metals. Accordingly, the early inhabitants
of Mesopotamia were forced to go abroad and trade their food for other
raw materials. They found copper at Magan, an ancient city that lay
somewhere in the contemporary state of Oman and, via Magan, traded with
people in the Indus Valley for lumber and other finished goods.
Trade between Mesopotamia and India was facilitated by the small size
of the Persian Gulf. Water provided the easiest way to transport goods,
and sailors crossed the gulf fairly early, moving out along the coasts
of Persia and India until they reached the mouth of the Indus. Merchants
and sailors became middlemen who used their position to profit from the
movement of goods through the gulf. The people of Magan were both
middlemen and suppliers because the city was a source of copper as well
as a transit point for Indian trade. Over time, other cities developed
that were exclusively entrep�ts, or commercial way stations. One of the
best known of these cities was Dilmun.
Dilmun probably lay on what is now the island state of Bahrain.
Excavations on the island reveal rich burial mounds from the Dilmun
period (ca. 4000 to 2000 B.C.). Scholars believe the monuments on the
island indicate that residents, in addition to farming, earned money
from the East-West trade and that other cities on the gulf coast
survived similarly.
The trading cities on the gulf were closely linked to Mesopotamia,
reflected in the similarities between the archaeological finds in the
two areas. The similar finds suggest that the people of the gulf coast
and the people of the Tigris and Euphrates valley developed increasingly
complex societies and beliefs.
The people of the gulf coast differed from those of the interior of
the Arabian Peninsula. The people in the interior were nomads who had no
time to build cities or monuments and no need to develop elaborate
social structures. When the desert provided insufficient food for their
flocks, the tribes pushed into the date groves or farmlands of the
settled towns. Centers on the gulf coast were subject to such nomadic
incursions, as were the people of Mesopotamia. As a result, after the
second millennium B.C. the gulf began to take on an increasingly Arab
character. Some Arab tribes from the interior left their flocks and took
over the date groves that ringed the region's oases, while others took
up sailing and began to take part in the trade and piracy that were the
region's economic mainstays. These nomadic incursions periodically
changed the ethnic balance and leadership of the gulf coast.
Meanwhile, trade flourished in the second millennium B.C., as
reflected in the wealth of Dilmun. In about 1800 B.C., however, both the
quality and the amount of goods that passed through Dilmun declined, and
many scholars attribute this to a corresponding decline in the
Mesopotamian markets. Concurrently, an alternate trade route arose that
linked India to the Mediterranean Sea via the Arabian Sea, then through
the Gulf of Aden, thence into the Red Sea where the pharaohs had built a
shallow canal that linked the Red Sea to the Nile. This new route gave
access not only to Mediterranean ports but also, through the
Mediterranean ports, to the West as well.
One of the ways that rulers directed goods toward their own country
was to control transit points on the trade routes. Oman was significant
to rulers in Mesopotamia because it provided a source of raw materials
as well as a transshipment point for goods from the East. Although a
valuable prize, Oman's large navy gave it influence over other cities in
the gulf. When Mesopotamia was strong, its rulers sought to take over
Oman. When Oman was strong, its rulers pushed up through the gulf and
into Mesopotamia. One of the basic conflicts in gulf history has been
the struggle of indigenous peoples against outside powers who sought to
control the gulf because of its strategic importance.
Competition between Red Sea and Persian Gulf trade routes was
complicated by the rise of new land routes around 1000 B.C.
Technological advances in the second and first millennia B.C. made land
routes increasingly viable for moving goods. The domestication of the
camel and the development of a saddle enabling the animal to carry large
loads allowed merchants to send goods across Arabia as well. As a
result, inland centers developed at the end of the first millennium B.C.
to service the increasing caravan traffic. These overland trade routes
helped to Arabize the gulf by bringing the nomads of the interior into
closer contact with their relatives on the coast.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - THE GULF IN THE ANCIENT WORLD
Persian Gulf States
Archaeological evidence suggests that Dilmun returned to prosperity
after the Assyrian Empire stabilized the TigrisEuphrates area at the end
of the second millennium B.C. A powerful ruler in Mesopotamia meant a
prosperous gulf, and Ashurbanipal, the Assyrian king who ruled in the
seventh century B.C., was particularly strong. He extended Assyrian
influence as far as Egypt and controlled an empire that stretched from
North Africa to the Persian Gulf. The Egyptians, however, regained
control of their country about a half-century after they lost it.
A series of other conquests of varying lengths followed. In 325 B.C.,
Alexander the Great sent a fleet from India to follow the eastern, or
Persian, coast of the gulf up to the mouth of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers and sent other ships to explore the Arab side of the waterway.
The temporary Greek presence in the area increased Western interest in
the gulf during the next two centuries. Alexander's successors, however,
did not control the area long enough to make the gulf a part of the
Greek world. By about 250 B.C., the Greeks lost all territory east of
Syria to the Parthians, a Persian dynasty in the East. The Parthians
brought the gulf under Persian control and extended their influence as
far as Oman.
The Parthian conquests demarcated the distinction between the Greek
world of the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian Empire in the East. The
Greeks, and the Romans after them, depended on the Red Sea route,
whereas the Parthians depended on the Persian Gulf route. Because they
needed to keep the merchants who plied those routes under their control,
the Parthians established garrisons as far south as Oman.
In the third century A.D., the Sassanians, another Persian dynasty,
succeeded the Parthians and held the area until the rise of Islam four
centuries later. Under Sassanian rule, Persian control over the gulf
reached its height. Oman was no longer a threat, and the Sassanians were
strong enough to establish agricultural colonies and to engage some of
the nomadic tribes in the interior as a border guard to protect their
western flank from the Romans.
This agricultural and military contact gave people in the gulf
greater exposure to Persian culture, as reflected in certain irrigation
techniques still used in Oman. The gulf continued to be a crossroads,
however, and its people learned about Persian beliefs, such as
Zoroastrianism, as well as about Semitic and Mediterranean ideas.
Judaism and Christianity arrived in the gulf from a number of
directions: from Jewish and Christian tribes in the Arabian desert; from
Ethiopian Christians to the south; and from Mesopotamia, where Jewish
and Christian communities flourished under Sassanian rule. Whereas
Zoroastrianism seems to have been confined to Persian colonists,
Christianity and Judaism were adopted by some Arabs. The popularity of
these religions paled, however, when compared with the enthusiasm with
which the Arabs greeted Islam.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF ISLAM
Persian Gulf States
Islam is a system of religious beliefs and an allencompassing way of
life. Muslims believe that God (Allah) revealed to the Prophet Muhammad
the rules governing society and the proper conduct of society's members.
It is incumbent on the individual, therefore, to live in a manner
prescribed by the revealed law and incumbent on the community to build
the perfect human society on earth according to holy injunctions. Islam
recognizes no distinctions between the religious institution and the
state. The distinction between religious and secular law is a recent
development that in part reflects the more pronounced role of the state
in society and Western economic and cultural penetration. The impact of
religion on daily life in Muslim countries is extensive, usually greater
than that found in the West.
The area that constitutes the present-day Persian Gulf states was on
the immediate periphery of the rise of Islam. In A.D. 610, Muhammad--a
merchant of the Hashimite branch of the ruling Quraysh tribe in the
Arabian town of Mecca--began to preach the first of a series of
revelations that Muslims believe was granted him by God, some directly
and some through the angel Gabriel. A fervent monotheist, Muhammad
denounced the polytheism of his fellow Meccans. Because the town's
economy was based in part on a thriving pilgrimage business to the
shrine called the Kaaba and to numerous other pagan religious sites in
the area, his censure earned him the enmity of the town's leaders. In
622 he and a group of followers accepted an invitation to settle in the
town of Yathrib, later known as Medina (the city), because it was the
center of Muhammad's activities. The move, or hijra, known in the West as the hegira, marks the beginning of
the Islamic era and of Islam as a force in history; the Muslim calendar
begins in 622. In Medina, Muhammad continued to preach, and he
eventually defeated his detractors in battle. He consolidated the
temporal and the spiritual leadership in his person before his death in
632. After Muhammad's death, his followers compiled those of his words
regarded as coming directly from God into the Quran, the holy scripture
of Islam. Others of his sayings, recalled by those who had known him,
became the hadith. The precedent of Muhammad's deeds is called the sunna.
Together they form a comprehensive guide to the spiritual, ethical, and
social life of an orthodox Sunni Muslim.
The major duties of Muslims are found in the five pillars of Islam,
which set forth the acts necessary to demonstrate and reinforce the
faith. These are the recitation of the shahada ("There is
no god but God [Allah], and Muhammad is his prophet"), daily prayer
(salat), almsgiving (zakat), fasting (sawm),
and pilgrimage (hajj). The believer is to pray in a prescribed manner
after purification through ritual ablutions each day at dawn, midday,
midafternoon, sunset, and nightfall. Prescribed genuflections and
prostrations accompany the prayers, which the worshiper recites while
facing toward Mecca. Whenever possible, men pray in congregation at the
mosque with an imam, and on Fridays they are required to do so. The Friday
noon prayers provide the occasion for weekly sermons by religious
leaders. Women may also attend public worship at the mosque, where they
are segregated from the men, although most frequently women pray at
home. A special functionary, the muezzin, intones a call to prayer to
the entire community at the appropriate hour.
The ninth month of the Muslim calendar is Ramadan, a period of
obligatory fasting in commemoration of Muhammad's receipt of God's
revelation. Throughout the month, all but the sick and the weak,
pregnant or lactating women, soldiers on duty, travelers on necessary
journeys, and young children are enjoined from eating, drinking,
smoking, or sexual intercourse during the daylight hours. Those adults
excused are obliged to endure an equivalent fast at their earliest
opportunity. A festive meal breaks the daily fast and inaugurates a
night of feasting and celebration. The pious well-to-do usually do
little or no work during this period, and some businesses close for all
or part of the day. Because the months of the lunar year revolve through
the solar year, Ramadan falls earlier in the solar year each successive
year. A considerable test of discipline at any time of the year, a fast
that falls in summer imposes severe hardship on those who must do
physical work.
All Muslims, at least once in their lifetimes and if circumstances
permit, should make the hajj to Mecca to participate in special rites
held there during the twelfth month of the lunar calendar. Muhammad
instituted this requirement, modifying pre-Islamic custom, to emphasize
sites associated with God and Abraham (Ibrahim), founder of monotheism
and father of the Arabs through his son, Ismail.
The lesser pillars of the faith, which all Muslims share, are jihad,
or the permanent struggle for the triumph of the word of God on earth,
and the requirement to do good works and to avoid all evil thoughts,
words, and deeds. In addition, Muslims agree on certain basic principles
of faith based on the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad: there is one
God, who is a unitary divine being in contrast to the trinitarian belief
of Christians; Muhammad, the last of a line of prophets beginning with
Abraham and including Moses and Jesus, was chosen by God to present
God's message to humanity; and there is a general resurrection on the
last, or judgment, day.
During his lifetime, Muhammad held both spiritual and temporal
leadership of the Muslim community. Religious and secular law merged,
and all Muslims have traditionally been subject to the sharia, or
religious law. A comprehensive legal system, the sharia developed
gradually through the early centuries of Islam, primarily through the
accretion of interpretations and precedents set by various judges and
scholars. During the tenth century, legal opinion began to harden into
authoritative rulings, and the figurative bab al ijtihad (gate
of interpretation) closed. Thereafter, rather than encouraging
flexibility, Islamic law emphasized maintenance of the status quo.
After Muhammad's death, the leaders of the Muslim community
consensually chose Abu Bakr, the Prophet's father-in-law and one of his
earliest followers, to succeed him. At that time, some persons favored
Ali ibn Abu Talib, Muhammad's cousin and the husband of his daughter,
Fatima, but Ali and his supporters (the Shiat Ali, or Party of Ali)
eventually recognized the community's choice. The next two caliphs
(successors)--Umar, who succeeded in 634, and Uthman, who took power in
644--enjoyed the recognition of the entire community. When Ali finally
succeeded to the caliphate in 656, Muawiyah, governor of Syria, rebelled
in the name of his murdered kinsman, Uthman. After the ensuing civil
war, Ali moved his capital to Iraq, where he was murdered shortly
thereafter.
Ali's death ended the last of the so-called four orthodox caliphates
and the period in which the entire community of Islam recognized a
single caliph. Muawiyah proclaimed himself caliph from Damascus. The
Shiat Ali refused to recognize him or his line, the Umayyad caliphs, and
withdrew in the great schism of Islam to establish the dissident sect,
known as the Shia, who supported the claims of Ali's line to the
caliphate based on descent from the Prophet. The larger faction, the
Sunnis, adhered to the position that the caliph must be elected, and
over the centuries they have represented themselves as the orthodox
branch.
<>Sunni Islam
<>Shia Islam
<>The Spread of Islam
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - Sunni Islam
Persian Gulf States
Although originally political in nature, the differences between
Sunni and Shia interpretations rapidly took on theological overtones. In
principle, a Sunni approaches God directly: there is no clerical
hierarchy. Some duly appointed religious figures, such as imams,
however, exert considerable social and political power. Imams usually
are men of importance in their communities, but they need not have any
formal training. Committees of socially prominent worshipers usually are
responsible for managing major mosque-owned lands. In most Arab
countries, the administration of waqfs (religious endowments) has come
under the influence of the state. Qadis (judges) and imams are appointed
by the government.
The Muslim year has two religious festivals: Id al Adha, a
sacrificial festival held on the tenth day of Dhu al Hijjah, the
twelfth, or pilgrimage, month; and Id al Fitr, the festival of breaking
the fast, which celebrates the end of Ramadan on the first day of
Shawwal, the tenth month. To Sunnis these are the most important
festivals of the year. Each lasts three or four days, during which time
people put on their best clothes and visit, congratulate, and bestow
gifts on each other. In addition, cemeteries are visited. Id al Fitr is
celebrated more festively because it marks the end of Ramadan.
Celebrations also take place, although less extensively, on the
Prophet's birthday, which falls on the twelfth day of Rabi al Awwal, the
third month.
With regard to legal matters, Sunni Islam has four orthodox schools
that give different weight in legal opinions to prescriptions in the
Quran, to the hadith, to the consensus of legal scholars, to analogy (to
similar situations at the time of the Prophet), and to reason or
opinion. Named for their founders, the earliest Muslim legal schools
were those of Abd Allah Malik ibn Anas (ca. 715-95) and An Numan ibn
Thabit Abu Hanifa (ca. 700-67). The Maliki school was centered in
Medina, and the lawbook of Malik ibn Anas is the earliest surviving
Muslim legal text, containing a systematic consensus of Medina legal
opinions. The Hanafi school in Iraq stressed individual opinion in
making legal decisions. Muhammad ibn Idris ash Shafii (767-820), a
member of the tribe of Quraysh and a distant relative of the Prophet,
studied under Malik ibn Anas in Medina. He followed a somewhat eclectic
legal path, laying down the rules for analogy that were later adopted by
other legal schools. The last of the four major Sunni legal schools,
that of Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Hanbal (780-855), was centered in
Baghdad. The Hanbali school, which became prominent in Arabia as a
result of Wahhabi influence, gave great emphasis to the hadith as a
source of Muslim law but rejected innovations and rationalistic
explanations of the Quran and the traditions.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - Shia Islam
Persian Gulf States
Shia Muslims hold the fundamental beliefs of other Muslims. In addition to these tenets, however, Shia
believe in the imamate, which is the distinctive institution of Shia
Islam. Whereas Sunni Muslims view the caliph as a temporal leader only
and consider an imam to be a prayer leader, Shia Muslims hold a
hereditary view of Muslim leadership. They believe the Prophet Muhammad
designated Ali to be his successor as Imam (when uppercase, Imam refers
to the Shia descendant of the House of Ali), exercising both spiritual
and temporal leadership. Only those who have walayat (spiritual
guidance) are free from error and sin and have been chosen by God
through the Prophet. Each Imam in turn designated his successor--through
twelve Imams--each holding the same powers.
The imamate began with Ali, who is also accepted by Sunni Muslims as
the fourth of the "rightly guided caliphs" to succeed the
Prophet. Shia revere Ali as the First Imam, and his descendants,
beginning with his sons Hasan and Husayn, continue the line of the Imams
until the twelfth. Shia point to the close lifetime association of the
Prophet with Ali. When Ali was six years old, he was invited by the
Prophet to live with him, and Shia believe Ali was the first person to
make the declaration of faith in Islam. Ali also slept in the Prophet's
bed on the night of the hijra, when it was feared that the house would
be attacked by unbelievers and the Prophet stabbed to death. He fought
in all the battles the Prophet did, except one, and the Prophet chose
him to be the husband of one of his favorite daughters, Fatima.
Among Shia, the term imam traditionally has been used only
for Ali and his eleven descendants. None of the twelve Imams, with the
exception of Ali, ever ruled an Islamic government. During their
lifetimes, their followers hoped that they would assume the rulership of
the Islamic community, a rule that was believed to have been wrongfully
usurped. Because Sunni caliphs were cognizant of this hope, Imams
generally were persecuted under the Umayyad and Abbasid dynasties.
Therefore, the Imams tried to be as unobtrusive as possible and to live
as far as was reasonable from the successive capitals of the Islamic
empire.
During the eighth century, Caliph Al Mamun, son and successor to
Harun ar Rashid, was favorably disposed toward the descendants of Ali
and their followers. He invited Imam Reza, the Eighth Imam (765-816), to
come from Medina to his court at Marv (Mary in present-day
Turkmenistan). While Reza was residing at Marv, Al Mamun designated him
as his successor in an apparent effort to avoid conflict among Muslims.
Reza's sister, Fatima, journeyed from Medina to be with her brother but
took ill and died at Qom, in present-day Iran. A major shrine developed
around her tomb, and over the centuries Qom has become a major Shia
pilgrimage site and theological center.
Al Mamun took Reza on his military campaign to retake Baghdad from
political rivals. On this trip, Reza died unexpectedly in Khorasan. Reza
was the only Imam to reside in, or die in, what is now Iran. A major
shrine, and eventually the city of Mashhad, grew up around his tomb,
which is the major pilgrimage center in Iran. Several theological
schools are located in Mashhad, associated with the shrine of the Eighth
Imam.
Reza's sudden death was a shock to his followers, many of whom
believed that Al Mamun, out of jealousy for Reza's increasing
popularity, had the Imam poisoned. Al Mamun's suspected treachery
against Imam Reza and his family tended to reinforce a feeling already
prevalent among his followers that Sunni rulers were untrustworthy.
The Twelfth Imam is believed to have been only five years old when he
became Imam in 874 on the death of his father. Because his followers
feared he might be assassinated, the Twelfth Imam was hidden from public
view and was seen only by a few of his closest deputies. Sunnis claim
that he never existed, or that he died while still a child. Shia believe
that the Twelfth Imam never died, but disappeared in about 939. Since
then, the greater occultation of the Twelfth Imam has been in force,
which will last until God commands the Twelfth Imam to manifest himself
on earth again as the mahdi or messiah. Shia believe that during the
occultation of the Twelfth Imam, he is spiritually present--some believe
that he is materially present as well--and he is besought to reappear in
various invocations and prayers. His name is mentioned in wedding
invitations, and his birthday is one of the most jubilant of all Shia
religious observances.
The Shia doctrine of the imamate was not fully elaborated until the
tenth century. Other dogmas developed still later. A characteristic of
Shia Islam is the continual exposition and reinterpretation of doctrine.
A significant practice of Shia Islam is that of visiting the shrines
of Imams in Iraq and in Iran. In Iraq, these include the tomb of Imam
Ali in An Najaf and that of his son, Imam Husayn, in Karbala, because
both are considered major Shia martyrs. Before the Iran-Iraq War
(1980-88), tens of thousands made the visits each year. Other principal
pilgrimage sites in Iraq are the tombs of the Seventh Imam and the Ninth
Imam at Kazimayn near Baghdad. In Iran, pilgrimage sites include the
tomb of the Eighth Imam in Mashhad and that of his sister in Qom. Such
pilgrimages originated in part from the difficulty and the expense of
making the hajj to Mecca in the early days.
In commemoration of the martyrdom of Husayn, killed near Karbala in
680 during a battle with troops supporting the Umayyad caliph,
processions are held in the Shia towns and villages of southern Iraq on
the tenth day of Muharram (Ashura), the anniversary of his death. Ritual
mourning (taaziya) is performed by groups of five to twenty men
each. Contributions are solicited in the community to pay transportation
for a local group to go to Karbala for taaziya celebrations
forty days after Ashura. There is great rivalry among groups for the
best performance of the taaziya passion plays.
Shia practice differs from Sunni practice concerning divorce and
inheritance in that it is more favorable to women. The reason for this
reputedly is the high esteem in which Fatima, the wife of Ali and the
daughter of the Prophet, was held.
Like Sunni Islam, Shia Islam has developed several sects. The most
important of these is the Twelver, or Ithna-Ashari, sect, which
predominates in the Shia world generally. Not all Shia became Twelvers,
however. In the eighth century, a dispute arose over who should lead the
Shia community after the death of the Sixth Imam, Jaafar ibn Muhammad
(also known as Jaafar as Sadiq). The group that eventually became the
Twelvers followed the teaching of Musa al Kazim; another group followed
the teachings of Musa's brother, Ismail, and were called Ismailis.
Ismailis are also referred to as Seveners because they broke off from
the Shia community over a disagreement concerning the Seventh Imam.
Ismailis do not believe that any of their Imams have disappeared from
the world in order to return later. Rather, they have followed a
continuous line of leaders represented in early 1993 by Karim al Husayni
Agha Khan IV, an active figure in international humanitarian efforts.
The Twelver Shia and the Ismailis also have their own legal schools.
Another group, the Kharijites, arose from events surrounding the
assassination of Uthman, the third caliph, and the transfer of authority
to the fourth caliph, Ali. In the war between Ali and Muawiyah, part of
Ali's army objected to arbitration of the dispute. They left Ali's camp,
causing other Muslims to refer to them as "kharijites" (the
ones who leave). The term Kharijites also became a designation
for Muslims who refused to compromise with those who differed from them.
Their actions caused the Sunni community to consider them assassins.
In the eighth century, some Kharijites began to moderate their
position. Leaders arose who suppressed the fanatical political element
in Kharijite belief and discouraged their followers from taking up arms
against Islam's official leader. Kharijite leaders emphasized instead
the special benefits that Kharijites might receive from living in a
small community that held high standards for personal conduct and
spiritual values. One of these religious leaders, or imams, was Abd
Allah ibn Ibad, whose followers founded communities in parts of Africa
and southern Arabia. Some of Abd Allah's followers, known as Ibadis,
became the leaders of Oman.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - The Spread of Islam
Persian Gulf States
Early Islamic polity was intensely expansionist, fueled both by
fervor for the faith and by economic and social factors. After gaining
control of Arabia and the Persian Gulf region, conquering armies swept
out of the peninsula, spreading Islam. By the end of the eighth century,
Islamic armies had reached far into North Africa and eastward and
northward into Asia.
Traditional accounts of the conversion of tribes in the gulf are
probably more legend than history. Stories about the Bani Abd al Qais
tribe that controlled the eastern coast of Arabia as well as Bahrain
when the tribe converted to Islam indicate that its members were traders
having close contacts with Christian communities in Mesopotamia. Such
contacts may have introduced the tribe to the ideal of one God and so
prepared it to accept the Prophet's message.
The Arabs of Oman also figure prominently among the early converts to
Islam. According to tradition, the Prophet sent one of his military
leaders to Oman to convert not only the Arab inhabitants, some of whom
were Christian, but also the Persian garrison, which was Zoroastrian.
The Arabs accepted Islam, but the Persians did not. It was partly the
zeal of the newly converted Arabs that inspired them to expel the
Persians from Oman.
Although Muhammad had enjoined the Muslim community to convert the
infidel, he had also recognized the special status of the "people
of the book," Jews and Christians, whose scriptures he considered
revelations of God's word and which contributed in some measure to
Islam. By accepting the status of dhimmis (tolerated subject
people), Jews and Christians could live in their own communities,
practice their own religious laws, and be exempt from military service.
However, they were obliged to refrain from proselytizing among Muslims,
to recognize Muslim authority, and to pay additional taxes. In addition,
they were denied certain political rights.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - THE GULF IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Persian Gulf States
In the Islamic period, the prosperity of the gulf continued to be
linked to markets in Mesopotamia. Accordingly, after 750 the gulf
prospered because Baghdad became the seat of the caliph and the main
center of Islamic civilization. Islam brought great prosperity to Iraq
during this period, thus increasing the demand for foreign goods. As a
result, gulf merchants roamed farther and farther afield. By the year
1000, they were traveling regularly to China and beyond, and their
trading efforts were instrumental in spreading Islam, first to India and
then to Indonesia and Malaysia.
The Islam they spread, however, was often sectarian. Eastern Arabia
was a center for both Kharijites and Shia; in the Middle Ages, the
Ismaili Shia faith constituted a particularly powerful force in the
gulf. Ismailis originated in Iraq, but many moved to the gulf in the
ninth century to escape the Sunni authorities. Whereas the imam was
central to the Ismaili tradition, the group also recognized what they
referred to as "missionaries" (dua; sing., dai),
figures who spoke for the imam and played major political roles. One of
these missionaries was Hamdan Qarmat, who sent a group from Iraq to
Bahrain in the ninth century to establish an Ismaili community. From
their base in Bahrain, Qarmat's followers, who became known as
Qarmatians, sent emissaries throughout the Muslim world.
The Qarmatians are known for their attacks on their opponents,
including raids on Baghdad and the sack of Mecca and Medina in 930. For
much of the tenth century, the Ismailis of Bahrain were the most
powerful force in the Persian Gulf and the Middle East. They controlled
the coast of Oman and collected tribute from the caliph in Baghdad as
well as from a rival Ismaili imam in Cairo, whom they did not recognize.
By the eleventh century, Ismaili power had waned. The Qarmatians
succumbed to the same forces that had earlier threatened centers on the
gulf coast--the ambitions of strong leaders in Mesopotamia or Persia and
the incursion of tribes from the interior. In 985 armies of the Buyids,
a Persian dynasty, drove the Ismailis out of Iraq, and in 988 Arab
tribes drove the Ismailis out of Al Ahsa, an oasis they controlled in
eastern Arabia. Thereafter, Ismaili presence in the gulf faded, and in
the twentieth century the sect virtually disappeared.
Ibadis figured less prominently than the Shia in the spread of Islam.
A stable community, the Ibadi sect's large following in Oman has helped
to distinguish Oman from its gulf neighbors. Ibadis originated in Iraq,
but in the early eighth century, when the caliph's representative began
to suppress the Ibadis, many left the area. Their leader at the time,
Jabir ibn Zayd, had come to Iraq from Oman, so he returned there. Jabir
ibn Zayd's presence in Oman strengthened the existing Ibadi communities;
in less than a century, the sect took over the country from the Sunni
garrison that ruled it in the caliph's name. Their leader, Al Julanda
ibn Masud, became the Ibadi imam of Oman.
In the Ibadi tradition, imams are elected by a council of religious
scholars, who select the leader that can best defend the community
militarily and rule it according to religious principles. Whereas Sunnis
and Shia traditionally have focused on a single leader, referred to as
caliph or imam, Ibadis permit regions to have their own imams. For
instance, there have been concurrent Ibadi imams in Iraq, Oman, and
North Africa.
Because of the strong sense of community among Ibadis, which
resembles tribal feelings of community, they have predominated in the
interior of Oman and to a lesser degree along the coast. In 752, for
example, a new line of Sunni caliphs in Baghdad conquered Oman and
killed the Ibadi imam, Al Julanda. Other Ibadi imams arose and
reestablished the tradition in the interior, but extending their rule to
the coastal trading cities met opposition. The inland empires of Persia
and Iraq depended on customs duties from East-West trade, much of which
passed by Oman. Accordingly, the caliph and his successors could not
allow the regional coastal cities out of their control.
As a result, Oman acquired a dual nature. Ibadi leaders usually
controlled the mountainous interior while, for the most part, foreign
powers controlled the coast. People in the coastal cities have often
been foreigners or have had considerable contact with foreigners because
of trade. Coastal Omanis have profited from their involvement with
outsiders, whereas Omanis in the interior have tended to reject the
foreign presence as an intrusion into the small, tightly knit Ibadi
community. Ibadi Islam has thus preserved some of the hostility toward
outsiders that was a hallmark of the early Kharijites.
While the imam concerned himself with the interior, the Omani coast
remained under the control of Persian rulers. The Buyids in the late
tenth century eventually extended their influence down the gulf as far
as Oman. In the 1220s and 1230s, another group, the Zangids--based in
Mosul, Iraq--sent troops to the Omani coast; around 1500 the Safavids,
an Iranian dynasty, pushed into the gulf as well. The Safavids followed
the Twelver Shia tradition and imposed Shia beliefs on those under their
rule. Thus, Twelver communities were established in Bahrain and to a
lesser extent in Kuwait.
Oman's geographic location gave it access not only to the Red Sea
trade but also to ships skirting the coast of Africa. By the end of the
fifteenth century, however, a Persian ruler, the shaykh of Hormuz,
profited most from this trade. The shaykh controlled the Persian port
that lay directly across the gulf from Oman, and he collected customs
duties in the busy Omani ports of Qalhat and Muscat. Ibadi imams
continued to rule in the interior, but until Europeans entered the
region in the sixteenth century, Ibadi rulers were unable to reclaim the
coastal cities from the Iranians.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - THE AGE OF COLONIALISM
Persian Gulf States
During the Middle Ages, Muslim countries of the Middle East
controlled East-West trade. However, control changed in the fifteenth
century. The Portuguese, who were building ships with deep hulls that
remained stable in high seas, were thus able to make longer voyages.
They pushed farther and farther down the west coast of Africa until they
found their way around the southern tip of the continent and made
contact with Muslim cities on the other side. In East Africa, the
Portuguese enlisted Arab navigators there to take them across to India,
where they eventually set themselves up in Calicut on the Malabar Coast
in the southwestern part of the country.
Once in India, the Portuguese used their superior ships to transport
goods around Africa instead of using the Red Sea route, thus eliminating
the middlemen in Egypt. The Portuguese then extended their control to
the local trade that crossed the Arabian Sea, capturing coastal cities
in Oman and Iran and setting up forts and customs houses on both coasts
to collect duty. The Portuguese allowed local rulers to remain in
control but collected tribute from them in exchange for that privilege,
thus increasing Portuguese revenues.
The ruler most affected by the rise of Portuguese power was the
Safavid shah of Iran, Abbas I (1587-1629). During the time the shaykh of
Hormuz possessed effective control over gulf ports, he continued to pay
lip service and tribute to the Safavid shah. When the Portuguese
arrived, they forced the shaykh to pay tribute to them. The shah could
do little because Iran was too weak to challenge the Portuguese. For
that the shah required another European power; he therefore invited the
British and the Dutch to drive the Portuguese out of the gulf, in return
for half the revenues from Iranian ports.
Both countries responded to the shah's offer, but it was the British
who proved the most helpful. In 1622 the British, along with some of the
shah's forces, attacked Hormuz and drove the Portuguese out of their
trading center there. Initially, the Dutch cooperated with the British,
but the two European powers eventually became rivals for access to the
Iranian market. The British won, and by the beginning of the nineteenth
century Britain had become the major power in the gulf.
Struggles between Iranians and Europeans contributed to a power
vacuum along the coast of Oman. The British attacks on the Portuguese
coincided with the rise of the Yarubid line of Ibadi imams in the
interior of Oman. The Yarubid took advantage of Portuguese preoccupation
with naval battles on the Iranian side of the gulf and conquered the
coastal cities of Oman around 1650. The imams moved into the old
Portuguese stronghold of Muscat and so brought the Omani coast and
interior under unified Ibadi control for the first time in almost 1,000
years.
A battle over imamate succession in the early eighteenth century,
however, weakened Yarubid rule. Between the 1730s and the 1750s, the
various parties began to solicit support from outside powers. The
Yarubid family eventually called in an Iranian army, which reestablished
Iranian influence on the Omani coast. But this time the Iranian hold on
Oman was short-lived. In 1742 the Al Said, an Ibadi family from one of
the coastal cities, convinced the local population to help it expel the
Iranians; this put the leader, Ahmad ibn Said Al Said, in control of the
Omani coast. His success sufficiently impressed the Ibadi leaders so
that they made him imam several years later.
The title of imam gave Ahmad ibn Said control over all of Oman, and
under him and his successors the country prospered for more than a
century. The Omanis extended their influence into the interior and into
part of the present-day United Arab Emirates (UAE), consisting of the
states of Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Al Fujayrah, Dubayy, Ras al Khaymah,
Sharjah, and Umm al Qaywayn. They also collected tribute from as far
away as present-day Bahrain and Iraq. The Omanis conquered the Dhofar
region, which is part of present-day Oman but was not historically part
of the region of Oman.
Oman also strengthened its hold on the Muslim cities of East Africa.
These cities had been established by Omani traders in the tenth and
eleventh centuries, but their connection to Oman had grown somewhat
tenuous. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, however, the Al
Said reasserted Omani authority in the area. Said ibn Sultan (1806-65)
encouraged Omanis to settle in Zanzibar, an island off the African coast
that had retained strong connections with Oman and, from Zanzibar, sent
expeditions to take over several cities on the mainland
Although Ahmad ibn Said had succeeded in uniting Oman under an Ibadi
imamate, the religious nature of his family's authority did not last
long. His son, Said ibn Ahmad Al Said, was elected to the imamate after
him, but no other family member won the official approval of the
religious establishment. As a result, the Al Said called themselves sultans,
a secular title having none of the religious associations of imam. They
further distanced themselves from Ibadi traditions by moving their
capital from Ar Rustaq, a traditional Ibadi center in the interior, to
the trading center of Muscat. As a result of the move, the dichotomy
between coast and interior that had traditionally split Oman was
reinstituted.
The relationship between coast and interior was becoming a major
feature within the gulf. In the eighteenth century, tribes from the
interior increasingly began to move and settle into the coastal centers.
Although the economy on the Arab side of the gulf did not match past
prosperity, coastal conditions remained better than those in central
Arabia. Limited agriculture existed, and the gulf waters were the site
of rich oyster beds for harvesting pearls. The area's easy access to
India, a major market for pearls, made the pearling industry
particularly lucrative, and this drew the attention of tribes in the
interior. The tribal migrations that occurred around 1800 put in place
the tribes and clans that in 1993 controlled Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and
the UAE.
The Bani Utub moved from central Arabia into the northern gulf in the
early 1800s, and one of its families, the Al Sabah, established itself
as leaders of present-day Kuwait; another family, the Al Khalifa,
established itself in present-day Bahrain. In the early 1800s, a number
of other tribes were living along the gulf. Thus, Al Sabah and Al
Khalifa control meant that these families ruled loosely over other
tribes. Before taking Bahrain, the Al Khalifa had first established a
settlement across the water on the peninsula that is present-day Qatar.
Although the Al Khalifa were successful in taking Bahrain, they were
unable to hold Qatar. They lost the peninsula to the Al Thani, the
leading family from another tribe that, like the Bani Utub, had recently
moved into the area.
The exact origins of the Al Thani are unknown, but they were already
in Qatar when the Al Khalifa came. The origins of the Bani Yas and the
Qawasim tribes that rule in the present-day UAE are somewhat clearer.
The Bani Yas originated in central Arabia and probably established
themselves on the coast at Abu Dhabi around 1700; they later extended
their influence to Dubayy. Historical evidence indicates that the
Qawasim lived along the gulf during the pre-Islamic period and engaged
in trade, pearling, and piracy.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - WAHHABI ISLAM AND THE GULF
Persian Gulf States
The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were a turbulent time for
Arabia in general and for the gulf in particular. To the southeast, the
Al Said of Oman were extending their influence northward, and from Iraq
the Ottoman Turks were extending their influence southward. From the
east, both the Iranians and the British were becoming increasingly
involved in Arab affairs.
The most significant development in the region, however, was the
Wahhabi movement. The name Wahhabi derived from Muhammad ibn
Abd al Wahhab, who died in 1792. He grew up in an oasis town in central
Arabia where he studied Hanbali law, usually considered the strictest of
Islamic legal schools, with his grandfather. While still a young man, he
left home and continued his studies in Medina and then in Iraq and Iran.
When he returned from Iran to Arabia in the late 1730s, he attacked
as idolatry many of the customs followed by tribes in the area who
venerated rocks and trees. He extended his criticism to practices of the
Twelver Shia, such as veneration of the tombs of holy men. He focused on
the central Muslim principle that there is only one God and that this
God does not share his divinity with anyone. From this principle, his
students began to refer to themselves as muwahhidun (sing., muwahhid),
or "unitarians." Their detractors referred to them as
"Wahhabis."
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab considered himself a reformer and looked
for a political figure to give his ideas a wider audience. He found this
person in Muhammad ibn Saud, the amir of Ad Diriyah, a small town near Riyadh. In 1744 the two
swore a traditional Muslim pledge in which they promised to work
together to establish a new state (which later became present-day Saudi
Arabia) based on Islamic principles. The limited but successful military
campaigns of Muhammad ibn Saud caused Arabs from all over the peninsula
to feel the impact of Wahhabi ideas.
The Wahhabis became known for a fanaticism similar to that of the
early Kharijites. This fanaticism helped to intensify conflicts in the
gulf. Whereas tribes from the interior had always raided settled
communities along the coast, the Wahhabi faith provided them with a
justification for continuing these incursions to spread true Islam.
Accordingly, in the nineteenth century Wahhabi tribes, under the
leadership of the Al Saud, moved at various times against Kuwait,
Bahrain, and Oman. In Oman, the Wahhabi faith created internal
dissension as well as an external menace because it proved popular with
some of the Ibadi tribes in the Omani interior.
Wahhabi thought has had a special impact on the history of Qatar.
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab's ideas proved popular among many of the
peninsula tribes, including the Al Thani clan, before the Al Khalifa
attempted to take over the area from Bahrain at the beginning of the
nineteenth century. As a result, Wahhabi beliefs motivated Al Thani
efforts to resist the attempt of the Al Khalifa, who rejected Wahhabism,
to gain control of the peninsula. In the early 1990s, Wahhabism
distinguished Qatar religiously from its neighbors.
Wahhabi fervor was also significant in the history of the present-day
UAE. The Qawasim tribes that had controlled the area since the
eighteenth century adapted Wahhabi ideas and transferred the movement's
religious enthusiasm to the piracy in which they had traditionally
engaged. Whereas Wahhabi thought opposed all that was not orthodox in
Islam, it particularly opposed non-Muslim elements such as the
increasing European presence in the Persian Gulf.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - TREATIES WITH THE BRITISH
Persian Gulf States
The increased European presence resulted in large part from
widespread Qawasim piracy in the early nineteenth century. The British
asked the sultan in Oman, to whom the pirates owed nominal allegiance,
to end it. When the sultan proved unable, British ships launched attacks
on Qawasim strongholds in the present-day UAE as early as 1809; the navy
did not succeed in controlling the situation until 1819. In that year,
the British sent a fleet from India that destroyed the pirates' main
base at Ras al Khaymah, a Qawasim port at the southern end of the gulf.
From Ras al Khaymah, the British fleet destroyed Qawasim ships along
both sides of the gulf.
The British had no desire to take over the desolate areas along the
gulf; they only wished to secure the area so that it would not pose a
threat to shipping to and from their possessions in India. Knowing that
the sultan in Oman could not be relied upon to control the pirates, the
British decided to leave in power those tribal leaders who had not been
conspicuously involved with piracy; they concluded a series of treaties
in which those leaders promised to suppress all piracy.
As a result of these truces, the Arab side of the gulf came to be
known as the "trucial coast." This area had previously been
under the nominal control of the sultan in Oman, although the trucial
coast tribes were not part of the Ibadi imamate. The area has also been
referred to as "trucial Oman" to distinguish it from the part
of Oman under the sultan that was not bound by treaty obligation.
In 1820 the British seemed primarily interested in controlling the
Qawasim, whose main centers were Ras al Khaymah, Ajman, and Sharjah,
which were all small ports along the southeastern gulf coast. The
original treaties, however, also involved Dubayy and Bahrain. Although
Dubayy and Bahrain were not pirate centers, they represented entrep�ts
where pirates could sell captured goods and buy supplies. The inclusion
of these ports brought two other extended families, the Bani Yas and the
Al Khalifa, into the trucial system.
During the next 100 years, the British signed a series of treaties
having wide-ranging provisions with other tribes in the gulf. As a
result, by the end of World War I, leaders from Oman to Iraq had
essentially yielded control of their foreign relations to Britain. Abu
Dhabi entered into arrangements similar to those of Dubayy and Bahrain
in 1835, Kuwait in 1899, and Qatar in 1916. The treaty whose terms
convey the most representative sense of the relationship between Britain
and the gulf states was the Exclusive Agreement of 1882. This text
specified that the signatory gulf states (members of the present-day
UAE) could not make any international agreements or host any foreign
agent without British consent.
Because of these concessions, gulf leaders recognized the need for
Britain to protect them from their more powerful neighbors. The main
threat came from the Al Saud in central Arabia. Although the Turks had
defeated the first Wahhabi empire of the Al Saud around 1820, the family
rose again about thirty years later; it threatened not only the Qawasim,
who by this time had largely abandoned Wahhabi Islam, but also the Al
Khalifa in Bahrain and the Ibadi sultan in Oman. In the early 1900s, the
Al Saud also threatened Qatar despite its Wahhabi rulers. Only with
British assistance could the Al Thani and other area rulers retain their
authority.
The Al Saud were not the only threat. Despite its treaty agreement
with Britain, Bahrain on several occasions has claimed Qatar because of
the Al Khalifa involvement on the peninsula. The Omanis and Iranians
have also claimed Bahrain because both have held the island at various
times. Furthermore, the Ottomans claimed Bahrain occasionally and tried
throughout the latter part of the nineteenth century to establish their
authority in Kuwait and Qatar.
The British wished to maintain security on the route from Europe to
India so that merchants could safely send goods between India and the
gulf. Britain also sought to exclude the influence in the area of other
powers, such as Turkey and France.
East-West trade through the Persian Gulf dried up in the nineteenth
century after the opening of the Suez Canal, which provided a direct
route to the Mediterranean Sea. Gulf merchants continued to earn
substantial income from the slave trade, but international pressure,
mostly from Britain, forced them to abandon this by 1900. Thereafter,
the region continued to profit from the gulf pearl beds, but this
industry declined in the 1930s as a result of the world depression,
which reduced demand, and as a result of the Japanese development of a
cheaper way to "breed" pearls, or make cultured pearls.
Oman, which was technically cut off from the gulf after 1820 when it
lost the southern portion of the present-day UAE, fared little better
during the late nineteenth century. The fifth sultan in the Al Said
line, Said ibn Sultan, ruled for almost the entire first half of the
nineteenth century, increasing Omani influence and revenue tremendously.
The resulting prosperity, however, was short-lived. The Omani fleet
could not compete with the more technologically advanced European ships;
thus the sultan gradually lost much of the income he had earned from
customs duties on the Indian trade. At the same time, the increasing
pressure to restrict the slave trade eliminated much of the revenue the
Omanis had earned from East Africa.
The final blow to Oman's economic and political viability came after
the death of Said ibn Sultan. When the Al Said could not agree on a
successor, the British acted. They divided the Al Said holdings and gave
Oman proper to one of the claimants to the throne and awarded Omani
possessions in East Africa to another. Thus, after 1856, there were two
Al Said rulers. The one in Muscat, with a weakened merchant fleet and no
East African revenues, was left with little support. Because of the
different centers of power, the country became popularly known as Muscat
and Oman.
The sultan's financial weakness contributed to his difficulty in
maintaining his hold on the interior. The devout Ibadi population of the
interior had long resented the more secular orientation of the coastal
centers. As the sultan grew weaker, groups in the interior raised
revolts against him on several occasions. Only with British help could
the sultan remain in control, and his growing dependence on outsiders
caused his relations with the Ibadi population to deteriorate. Whereas
other gulf rulers used the British to protect them from their more
powerful neighbors, the sultan needed the British to protect him from
his subjects.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - DISCOVERY OF OIL
Persian Gulf States
At the end of World War I, the Arab states of the gulf were weak,
with faltering economies and with local rulers who maintained their
autonomy only with British assistance. The rulers controlled mainly the
small port cities and some of the hinterland. The sultan in Oman claimed
a somewhat larger area, but resistance to his rule made it difficult for
him to exert his authority much beyond Muscat.
The discovery of oil in the region changed all this. Oil was first
discovered in Iran, and by 1911 a British concern, the Anglo-Persian Oil
Company (APOC), was producing oil in Iran. The British found oil in Iraq
after World War I. In 1932 Standard Oil Company of California (Socal)
discovered oil in commercial quantities in Bahrain. Socal then obtained
a concession in Saudi Arabia in 1933 and discovered oil in commercial
quantities in 1938.
A flurry of oil exploration activity occurred in the gulf in the
1930s with the United States and Britain competing with one another for
oil concessions. One reason for the increased activity was that in 1932
the new Iranian government of Reza Shah Pahlavi revoked APOC's
concession. Although the shah and the British later agreed on new terms,
the threat of losing Iranian oil convinced the British in particular
that they must find other sources. The small states of the Persian Gulf
were a natural place to look. Geological conditions were similar to
those in Iran, and, because of treaties signed between 1820 and 1920,
the British had substantial influence and could restrict foreign access.
Oil exploration did not mean immediate wealth for Arab rulers of the
area. Although the oil companies struck large deposits of oil in Bahrain
almost immediately, it took longer in other countries to locate finds of
commercial size. Oman, for instance, was unable to export oil until
1967. World War II delayed development of whatever fields had been
discovered in the 1930s; so it was not until the 1950s that countries
still technically dependent on Britain for their security began to earn
large incomes. The oil fields in Kuwait were developed the fastest, and
by 1953 that nation had become the largest oil producer in the gulf.
Considerably smaller fields in Qatar came onstream in commercial
quantities in the 1950s, and Abu Dhabi began to export offshore oil in
1962. Dubayy began to profit from offshore oil deposits in the late
1960s.
Until the 1970s, foreign companies owned and managed the gulf oil
industry. In most cases, European- and United States-based concerns
formed subsidiaries to work in specific countries, and these
subsidiaries paid fees to the local rulers, first for the right to
explore for oil and later for the right to export the oil. When the
first arrangements were made, local rulers had a weak bargaining
position because they had few other sources of income and were eager to
get revenues from the oil companies as fast as possible. Moreover, in
1930 no one knew the size of gulf oil reserves.
As production increased and the extent of oil deposits became known,
indigenous rulers improved their terms. In the 1950s, rulers routinely
demanded an equal share of oil company profits in addition to a royalty
fee. By the 1970s, most of the gulf countries, which by then were
independent of British control, bought major shares in the subsidiary
companies that worked within their borders. By the early 1990s, many of
these subsidiaries had become completely state-owned concerns. They
continued to employ Western experts at the highest decisionmaking
levels, but the local government had ultimate responsibility and
profits.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - INDEPENDENCE
Persian Gulf States
With the exception of Saudi Arabia and Iraq, the Arab coast of the
gulf was ruled by ten families: in Kuwait the Al Sabah; in Bahrain the
Al Khalifa; in Qatar the Al Thani; in the present-day UAE the Al
Nuhayyan in Abu Dhabi, the Al Nuaimi in Ajman, the Al Sharqi in Al
Fujayrah, the Al Maktum in Dubayy, the Al Qasimi in Ras al Khaymah and
Sharjah, and the Al Mualla in Umm al Qaywayn; and the Al Said in
present-day Oman. These families owed their positions to tribal
leadership; it was on this traditional basis that the British had
negotiated treaties with their leaders in the nineteenth century and the
early twentieth century.
A major provision of these treaties was the recognition of
sovereignty. The British were concerned that rulers of the weaker gulf
families would yield some of their territory under pressure from more
powerful groups, such as the Al Saud or the Ottomans. Accordingly, the
treaties signed between 1820 and 1916 recognized the sovereignty of
these rulers within certain borders and specified that these borders
could not be changed without British consent. Such arrangements helped
to put tribal alliances into more concrete terms of landownership. This
meant that the Al Nuhayyan of Abu Dhabi, for example, not only commanded
the respect of tribes in the hinterland but also owned, as it were, the
land that those tribes used--in this case, about 72,000 square
kilometers of Arabia.
Controlling, or owning, land became more important with the discovery
of oil. When oil companies came to explore for oil, they looked for the
"owner" of the land; in accordance with British treaties, they
went to the area's leading families and agreed to pay fees to the heads
of these families. As oil revenues increased, the leaders became rich.
Although the leaders spent much of their new wealth on themselves, they
also distributed it in the area they controlled according to traditional
methods, which initially consisted mostly of largesse: gifts for friends
and food for whomever needed it. As time passed, the form of largesse
became more sophisticated and included, for example, the construction of
schools, hospitals, and roads to connect principal cities to towns in
the interior.
Oil revenues did not change traditional tribal ideas about
leadership. New money, however, increased the influence of area leaders
by giving them more resources to distribute. Because of oil exploration,
tribal boundaries became clearer, and areas were defined more precisely.
Distinctions among tribes also became more evident. A new sense of
identity appeared in gulf shaykhdoms and aroused a growing expectation
that they should rule themselves. To do this, shaykhs had to cut
themselves off from British control and protection.
By the early 1960s, this was something to which the British had
little objection. India and Pakistan won their independence in 1947;
this meant that Britain no longer had to worry about protecting the
western flank of the subcontinent. Britain was also burdened by the
tremendous sacrifices it made during World War II and could not be as
globally involved as it had been before the war. Therefore, Britain
yielded many of its strategic responsibilities to the United States in
the postwar period or gave them up entirely. However, the British were
bound to the gulf by treaties and so remained in the region, but it was
clear by the 1960s that they sought to leave the gulf.
Kuwait was the first state to terminate the agreement connecting it
with Britain. Oil production in Kuwait had developed more quickly than
in neighboring states; as a result, Kuwaitis were better prepared for
independence. They declared independence in 1961 but ran into immediate
trouble when Iraq claimed the territory. The Iraqis argued that the
British had recognized Ottoman sovereignty over Kuwait before World War
I and, because the Ottomans had claimed to rule Kuwait from what was
then the province of Iraq, the territory should belong to Iraq.
The British immediately sent troops to Kuwait to deter any Iraqi
invasion. British and Kuwaiti positions were supported by the newly
formed League of Arab States (Arab League), which recognized the new
state and sent troops to Kuwait. The Arab League move left the Iraqis
isolated and somewhat intimidated. Accordingly, when a new Iraqi
government came to power in 1963, one of its first steps was to give up
its claim and recognize the independence of Kuwait.
The experience of Kuwait may have increased the anxiety of other gulf
leaders about declaring their independence. Even into the 1970s, Iran
and Saudi Arabia continued to make claims on territory in Bahrain and
the UAE, although by the end of 1971 those states were independent, and
nothing came of those claims. Gulf leaders also faced uncertainty about
the form their state should take. Should they all, with the exception of
Oman whose situation was different in that its treaty relationship with
Britain did not guarantee its borders as did treaties of the other gulf
states, band together in the largest entity possible? Or should they
break up into nine separate states, the smallest of which had little
territory, few people, and no oil?
British action forced gulf leaders to decide. Because of domestic
financial concerns, Britain decided in the late 1960s to eliminate its
military commitments east of Suez. As a result, the gulf shaykhs held a
number of meetings to discuss independence. Initially, leaders
considered a state that would include all nine shaykhdoms; Qatar had
even drawn up a constitution to this effect. In the end, however, so
large a federation proved unworkable.
An obstacle to creating a "superstate" was the status of
Bahrain, which had been occupied by Iran at various times. The shah of
Iran argued that he had a stronger claim to the island than the Al
Khalifa, who had only come to Bahrain in the eighteenth century.
Furthermore, the shah indicated that Iran would not accept a federation
of Arab states that included Bahrain.
In the end, the United Nations (UN) considered the issue of Bahrain;
it decided to deny the Iranian claim to the island and to allow the
Bahrainis to form an independent state. Bahrain was better suited to
independence than some of the other shaykhdoms because the island had
been a center of British administration and had a more developed
infrastructure and education system than its neighbors. Ironically, the
greater British presence on Bahrain made residents more resentful of
treaty ties to Britain. Bahrain was the only place in the gulf where
demonstrations against Britain occurred.
Backed by the UN decision, Bahrain declared its independence on
August 15, 1971. On September 3, 1971, Qatar followed, removing another
state from any potential federation. Although Qatar had minimal contact
with Britain, it was well suited to independence because it had a
history of support from the Al Saud that went back to the beginnings of
the Wahhabi state. Accordingly, at independence, Qatar could expect
continued support from Saudi Arabia. It could also anticipate
substantial oil revenues that had been increasing since the 1950s.
The same was not true for the other gulf states. The five southern
shaykhdoms--Ajman, Al Fujayrah, Ras al Khaymah, Sharjah, and Umm al
Qaywayn--had little oil in their territory and so could not afford
self-sufficiency as countries. Although substantial deposits had been
discovered in Abu Dhabi and Dubayy, these two states preferred the
security of a confederation rather than independence. Abu Dhabi, for
example, had an outstanding border dispute with Saudi Arabia and a
history of poor relations with that country because of Abu Dhabi's
opposition to Wahhabi Islam. Abu Dhabi might have protected itself by
forming a federation with the five southern shaykhdoms, but this would
not have suited Dubayy. Although Dubayy had oil of its own, its rulers,
the Al Maktum, had a history of hostility toward their relatives in Abu
Dhabi, the Al Nuhayyan, from whom they split in the early nineteenth
century. The Al Maktum would not have liked the Al Nuhayyan to dominate
a confederation of gulf leaders while they were isolated in Dubayy.
Powers beyond the gulf coast also had an interest in the state to be
formed. The Saudis no longer sought to control the gulf coast, but they
remained concerned about stability on the eastern border. The British
and other oil-consuming countries in the West were similarly concerned,
and all parties believed that the largest state would also be the most
stable. Accordingly, many forces were applying pressure in 1970 to
convince the seven shaykhs to stay together.
Thus, in 1971 soon after Qatar became independent, the remaining
shaykhs, with the exception of the Al Qasimi in Ras al Khaymah, took the
preliminary constitution that Qatar had originally drawn up for a
nine-member confederation and adapted it to a six-member body. On
December 2, 1971, one day after the British officially withdrew, these
six shaykhdoms declared themselves a sovereign state.
Ras al Khaymah originally refused to join the confederation. The Al
Qasimi, who ruled the area, claimed a number of islands and oil fields
within the gulf to which Iran laid claim as well. In the negotiations to
form the UAE, the Al Qasimi sought support for their claims from Arab
states on the peninsula as well as from some Western powers. When their
efforts proved unsuccessful, the Al Qasimi pulled out of the
negotiations. They quickly realized, however, that they could not exist
on their own and joined the union in February 1972.
Oman was never considered a possible confederation member. Always
geographically separate from its neighbors to the north, Oman had never
entered into the agreements with Britain that governed other gulf
rulers. The British had been closely involved in Oman since the middle
of the nineteenth century, but they were under no official obligation to
defend it.
The issue in Oman was one of internal unity rather than of
sovereignty over foreign affairs. The historical split between coast and
interior had continued through the second half of the nineteenth century
and the first part of the twentieth. In 1920 the Al Said sultan, Taimur
ibn Faisal, came to terms with this split by granting limited
sovereignty to the tribes of the interior. Because of ambiguous
language, the peoples of the interior believed that the treaty cut them
off from the Al Said; the Al Said, however, never gave up their claim to
all of Oman.
The dispute between the two groups was exacerbated by the exploration
for oil, which began in Oman in 1924. The oil fields lay in the
interior, and the oil companies negotiated for access to them with the
Al Said in Muscat. This Al Said sultan gladly sold them rights to the
Omani oil fields, although the tribes of the interior claimed
sovereignty over the area. When the oil men went inland to explore, they
were attacked by the tribes, whom the sultan considered to be rebels,
leading the oil companies to complain to the British government. Their
complaints encouraged the British to continue their aid to the sultan,
hoping that he would pacify the area and ensure Western access to Omani
oil.
The sultan was eventually successful. In 1957 forces loyal to Said
ibn Taimur captured the town of Nazwah, which the Al Said had not
controlled since the nineteenth century. In 1958 the sultan withdrew to
his palace in the coastal city of Salalah in Dhofar, a southern province
that the Al Said had annexed in the nineteenth century, and took little
interest in maintaining stability in the country. While keeping his
military relationship with the British, he restricted Oman's contact
with the rest of the world, discouraged development, and prohibited
political reform.
In the end, the Al Said control over a united Oman survived, but Said
ibn Taimur did not. Although the sultan had partially reestablished his
authority in the Omani interior, he was unable to handle the increasing
complexity of domestic politics. By the 1960s, Omani affairs had become
international issues. Western oil companies sought to work in the
interior of the country, and foreign governments, such as the Marxist
state of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen, were sending arms to
the rebels in Dhofar.
The Al Said hold over the region remained problematic, however, and
in 1964 another rebellion arose, this time in Dhofar. The Dhofar
rebellion, which was not brought under control until 1976, obliged the
sultan to seek foreign military assistance; therefore, British forces,
particularly the air force, resumed action in the country. The rebels
pointed to British involvement as an indication of the sultan's
illegitimacy and brought their case to the UN, which eventually censured
Britain for its continuing involvement in Oman.
Said ibn Taimur's policies frustrated many, not only in Oman but also
in Britain, whose citizens were heavily involved in the sultan's
military and intelligence apparatus. By 1970 these elements decided they
could bear with the situation no longer; a coalition of Omani military
and civilian forces, as well as British forces, attacked the palace and
forced Said ibn Taimur to abdicate. They replaced him with his son,
Qabus ibn Said Al Said, who had played no role in Said ibn Taimur's
government. The sultan had actually locked his son in the palace for
fear that Qabus ibn Said, who had been educated in Britain, would
challenge his archconservative policies.
On his release, Qabus ibn Said consolidated the sultanate's hold over
the interior and then solicited regional rather than British help to put
down the rebellion in Dhofar. Other Arab leaders, as well as the shah of
Iran, sent troops to Oman in response to Qabus ibn Said's requests; with
the help of this coalition, by 1976 the sultan ended the Dhofar
rebellion.
Qabus ibn Said was not an Ibadi imam as the first rulers in his line
had been, but in 1970 this was less important than it had been in
earlier times. Only about 60 percent of Oman's population was Ibadi,
concentrated in the northern mountains. Furthermore, the province of
Dhofar had a relatively short history of association with the rest of
Oman.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - DEVELOPMENTS SINCE INDEPENDENCE
Persian Gulf States
Since the early 1970s, increased oil production and regional
instability have dominated events in the Persian Gulf. Revenues from the
oil industry grew dramatically after oil producers raised their prices
unilaterally in 1973; as a result, funds available to gulf rulers
increased. Governments began massive development projects that brought
rapid material and social change. As of 1993, the turmoil that these
changes caused had not yet stabilized. Those states that had benefited
longest from oil money, such as Kuwait and Bahrain, made the greatest
progress in adjusting to the new oil wealth. Oman--which has used its
oil reserves only since the early 1970s and which had suffered under the
repressive policies of Said ibn Taimur--saw substantially less progress.
The Iranian Revolution of 1979 challenged gulf stability. Many gulf
leaders agreed with some of the social goals of the revolution and its
efforts to tie Iran more firmly to its Islamic roots. But Iran's desire
to spread the movement beyond its borders clearly threatened gulf
leaders. Furthermore, several gulf states have significant Shia or
Iranian minorities (Bahrain has a Shia majority although the ruling
family is Sunni), and gulf rulers feared that Iran would use ethnic or
sectarian loyalties to stir up such minorities.
As of 1993, however, Shia of the western gulf had not responded
enthusiastically to the Iranian call. Kuwait and Bahrain, which have the
largest Shia populations, experienced some limited pro-Iranian
demonstrations in 1979. In general, however, Shia in both these states
feel that they have more to gain by supporting the existing regimes than
by supporting the convulsive changes that have taken place in Iran.
Iran was perhaps more threatening to gulf stability because of its
strong anti-Western stance in world and in regional politics. The new
Iranian position stood in stark contrast to the gulf amirs' long history
of involvement with the British and the close ties to the West that the
oil industry entailed. Thus, the Iranian political worldview was one to
which rulers in the gulf states could not subscribe.
In 1980 the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War made the Iranian threat
more concrete. For the first six years of the conflict, the gulf states
sought to mediate between the two countries and to remain neutral. Their
position changed, however, in 1986, when fighter aircraft attacked
tankers belonging to Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Whether Iran or Iraq was
responsible for the first attacks remains uncertain, but the gulf states
decided to blame the Iranians and began to take Iraq's side in the war.
Iran responded by opening up a limited secret campaign against the gulf
states. A number of explosions occurred in Kuwait and Bahrain for which
many believed Iran was responsible. Such attacks made all the states in
the region more concerned about external threats.
In 1981, partly in response to these concerns, Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Oman, and the UAE formed the Gulf Cooperation Council
(GCC). The goal of the GCC has been to provide for regional defense and
to coordinate policy on trade and economic issues. Although the GCC has
taken steps to increase the military capabilities of various members,
the region has remained dependent to a great extent on the protection of
the Western powers. For instance, when the Iran-Iraq War made the gulf
unsafe for oil tankers in the late 1980s, it was ships from Europe and
the United States that protected shipping and cleared the area of mines.
Whereas broader, regional alliances in the gulf have changed
dramatically since the 1970s, individual political systems have remained
relatively unchanged. All the gulf countries grant ultimate power to a
single family, whose leading member rules as amir, but they also provide
for an advisory body whose members are drawn from outside the royal
family. Kuwait and Bahrain have gone beyond this and have set up
separate parliaments with limited power to draft legislation. However,
the Al Sabah and the Al Khalifa have sometimes dissolved these bodies;
thus, it remains uncertain whether parliaments will become a permanent
feature of gulf politics.
The ruling families' hold on power has been challenged at various
times. More problematic is the manner in which the gulf states have
distributed individual citizenship. Since the 1930s, the population has
increased dramatically because of the oil boom, but the number of
citizens has not increased correspondingly. Most of the gulf states
place restrictions on citizenship, requiring that an individual trace
his or her roots in the country to before 1930. Accordingly, the
millions of people that have poured into the region since the 1940s have
only partial legal status and lack political rights in the countries in
which they reside. Although they may have lived there for two
generations, they can be asked to leave at any time.
Persian Gulf States
Persian Gulf States - TRIBAL NATURE OF GULF SOCIETY
Persian Gulf States
Gulf states have not granted citizenship freely for two reasons.
First, they are reluctant to share wealth with recent arrivals; second,
the tribal nature of gulf society does not admit new members easily. A
tribe usually traces its lineage to a particular eponymous ancestor. The
standard Arabic reference to tribe is bani fulan, or "the
sons [bani] of so-and- so." The Bani al Murrah in Saudi
Arabia, for example, trace their line back to a figure named Murrah, who
lived some time before the Prophet.
Over a period of 1,500 years, the sons of Murrah, or any other
ancient figure, have tended to become numerous, making further
distinctions necessary. Accordingly, tribes are divided into clans and
then into households (fukhud; sing., fakhd).
Households include groups of single families. Together this extended
group of families calls itself a tribe. Each tribe has certain
characteristics, such as different speech, dress, and customs. But since
the 1950s, speech has become less of a distinguishing factor because of
the fluidity of gulf society.
The name of a tribe may also reflect some past event. For example,
the name Utub--the tribe to which the Al Sabah of Kuwait and
the Al Khalifa of Bahrain belong--comes from the Arabic word for wander
(atab). In 1744 the tribe "wandered" out of the
desert and into the gulf area and became the Utub.
Two of the most important tribal groups in Arabia are the Qahtan and
the Adnan, whose roots stem from the belief that tribes in the north of
the peninsula were descended from Adnan, one of Ismail's sons, and that
tribes in the south were descended from Qahtan, one of Noah's sons.
People in the gulf often attribute the structure of tribal alliances to
this north-south distinction, and many still classify their tribes as
Adnani or Qahtani.
Historically, the tribal nature of society has occasioned petty
warfare in the gulf. Arab tribes have attacked each other since before
Islam, but tribal customs have prevented these attacks from turning into
random violence. Clans, however, have defected from their tribe and made
alliances with other tribes, and tribes have sometimes banded together
to form a more powerful group.
Moreover, although some tribes may trace their lineage to some heroic
figure, the real identity of the tribe lies in the people that currently
compose it. In the tribe, an individual bases his or her sense of
self-esteem on the honor of the tribe as a whole.
In Arabia it was impossible to survive in the desert alone, and so
families banded together to find water and move their flocks to new
grazing lands. Once they established the necessary resources through
collective effort, they guarded them jealously and refused to share them
with outsiders. It therefore became necessary to set up boundaries
between members of the group or between the tribe and outsiders. The
tribe worked to restrict membership in order to preserve its sense of
solidarity. As a result, birth into the right family tended to be the
only way to become a member of a tribe. Marriage sometimes extended the
tribal line beyond blood lines, but, in general, people tended to marry
within the tribe and only went outside to establish alliances with other
tribes.
The emphasis on the group precluded the rise of a strong leader.
Accordingly, tribal leadership is often described as "the first
among equals," suggesting a collective leadership in which one
among a number of leaders is recognized as the most authoritative. This
principal leader must continue to consult with his lesser colleagues and
so rules by consensus.
An extension of this pattern of leadership is the concept of leading
families within the tribe. Although tribalism tends to discourage
inherited authority, traditions of leadership are nevertheless passed
down, and tribes expect that certain families will furnish them with
leaders generation after generation. This pattern occurred when tribes
that were previously nomadic settled down in oases or coastal areas. It
then became more likely that certain families would accumulate wealth,
whether in food or in goods, and with this wealth would increase their
authority. In this way, the individual families that in the 1990s
controlled the gulf states established themselves around 1800. Relations
with the British and the discovery of oil continued that process.
The existence of these ruling families is perhaps the most obvious
manifestation of Arab tribalism in gulf society in 1993. Another
manifestation is the collective manner in which these families rule. In
most of these states, the position of amir is not passed from father to
son but alternates among different parallel patrilineal lines. This
makes the appointment of the next amir an open issue and something on
which the entire family must agree. The family also participates in the
various consultative bodies that exist to advise the leader. Such
bodies, which include figures outside the ruling family, help to
institutionalize the first among equals system in these states.
The way that government officials are appointed reflects the
importance of tribal connections. Members of the ruling family are
accommodated first, followed by families and tribes with whom the rulers
have been traditionally allied. In Bahrain, for example, the ruling Al
Khalifa have given the major positions in the bureaucracy to Sunni Arabs
from tribes that helped them rule the island in the nineteenth century.
The Al Khalifa have given lesser positions to Shia Arabs from merchant
families with whom they engaged in the pearl industry but with whom they
had no tribal alliances. But the Al Khalifa have been reluctant to give
positions of authority to Shia farmers of Iranian descent to whom they
had neither tribal nor economic ties.
Tribal cohesiveness is also reflected in the efforts of the gulf
states to restrict citizenship. The gulf has always been relatively
cosmopolitan, and its port cities have included Arab Shia from Iraq,
freed slaves from Africa, Indian pearl traders, and Iranian farmers and
merchants, in addition to tribal Sunni Arabs. (In 1939, for example,
before the oil boom started, 39 percent of Qatar's population was
non-Arab.) The dominant Arab tribes have accommodated many of these
groups, and those who arrived in the region before 1930 became full
citizens of the gulf states, albeit without the connections of tribal
Arabs. The tremendous influx since 1940, however, has caused the
naturally restrictive nature of tribal society to reassert itself to
prevent a further dilution of tribal identities.
Ironically, those foreigners closest to the tribal Arabs, the
nontribal Arabs, represent the greatest threat. Only Arabs from other
Arab states might conceivably stay in the gulf and expect to be
citizens. Others, even Muslims from the coasts of Pakistan and India,
whose history is intertwined with that of the gulf, would have a
difficult time arguing in the twentieth century that they should be
citizens of an Arab state.
Modern Arab politics, however, often speaks of a single Arab nation
in which all Arabs might be citizens. This has led to the notion that
Arabs should have rights in the gulf states simply because of their
ethnicity. The continuing exodus of millions of Palestinian Arabs since
1948, and their subsequent residence throughout the Arab world, has
added urgency to the demand that individual Arab states define their
qualifications for citizenship. Many Arabs argue that Palestinians in
particular, but other Arabs as well, should be accepted as citizens in
the gulf. Gulf leaders have understandably opposed this for fear that
nontribal Arabs would challenge traditional ways of rule. Although
people from all over the world may come to the gulf to work, sovereignty
and citizenship are closely guarded by the predominantly tribal
population that has its roots in the Arabian Peninsula. In this way, the
Persian Gulf coast has preserved its ties with the Arab interior that
form the essence of its identity.
The literature on Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, and Oman may be
divided into two groups: books on Oman and books on the rest of the gulf
states. Calvin Allen has a relatively brief study of the modern history
of Oman entitled Oman: The Modernization of the Sultanate. John
C. Wilkinson has written a number of scholarly studies on Oman,
including his recent work, The Imamate Tradition of Oman. This
is an excellent and detailed study of most aspects of Omani history.
For the rest of the gulf, a number of brief studies exist, of which
the most recent is The Arab Gulf and the Arab World, a
collection of articles on various aspects of modern gulf life edited by
B.R. Pridham; it contains little on the history of the region. For more
historical background, the reader may consult an older but more
substantial collection edited by Alvin Cottrell entitled The Persian
Gulf States. Further history can be found in Donald Hawley's The
Trucial States.
Of books on particular countries or issues, the best is Fuad Khuri's Tribe
and State in Bahrain, which considers the social, religious, and
ethnic divisions of the island nation. A recent brief work on the UAE by
Malcolm C. Peck, The United Arab Emirates, is very good.
Abdulrasool al-Mossa's study, Immigrant Labor in Kuwait,
provides a description of the situation of foreign workers in the gulf.
Religious disturbances in the gulf are discussed in relevant chapters of
Robin Wright's Sacred Rage.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Geography
Persian Gulf States
KUWAIT CAPTURED THE WORLD'S ATTENTION on August 2, 1990, when Iraqi
forces invaded and occupied the country, catalyzing a series of events
that culminated in military intervention and ultimate victory by United
States-led coalition forces in February 1991. In 1993 it appeared that
the invasion and its aftermath would have a lasting effect on the
people, the economy, and the politics of Kuwait.
Once a small gulf shaykhdom known locally as a center for pearl
diving and boat construction, Kuwait came to international prominence in
the post-World War II era largely because of its enormous oil revenues.
Yet its history as an autonomous political entity is much older, dating
back to the eighteenth century. At that time, the town of Kuwait was
settled by migrants from central Arabia who arrived at what was then a
lightly populated fishing village under the suzerainty of the Bani
Khalid tribe of Arabia. Members of one family, the Al Sabah, have ruled
Kuwait from that time.
Since 1977 Kuwait has been ruled by Shaykh Jabir al Ahmad al Jabir Al
Sabah and his designated successor, Shaykh Saad al Abd Allah as Salim Al
Sabah, the prime minister and crown prince. In the postwar period, these
men have supported, with some ambivalence, the strengthening of popular
participation in decision making as provided for in the constitution.
Kuwait is located at the far northwestern corner of the Persian Gulf,
known locally as the Arabian Gulf. It is a small state of about 17,818
square kilometers, a little smaller than the state of New Jersey. At its
most distant points, it is about 200 kilometers north to south and 170
kilometers east to west.
Shaped roughly like a triangle, Kuwait borders the gulf to the east,
with 195 kilometers of coast. Kuwait includes within its territory nine
gulf islands, two of which, Bubiyan (the largest) and Warbah, are
largely uninhabited but strategically important. The island of Faylakah,
at the mouth of Kuwait Bay, is densely inhabited. It is believed to be
the outermost point of the ancient civilization of Dilmun, which was
centered in what is present-day Bahrain. Faylakah is the site of an
ancient Greek temple built by the forces of Alexander the Great.
Kuwait's most prominent geographic feature is Kuwait Bay, which indents
the shoreline for about forty kilometers, providing natural protection
for the port of Kuwait and accounting for nearly onehalf the state's
shoreline.
To the south and west, Kuwait shares a long border of 250 kilometers
with Saudi Arabia. The boundary between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia was set
by the Treaty of Al Uqayr in 1922, which also established the
Kuwait-Saudi Arabia Neutral Zone of 5,700 square kilometers. In 1966
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia agreed to divide the Neutral Zone; the
partitioning agreement making each country responsible for
administration in its portion was signed in December 1969. The resources
in the area, since known as the Divided Zone, are not affected by the
agreement, and the oil from onshore and offshore fields continues to be
shared equally between the two countries.
The third side of the triangle is the 240 kilometers of historically
contested border to the north and west that Kuwait shares with Iraq.
Although the Iraqi government, which had first asserted a claim to rule
Kuwait in 1938, recognized the borders with Kuwait in 1963 (based on
agreements made earlier in the century), it continued to press Kuwait
for control over Bubiyan and Warbah islands through the 1960s and 1970s.
In August 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait and, shortly thereafter, formally
incorporated the entire country into Iraq. Under United Nations (UN)
Security Council Resolution 687, after the restoration of Kuwaiti
sovereignty in 1991, a UN commission undertook formal demarcation of the
borders on the basis of those agreed to in 1963. The boundary was
demarcated in 1992, but Iraq refuses to accept the commission's
findings.
Kuwait has a desert climate, hot and dry. Rainfall varies from
seventy-five to 150 millimeters a year across the country; actual
rainfall has ranged from twenty-five millimeters a year to as much as
325 millimeters. In summer, average daily high temperatures range from
42� C to 46� C; the highest recorded temperature is 51.5� C. The
summers are relentlessly long, punctuated mainly by dramatic dust storms
in June and July when northwesterly winds cover the cities in sand. In
late summer, which is more humid, there are occasional sharp, brief
thunderstorms. By November summer is over, and colder winter weather
sets in, dropping temperatures to as low as 3� C at night; daytime
temperature is in the upper 20s C range. Frost rarely occurs; rain is
more common and falls mostly in the spring.
The land was formed in a recent geologic era. In the south, limestone
rises in a long, north-oriented dome that lies beneath the surface. It
is within and below this formation that the principal oil fields,
Kuwait's most important natural resource, are located. In the west and
north, layers of sand, gravel, silt, and clay overlie the limestone to a
depth of more than 210 meters. The upper portions of these beds are part
of a mass of sediment deposited by a great wadi whose most recent
channel was the Wadi al Batin, the broad shallow valley forming the
western boundary of the country. On the western side of Ar Rawdatayn
geological formation, a freshwater aquifer was discovered in 1960 and
became Kuwait's principal water source. The supply is insufficient to
support extensive irrigation, but it is tapped to supplement the
distilled water supply that fills most of the country's needs. The only
other exploited aquifer lies in the permeable zone in the top of the
limestone of the Ash Shuaybah field south and east of the city of
Kuwait. Unlike water from the Ar Rawdatayn aquifer, water from the Ash
Shuaybah aquifer is brackish. Millions of liters a day of this water are
produced for commercial and household purposes.
The bulk of the Kuwaiti population lives in the coastal capital of
the city of Kuwait. Smaller populations inhabit the nearby city of Al
Jahrah, smaller desert and coastal towns, and, prior to the Persian Gulf
War, some of the several nearby gulf islands, notably Faylakah.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Population
Persian Gulf States
In the summer of 1990, Kuwait had an estimated population of
2,155,000. The most dramatic division in this preinvasion population was
that between the national population of Kuwaiti citizens and the larger
population, more than 60 percent of the total population, of foreign
workers.
The percentage of foreigners in the population grew steadily after
World War II, following the rise in oil revenues and the consequent
government development programs with their sudden need for substantial
labor. The labor market came to consist increasingly of foreigners for a
number of reasons. The most important factor was the small size of the
indigenous population and, in the early years, their low level of
education. As oil revenues and government investment in education
produced a generation of highly educated Kuwaitis, they began to replace
foreigners at the highest levels of employment, but even this highly
educated population was small. The low participation rates of women in
the work force also contributed to the reliance on foreign workers.
Restrictions on female dress and behavior in public and consequently on
labor force participation are not as strong as they are elsewhere in the
gulf, notably in Saudi Arabia. Customary norms, however, coupled with
higher family incomes, which reduce the need to employ more family
members and lessen the incentive for individuals to undertake the more
unpleasant sorts of work, combine to promote a lower labor force
participation rate in the national population.
The importance of foreign workers to the economy in the postWorld War
II period is difficult to exaggerate. Most of these foreigners are male.
Most are employed by the state. Most are in Kuwait for relatively short
periods (40 percent stay less than five years); Arabs stay somewhat
longer than non-Arabs. Historically, Arabs constituted the bulk of the
non-Kuwaiti population. In addition to a large number of Palestinian
workers, estimated at 400,000 in 1990, there are numerous Egyptians,
Iraqis, Syrians, and Lebanese. A smaller but significant and growing
number of workers come from Asia. In the early 1980s, the composition of
the work force shifted, and by 1985 slightly more than one-half the
foreign workers (52 percent) were Asian and less than one-half (46
percent) were Arab. Africans, Europeans, and United States citizens
constitute the remainder. The government favors Asian workers because of
their lower labor costs, and, because they are unable to speak Arabic or
lay a claim to oil revenues on the basis of Arab nationalism, Asian
workers are more apt to return home in a few years, thus raising fewer
social and political issues.
The foreign population does not enjoy the economic and political
rights of the national population. Not being citizens, they can neither
vote nor run for seats in the National Assembly. They are not allowed to
own real property. They cannot form their own unions; although they can
join Kuwaiti unions, they are prohibited from voting or running for
union offices. Acquiring Kuwaiti citizenship is very difficult, and the
number of naturalized citizens remains low.
The large number of foreigners creates social tensions between
foreigners and the indigenous population. Foreign workers, particularly
those who have worked many years in Kuwait, resent the discrimination
against them. Citizens often view foreign workers with suspicion, if not
hostility. Even before the Persian Gulf War, public debate often focused
on a perceived compromise between Kuwait's economic needs and its
security needs.
Although the most important social division in the country is between
citizens and foreigners, the indigenous population is internally divided
along a number of lines as well. The first is sectarian. The majority of
Kuwaiti nationals are Sunnis Muslims; the minority are Shia. Figures have never been published on the number of Shia,
but estimates in the 1980s ranged from 15 to 25 percent of the national
population. Shia are a diverse group. Some are Arab, many the
descendants of immigrants from Ash Sharqiyah (Eastern Province) in Saudi
Arabia or from Bahrain. Others come from Arab families who moved from
the Arabian side of the gulf to Iran, stayed awhile, and then returned.
Others are of Iranian origin, who often speak Farsi as well as Arabic at
home and sometimes maintain business or family ties with Iranians across
the gulf. After the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the subsequent
Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, this Shia community experienced a renewed
sense of sectarian identification. The identification resulted from
sympathy with their revolutionary coreligionists in Iran and from
increasing government and social discrimination. During the 1980s, the
tension between Sunnis and Shia, which had erupted occasionally in the
past, became somewhat sharper.
Kuwaitis are also divided to a certain extent along class lines.
Although the national population is generally well off because of the
state's generous employment policies regarding nationals and its
extensive social services, important divisions nonetheless exist between
the country's economic elite and the rest of the population. The
wealthiest Kuwaitis are members either of the ruling family or of what
was once a powerful and still distinct merchant class. Many of these are
descendants of the Bani Utub, the original central Arabian tribe that
settled Kuwait in the eighteenth century. The most important and
wealthiest of the Bani Utub are members of the Al Sabah, the ruling
family of Kuwait. The economic elite is largely Sunni. However, some
Shia families and individual Shia are also wealthy.
Despite these internal divisions, the national population is also
characterized by a strong sense of national identity. There are no
important ethnic divisions: the national population is overwhelmingly
Arab. The major sectarian divisions are subsumed in the larger shared
Islamic identity. And unlike many of its neighbors, Kuwait is not a
twentieth-century colonial fabrication. It has been an autonomous
political and social unit since the eighteenth century. In the
intervening years, a strong sense of local identity has arisen. This
national sense has been deeply reinforced by the Iraqi occupation.
Updated population figures for Kuwait.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait Education
Persian Gulf States
In 1993 Kuwait's population was highly educated, both in comparison
to other states in the region and in comparison to its pre-oil education
levels. The impressive education system was brought about by a conscious
government decision, made possible by revenues from oil that began in
the 1950s, to invest heavily in human resources.
Although the pre-oil education system was modest by 1993 standards,
it was still impressive, given the limited finances at the time. In the
early 1900s, education consisted largely of Quran schools offering basic
literacy training in the context of religious instruction. This system
provided some formal schooling for nearly all boys and most girls.
Wealthy families often sent sons abroad for further education. In the
first decades of the twentieth century, merchants anxious for more
extensive training for their sons opened a few private schools, notably
the Mubarakiyyah School in 1911 and the Ahmadiyyah School in 1921. In
the 1930s, merchants established the Education Council and expanded the
system to include four new primary schools, including one for girls. The
government soon took over this growing system and, with new oil revenues
after World War II,rapidly expanded the system. In 1956 the government
laid down the basis of the education system that still existed in 1993:
kindergarten and primary, middle, and secondary schools. A 1965 law,
largely enforced, made education compulsory until the age of fourteen. A
small system of private schools also developed. Public education,
including preschool and higher education, was from the beginning free
for all nationals and for many foreigners. The government absorbs not
only the costs of schools but also those of books, uniforms, meals,
transportation, and incidental expenses. In preinvasion Kuwait, the
majority of the students in the education system were non-Kuwaitis.
The apex of the public education system is Kuwait University, which
the government established in 1966. More than half the students at
Kuwait University are women, in part because families are more likely to
send boys abroad for study. The government also subsidizes hundreds of
students in university study abroad, many in the United States.
As a result of these efforts, the school population and the literacy
rate increased steadily. By the mid-1980s, literacy and education rates
were high. Although only 55 percent of the citizen population was
literate in 1975, by 1985 that percentage had increased to 73.6 percent
(84 percent for males and 63.1 percent for females). In 1990 the overall
literacy rate was 73 percent. The total number of teachers increased
from just under 3,000 at independence in 1961 to more than 28,000 in
academic year 1988-89; the number of schools increased from 140 to 642
during the same period.
The education system has its problems, however. For example, it
relies heavily on foreign teachers. In the late 1950s, almost 90 percent
were non-Kuwaitis. Despite a long-standing government effort to
indigenize education, the system continues to rely heavily on
foreigners. The system also often fails to train graduates in fields
that correspond to Kuwait's most pressing labor needs. Especially in
higher education, the system produces many graduates with training in
liberal arts and few with training in vocational subjects.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Health and Welfare
Persian Gulf States
The health care system and health conditions also improved
dramatically in the years after oil revenues brought wealth to the
country. Kuwait's first attempts to introduce a modern health care
system date back to the first years of the twentieth century when the
ruler, Shaykh Mubarak Al Sabah the Great, invited doctors from the
Arabian Mission of the Dutch Reformed Church in the United States to
establish a clinic. By 1911 the group had organized a hospital for men
and in 1919 a small hospital for women. In 1934 the thirty-four-bed
Olcott Memorial Hospital opened. Between 1909 and 1946, Kuwait
experienced gradual, albeit limited, improvement in health conditions.
General mortality stood between twenty and twenty-five per 1,000
population and infant mortality between 100 and 125 per 1,000 live
births. After the government began receiving oil revenues, it expanded
the health care system, beginning with the opening of the Amiri Hospital
in 1949. The Kuwait Oil Company (KOC) also opened some small health
facilities. By 1950 general mortality had fallen to between seventeen
and twenty-three per 1,000 population and infant mortality to between
eighty and 100 per 1,000 live births.In the 1950s, the government
introduced a comprehensive health care system offering free services to
the entire population. Free health care was so extensive that it even
included veterinary medicine. Expenditures on health ranked third in the
national budget, after public works and education. As with education,
the system relied heavily on foreigners. Most of the physicians were
foreigners, particularly Egyptians. Critics charged the designers of the
system with paying undue attention to acquiring the most modern and
expensive medical equipment, without regard to the country's health
priorities, and favoring treatment over prevention. Nonetheless,
improvements in available health care and in public health were
dramatic. The number of doctors grew from 362 in 1962 to 2,641 in 1988.
The doctor-to-patient ratio improved from one to 1,200 to one to 600.
Infant and child mortality rates dropped dramatically; in 1990 the
infant mortality rate was fifteen per 1,000 live births. Life expectancy
increased ten years in the postindependence years, putting Kuwait at a
level comparable to most industrialized countries. In 1990 life
expectancy for males was seventy-two years and for females seventy-six
years.
In addition to a comprehensive system of health care, the government
provides residents with one of the world's most encompassing social
service systems. Not only does it indirectly support the national
population through guaranteed state employment and subsidized services
(such as water and electricity), but it also supports those most in need
through direct subsidies. These include the disabled, the elderly, the
unemployed, students and their families, the widowed, the unmarried, and
even the families of prisoners.
By 1990 Kuwait had an extensive welfare program, exceeded perhaps by
no other country. Citizens receive free medical services from highly
trained practitioners in modern facilities; free education through the
university level; subsidized food, housing, utilities, and
transportation; and various other benefits. For all this, they pay no
taxes: the system is supported by oil revenues from outside the country.
On the eve of the Iraqi invasion, the United Nations Development
Programme placed Kuwait at the top of its annual human development index
with a life expectancy of 73.4 years, an adult literacy rate of 73
percent, and a real per capita gross domestic product of US$15,984. The
benefits of the welfare system, however, are unevenly distributed among
the population. Noncitizens in particular benefit much less, and many,
especially those from Arab states and those who have worked many years
in Kuwait, resent their disadvantaged position.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - The Economy
Persian Gulf States
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Kuwait's economy was
based on trade. The city of Kuwait rivaled Basra in Iraq as an entrep�t
for trade between India and parts of the Middle East. Kuwait became a
conduit for commerce from the gulf to Asia, Africa, and Europe. It was
Kuwait's fine natural harbor that first attracted the Bani Utub
settlers, and they made much of this maritime advantage. In the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the economy relied primarily
on pearl diving, and merchants and sailors harvested the gulf's natural
pearl banks, which were among the richest in the world. In the first
decades of the twentieth century, Kuwait had about 700 boats, employing
approximately 15,000 men. When the pearl-diving season (mid-May to
mid-September) ended, Kuwaiti merchants used their ships for
long-distance trade. From this trade, a shipbuilding industry developed,
and Kuwaiti craft became known throughout coastal Arabia for their
quality. Fishing was also a small but important industry. The tradition
of seafaring and trade gave Kuwait a thriving merchant class and an
outward orientation that remained important into the 1990s.
Although prosperous by regional standards, Kuwait's economy offered
only a meager existence to most of the population, especially those
outside the ruling families and the merchant families. Even this meager
existence began to suffer with the decline of pearling. That industry,
the basis of Kuwait's economy, came to a sudden end in the 1920s with
the development of the process of making cultured pearls in Japan and
then the Great Depression. Fortuitously, the pearl industry declined
just as a new source of revenue was emerging. In 1938 oil was discovered
in Kuwait. Once oil exports began in the immediate post-World War II
years, economic development became nearly continuous.
<>Oil
Industry
<>Diversification
<>Agriculture
and Fishing
<>Banking
and Finance
<>Foreign
Investment
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Oil Industry
Persian Gulf States
For centuries, oil seepages in the desert had indicated oil below the
surface. This oil came to the attention of European and United States
developers. In 1911 the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC), which was
developing oil fields in Iran, requested permission to negotiate a
concession from Kuwait. The British government refused the request (as
it was entitled to do so under an 1899 treaty that granted Britain
substantial control of Kuwait's foreign policy), but two years later the
British government commissioned a geological survey of the area. In 1913
the British government signed an agreement with Kuwait's Shaykh Mubarak
the Great in which he promised to grant concessions only to companies
approved by the British government, clarifying and reaffirming the
agreement of 1899. World War I interrupted another effort to negotiate a
concession. By this time, the British government had purchased 51
percent ownership in APOC as part of an effort to ensure oil supplies
for the Royal Navy.
After World War I, interest in oil grew. APOC continued attempts to
obtain a Kuwait concession. Meanwhile, in the 1920s, Gulf Oil of the
United States began to seek concessions in the gulf to overcome its lack
of crude oil sources. British treaties with most rulers in the gulf,
including Kuwait, made it difficult for non-British companies to gain
access, although the United States government pressured the British to
provide equal treatment to United States oil firms. In 1932 Gulf Oil and
APOC formed a joint company to negotiate a concession in Kuwait, and
this effort received British government approval. In 1934 Kuwait's
ruler, Shaykh Ahmad al Jabir Al Sabah, signed a concession agreement
with the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), the firm jointly owned by APOC and
Gulf Oil.
KOC began surveying in 1935. Drilling started in 1936 on the north
shore of Kuwait Bay, but no oil was found. The second attempt, in the
desert, struck a gusher in 1938 in an area that subsequently was called
the Al Burqan field, one of the largest and most productive fields in
the world. World War II slowed the development of the industry, but at the
end of the war, pipelines and other facilities were completed that could
handle 30,000 barrels per day of crude oil. Commercial export of crude oil began in June
1946. Production amounted to 5.9 million barrels in 1946 and 16.2
million barrels in 1947. KOC subsequently discovered seven additional
oil fields, and production continued to increase until it peaked in
1972. (In 1954 KOC's parent company, APOC, was renamed British
Petroleum-- BP.)
In the years after World War II, other companies received smaller
concessions, in particular for offshore oil, but KOC, which the
government nationalized in 1976 (retroactively to 1975), retained the
lion's share. Subsequent concessions contained progressively better
terms for Kuwait, partly because of the entrance of small oil companies
anxious to acquire crude oil sources and partly because of the
activities and exchanges of information among oil-producing states.
Payments were substantially higher, the length of concessions was
shorter, schedules for relinquishing underdeveloped areas were
established, and opportunities for Kuwaiti participation in the
companies were increased.
The American Independent Oil Company (Aminoil) was the successful
bidder for Kuwait's rights in the Neutral Zone, receiving in June 1948 a
sixty-year concession for exploration and production. Aminoil, which was
owned by a number of small United States oil companies, had a joint
operation with the Getty Oil Company, which held the Saudi rights in the
Neutral Zone. The Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco, the main
developer of Saudi Arabia's oil fields) reportedly viewed the terms
given Kuwait by Aminoil as unfavorable and relinquished its concession
in the Neutral Zone, which Getty won. Aminoil started exploratory
drilling in 1949 but did not strike oil until 1953. Production began in
1954. Production from the Neutral Zone was shared between the two
countries, and Aminoil paid royalties and taxes to Kuwait, whereas Getty
paid royalties and taxes to Saudi Arabia. The zone was partitioned in
1969, but the partitioning did not affect the concession arrangements.
A group of Japanese companies formed the Arabian Oil Company (AOC),
which obtained concessions from both Saudi Arabia (1957) and Kuwait
(1958) for exploration and production in the offshore area of the zone.
AOC started drilling in 1959, and production of crude oil began in 1961.
Production was shared between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Some AOC
production was from the northern tip of Saudi Arabia's As Saffaniyah
field, the world's largest offshore field. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait each
purchased 10 percent ownership of AOC soon after its formation.
From the beginning of the development of the oil industry, Kuwait's
leaders had wanted to participate actively in oil policy and company
management. BP and Gulf Oil rejected the demands of the amir for a Kuwaiti on the KOC board of directors, but the
Kuwaiti government obtained some participation in the AOC concession
agreement, although it was more symbolic than real.
Frozen out of oil operations by the major oil companies, Kuwait
started to develop its own proficiency in the oil industry. The Kuwait
National Petroleum Company (KNPC) was formed in 1960 with the expressed
intention of becoming an integrated oil company. Its founding charter
allowed it to engage in almost any activity concerning oil at home or
abroad. It began with 60 percent government ownership; the remaining
shares were held by private Kuwaiti investors. The government bought out
private investors in 1975.
KNPC started operations on a small scale, in part because of Kuwait's
acute shortage of skilled workers. It bought out KOC's local oil
distribution facilities and became the sole supplier of oil in Kuwait.
It participated in foreign refinery operations and established
subsidiaries and facilities abroad for marketing oil products.
Departments for exploration and other aspects of field operations were
established within KNPC to work with foreign companies in the concession
area that KNPC had received from the government.
Using foreign expertise and equipment, KNPC built a modern refinery
to use gas in the Al Burqan field, which would otherwise have been
flared, in a hydrogenation process to convert crude oil into products
and to produce sulfur as a useful by-product. Kuwait's crude is heavy
and contains considerable sulfur, so the design of the refinery was
excellently fitted to the local circumstances to turn out a product
superior to that of a regular refinery. The refinery at Ash Shuaybah was
completed in 1968, but technical problems initially caused an
unprofitable mix of products. Between cost overruns during construction
and a poor range of products, KNPC lost money until the problems were
corrected. Nonetheless, KNPC provided useful training for Kuwaitis in
upper levels of oil company management.
As oil revenues began to mount, officials increasingly favored
investing a larger part of the funds in downstream and upstream oil operations. The petrochemical industry offered fewer
obstacles to industrial development than most other industries. It
needed relatively few workers, large capital investments, and
substantial oil and gas sources--requirements that fit the country's
circumstances well. Yet despite the apparent advantages, the government
moved slowly, perhaps for good reason. In 1963 the Petrochemicals
Industries Company (PIC) was formed, with 80 percent state ownership. It
began with modest facilities but acquired additional plants over the
years through purchase of other companies and construction of new
facilities. In 1976 the government bought out private investors, and PIC
became wholly government owned. PIC's chemical complexes were the
country's largest manufacturing plants. A key ingredient was a
gas-gathering system to use the gases produced in association with crude
oil. Until the late 1970s, a considerable part of the gases had been
flared. In addition to the gas-gathering system, the government expanded
its investment in oil-refining capacity and petrochemical facilities.
Kuwait's goal of real participation in and control over its oil
industry was achieved in 1976 when the government bought KOC, including
the refinery and other installations. BP and Gulf Oil continued to
provide technical services and personnel in return for access to oil
supplies and service fees. In 1976 Kuwait concluded negotiations to
purchase 60 percent of its one-half share of AOC's offshore operations.
Negotiations for 60 percent of Aminoil foundered over the value of
assets. In 1977 Kuwait nationalized the firm, paying compensation on the
basis of an official estimate of the value of assets. Aminoil became the
Kuwait Wafrah Oil Company. In 1978 operations of the Al Wafrah field
passed to KOC, and KNPC took over the former Aminoil refinery and
shipping terminal at Mina Abd Allah.
As oil revenues rose in the 1970s, the Kuwaiti government continued
its upstream and downstream expansion, establishing the Kuwait Petroleum
Corporation (KPC) as a semiautonomous state organization in January 1980
to rationalize the organizational structure of its oil industry. KPC
became the country's national integrated oil company, with KOC, KNPC,
PIC, the Kuwait Oil Tanker Company, and the Kuwait Foreign Petroleum
Exploration Company among its more important wholly owned subsidiaries.
KOC remained primarily responsible for domestic exploration and
production of oil and gas, and KNPC was mainly the refining subsidiary.
KPC also entered into joint ventures with and purchased shares in
foreign companies involved in various aspects of the oil business. In
1981 KPC bought the Santa Fe International Corporation, a United States
drilling and energy engineering firm. Other KPC activities abroad
included part ownership in refineries and petrochemical plants,
exploration and drilling in foreign concession areas, and purchase of
retail outlets for petroleum products. By the late 1980s, Kuwait was
producing 20,000 bpd in overseas holdings, primarily in the United
States and in the North Sea. It was exporting 614,000 bpd as refined
products. Initially, Kuwait sold this oil primarily to Japan and
Pakistan, but beginning in the late 1980s, it also sold through a large
West European retail network it purchased, selling oil under the logo
Q8.
Oil production levels fluctuated in the period after World War II. At first, production of crude oil rose rapidly,
peaking at nearly 1.1 billion barrels in 1970 before falling to more
modest levels. Until 1972 much of the expansion resulted from increasing
crude oil production. For the rest of the 1970s, oil production was
substantially lower, but higher revenues per barrel financed continued
economic growth.
With regard to prices, Kuwaiti officials followed moderate policies
between conflicting objectives. Initially, Kuwait actively supported the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which at times
required oil production levels below that necessary to cover government
expenditures. Kuwait, for example, reduced oil production and exports
during the Arab oil embargo associated with the October 1973 War. The
Kuwaiti government believed that oil in the ground was worth more to
future generations than holding such paper claims as securities and
corporate shares that were subject to price inflation, exchange-rate
risks, and sequestration. In 1973 the Kuwaiti government set an oil
production limit of 3 million bpd under pressure from the National
Assembly. In 1976 the production ceiling was reduced to 2 million bpd.
In the 1980s, a surplus of oil relative to demand began to emerge on the
world market, and oil prices fell dramatically. As surplus oil supplies
grew, Kuwait's production ceiling was further reduced to 1.5 million
bpd, although actual production was appreciably lower. But as oil prices
fell, and with it revenues, Kuwait increasingly resisted OPEC's efforts
to limit its production. In 1986 Kuwait reluctantly agreed to an OPEC
limit of 1.25 million bpd (not counting, however, output of the Divided
Zone that, during this period, was earmarked as aid for Iraq). In 1989
it refused an OPEC level of just under 1.1 million bpd. In early 1990,
Kuwait produced nearly 2 million bpd, a factor that the Iraqi government
cited in its decision to invade Kuwait in August.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Kuwait economically had been little more than
an oil well: oil was the source of most of its revenues, and the bulk of
its exports were oil, mostly crude oil. But in the 1970s, officials
increased refining capacity, and by the 1980s, refined products gained
in value relative to crude oil exports. By the 1980s, Kuwait controlled
its hydrocarbon resources and had created an international oil company,
KPC, that was among the world's largest corporations. Through its
subsidiaries, KPC was involved in all aspects of the oil industry and in
many countries of the world. This was a remarkable achievement in view
of the fact that only twenty-five years had passed since Kuwait entered
the oil industry.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Diversification
Persian Gulf States
Industrial development in Kuwait has always faced formidable
obstacles. Kuwait, so rich in oil, is poor in most other resources,
which limits the manufacturing industries that can be established. No
metallic minerals and few suitable nonmetallic minerals are locally
available. Most raw materials for the early industries--for example,
cement--had to be imported. The limited supply of fresh water is another
constraint. In a country without streams and with few underground
sources, water is crucial to industrial development. The pre-oil system,
where local sailing boats carried water from Iraq to Kuwait, could not
meet manufacturing needs. The small size of the domestic market
restricts production for local consumption to small-scale operations.
The open economy, which was maintained before and after the discovery of
oil, provided little protection from foreign competition. The small
Kuwaiti labor force, possessing limited skills, is another constraint.
After the discovery of oil, labor costs escalated, and in a few years
wages in Kuwait were higher than those in almost any other area of the
Middle East, further hindering industrial development. Also, the
commercial tradition in the country predisposes most entrepreneurs to
invest in trade rather than manufacturing. As a result of these
obstacles, industry, excluding oil-related industry, expanded very
slowly.
The discovery of oil created a demand for new industries, initially
satisfied by the oil company itself. Oil operations particularly needed
water, electricity, and refined petroleum products, and these were the
first modern industries created in the state. The government took over
production of water and electricity, expanding the systems and
subsidizing their use. Air conditioning provided the largest demand,
with peak summer loads more than five times minimum winter loads,
creating substantial idle capacity for about six months of the year. The
need for larger and more regular supplies of water, no matter how
costly, compelled KOC to install the first desalination plant. In 1953
the government installed the first unit, which had a capacity of 3.8
million liters per day. Subsequently, the government claimed that it had
developed the most advanced continuously operating desalination
facilities in the world.
Although oil spurred the first industries in Kuwait, after the
initial push, oil did not generate much in the way of new industries
locally. As a result of the many obstacles that industry faced and in
light of the massive oil revenues, the government began to play a major
role in all industrial development. The government undertook some
efforts at diversification in the 1950s, but the first major push for
industrialization occurred with the establishment of the Ash Shuaybah
Industrial Zone in 1964. The zone comprised electricity and water
distillation plants, expanded port facilities, metalworks, and plants
manufacturing chlorine, asphalt, cement, pilings, and prefabricated
housing. The government provided such necessary facilities as roads,
gas, electricity, water, sewerage, port facilities, communications, and
rented or leased industrial sites at nominal rates. Most of the larger
industrial facilities were located in the zone. Other small
manufacturing establishments were located in the populated parts of the
country.
The government provided a range of incentives to private
manufacturers who were predominantly local--51 percent Kuwaiti ownership
was required of all businesses. In addition to infrastructural support,
financial aid included equity capital and loans. In 1974 the government
created the Investment Bank of Kuwait to provide medium- and long-term
industrial financing at low interest rates. The government also gave
local industry preference in government purchases, protection from
imports in some cases, and exemption from customs duties and taxes. In
the 1970s, the government's Industrial Development Committee and the
Industrial Bank of Kuwait established a number of incentives for
private-sector participation, such as technical aid and preferential
guaranteed markets in state industry. Nonetheless, industry in Kuwait
never enjoyed the same level of state support that it did in other gulf
states. The government, having made a conscious decision to invest its
revenues overseas and locally in such human resources as education and
health care, gave only minimal support, by the standards of other
oil-producing countries, to non-oil manufacturing.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Agriculture and Fishing
Persian Gulf States
Agriculture has also seen minimal development. Kuwait's desert
climate sustains little vegetation. Kuwait has no rivers, only a few
wadis that fill with winter and spring rain. Scant rainfall, little
irrigation water, and poor soils have always limited farming in Kuwait.
Before the discovery of oil, several occupations contributed to the
economy--nomads moving livestock to the sparse forage in the desert,
pearling, and fishing--but none of these occupations provided much
beyond subsistence. Once the government began receiving oil revenues,
the contribution of other sectors to national income was reduced still
further. Economic growth and welfare measures since World War II drew
workers away from historical pursuits and lessened the role of
agriculture. In the late 1980s, fewer than 10,000 people were employed
in agriculture. The government invested some money in developing
hydroponics to increase vegetable production. Kuwait's most important
crops in 1989 were tomatoes (40,000 tons), dried onions (25,000 tons),
melons (7,000 tons), dates (1,000 tons), and smaller amounts of
cucumbers and eggplants. Some of these crops are grown hydroponically.
Although Kuwait manages to export some vegetables, its agricultural
potential remains limited.
Fishing provides a minor but important economic contribution. Much of
the fishing for the local market was historically from small boats,
including many native dhows. Large-scale commercial fishing is mostly
confined to the United Fisheries of Kuwait, which operates a fleet of
vessels as far afield as the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, and the Atlantic
Ocean. United Fisheries is a large, international firm that processes
and exports part of its catch, particularly frozen shrimp. However, in
the 1970s overfishing in the gulf by many states considerably reduced
catches of fish and shrimp. In 1989 Kuwait had a catch of approximately
4,700 tons of fish and 3,000 tons of shrimp and prawns. In the late
1980s, war and environmental damage, including oil spills, also reduced
the attractiveness of the gulf fishing industry.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Banking and Finance
Persian Gulf States
Before independence in 1961, foreign monies, largely the Indian rupee
in the period between 1930 and 1960, circulated in Kuwait. At
independence the Kuwaiti dinar was introduced, and a currency board was
established to issue dinar notes and to maintain reserves. In 1959 the
Central Bank of Kuwait was created and took over the functions of the
currency board and the regulation of the banking system.
The first bank in Kuwait was established in 1941 by British
investors. Subsequent laws prohibited foreign banks from conducting
business in the country. When the British bank's concession ended in
1971, the government bought 51 percent ownership. In 1952 another bank,
the National Bank of Kuwait, the largest commercial bank, was founded.
The establishment of several other banks, all under Kuwaiti ownership,
followed. Some specialized financial institutions also emerged: the
Credit and Savings Bank, established in 1965 by the government to
channel funds into domestic projects in industry, agriculture, and
housing; the Industrial Bank of Kuwait, established in 1974 to fill the
gap in medium- and long-term industrial financing; and the private Real
Estate Bank of Kuwait. By the 1980s, Kuwait's banks were among the
region's largest and most active financial institutions. Then came the
Suq al Manakh stock market crash in 1982.
The large revenues of the 1970s left many private individuals with
substantial funds at their disposal. These funds prompted a speculation
boom in the official stock market in the mid-1970s that culminated in a
small crash in 1977. The government's response to this crash was to bail
out the affected investors and to introduce stricter regulations. This
response unintentionally contributed to the far larger stock market
crash of the 1980s by driving the least risk-averse speculators into the
technically illegal alternate market, the Suq al Manakh. The Suq al
Manakh had emerged next to the official stock market, which was
dominated by several older wealthy families who traded, largely among
themselves, in very large blocks of stock. The Suq al Manakh soon became
the market for the new investor and, in the end, for many old investors
as well.
Share dealings using postdated checks created a huge unregulated
expansion of credit. The crash of the unofficial stock market finally
came in 1982, when a dealer presented a postdated check for payment and
it bounced. A house of cards collapsed. Official investigation revealed
that total outstanding checks amounted to the equivalent of US$94
billion from about 6,000 investors. Kuwait's financial sector was badly
shaken by the crash, as was the entire economy. The crash prompted a
recession that rippled through society as individual families were
disrupted by the investment risks of particular members made on family
credit. The debts from the crash left all but one bank in Kuwait
technically insolvent, held up only by support from the Central Bank.
Only the National Bank of Kuwait, the largest commercial bank, survived
the crisis intact. In the end, the government stepped in, devising a
complicated set of policies, embodied in the Difficult Credit Facilities
Resettlement Program. The implementation of the program was still
incomplete in 1990 when the Iraqi invasion changed the entire financial
picture.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Foreign Investment
Persian Gulf States
From the very beginning, government officials were keenly aware that
oil was a depletable asset, that the country had few other resources,
and that preparations had to be made for the day when there would be no
more oil. As soon as the government began to receive oil revenues,
officials spent less than the treasury received, leaving a surplus in
the state's general reserve to be invested. Because of limited domestic
investment opportunities, most investments were made abroad. World Bank
economists estimate that about 25 percent of revenues were placed in
foreign assets during the 1950s, although the Kuwaiti government's
published data have always been vague about reserves as well as about
some other economic variables.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Kuwait began investing overseas in property
and businesses in Britain. In 1952 Kuwait established an office in
London, staffed with experienced British investment counselors who
guided the government's placement of funds. In the same year, Kuwait
created investment relations with a large New York bank. Because of the
vastly expanded oil revenues of the 1970s, Kuwait's overseas investment
program grew tremendously. In 1976 the government established the
Reserve Fund for Future Generations, into which it placed an initial
US$7 billion. It resolved to invest 10 percent of its revenues annually
in the reserve fund. Money from the fund, along with other government
revenues, was invested in overseas property and industry. In the 1970s,
most of these funds were invested in the United States and in Western
Europe: in German firms (such as Hoechst and DaimlerBenz , in each of
which Kuwait owned 25 percent), in property, and in most of the United
States Fortune Five Hundred firms. In the 1980s, Kuwait began
diversifying its overseas investments, placing more investments in
Japanese firms. By the late 1980s, Kuwait was earning more from these
overseas investments than it was from the direct sale of oil: in 1987
foreign investments generated US$6.3 billion, oil US$5.4 billion. The Financial
Times of London estimated Kuwait's overseas investments in early
1990 at more than US$100 billion, most of it in the Reserve Fund for
Future Generations.
The Iraqi invasion proved the importance of these investment
revenues. With oil revenues suspended, the government and population in
exile relied exclusively on investment revenues, including sales of
investments for sustenance, for their share of ongoing coalition
expenses and for postwar reconstruction and repair of the vital oil
industry.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Government and Politics
Persian Gulf States
Ruling Family
The modern political history of Kuwait began in the early eighteenth
century when a number of families of the Bani Utub section of the
Anaizah tribe migrated from central Arabia, settling eventually in
Kuwait. Once in Kuwait, they established a self-governing political
unit. The date of 1756 is conventionally chosen as the year when the
settlers decided to select as their leader Sabah, an Al Sabah shaykh,
who was succeeded by his son Abd Allah, in turn succeeded by his son
Jabir. All subsequent rulers historically have come from the Al Sabah
line, chosen by family council, in consultation with the leading
merchant families who, along with the tribal elite, exercise some
restriction over the shaykhs' political autonomy.
The shaykh's primary task was to represent his community in foreign
policy, negotiating with Ottoman Turkey and with neighboring tribes. The
one major and unsuccessful challenge to this system of rule occurred in
the 1760s when the Al Khalifa family disagreed with the Al Sabah and in
consequence left Kuwait for Qatar, and then Bahrain, where the Al
Khalifa continue to rule. Despite the rift, the two settlements
maintained good relations, including close trade ties.
In the nineteenth century, members of the Al Sabah oversaw the
growing trade and pearling settlement in Kuwait. The rulers also
developed a cordial relationship with Britain, beginning with the first
contacts with the British East India Company in 1775. As members of a
small, vulnerable settlement, Kuwait's rulers attempted to maintain a
polite but distant relationship with all the local powers, notably the
British, the Wahhabis of Arabia, and the Ottomans. It was only under Abd
Allah Al Sabah II, who ruled from 1866 to 1892, that Kuwait began to
edge away from this policy of neutrality. Abd Allah developed close ties
with the Ottomans, even taking the Ottoman title, albeit largely as a
formality, of provincial governor (qaimaqam) in 1871. In
practical terms, Kuwait's domestic politics remained unchanged because
the Ottoman government did not interfere in the selection of rulers and
laws. In any event, this tilt was completely reversed when, following
the four-year rule of Muhammad Al Sabah, Mubarak the Great acceded to
the rule from 1896 to 1915.
Kuwait came into the British sphere of influence at the end of the
nineteenth century when Mubarak sought British support against Ottoman
forces. The Ottomans were backing allies of Mubarak's brothers, Kuwait's
previous rulers, whom Mubarak had killed on taking power in 1896. Uneasy
about Ottoman intentions, Mubarak reversed his predecessors' pro-Ottoman
policy and approached Britain, seeking a more formal alliance. Britain,
concerned with growing European interests and notably with an Ottoman
concession to Germany for construction of a Berlin-to- Baghdad
railroad--with a proposed spur line to Kuwait--agreed. Britain signed a
treaty with Kuwait in 1899 that promised Mubarak British support and, in
return, gave Britain control of Kuwait's foreign policy. This treaty
governed relations between the two states until Kuwait's independence in
1961. It granted Britain tremendous influence, most notably in foreign
and economic policy.
After Mubarak's death, Kuwait was ruled by two of his sons, Jabir Al
Sabah (1915-17) and Salim Al Sabah (1917-21). Thereafter, with one
exception, only descendants of Mubarak through these two sons would rule
Kuwait, thus forming a major cleavage within the ruling family. After
Salim's death in 1921, Kuwait was ruled for nearly three decades by
Ahmad al Jabir Al Sabah. Ahmad al Jabir's rule witnessed a serious
effort to constrain ruling family power. In 1938 a rebellion, known
locally as the Majlis Movement, developed. New issues arose. Kuwait was
in the midst of a serious recession as a result of the general decline
of the pearling industry, the Great Depression, and a trade dispute with
Saudi Arabia that prompted a Saudi embargo. Simultaneously, the recently
signed oil concession with KOC promised better times ahead if the
resulting income were not monopolized by the ruling family. To prevent
that from happening, the leading merchants began petitioning the ruler
for a series of reforms. In June the merchants took their protest a step
further, holding elections for a legislative assembly to implement the
desired reforms using these new revenues. The Legislative Assembly ruled
for six months until finally put down by the ruler and his tribal
backers. The assembly, however, came to be viewed as Kuwait's first
prodemocracy movement. Its popularity gave the idea of formal
representation a place in Kuwaiti popular history.
Ahmad al Jabir was succeeded by his cousin Abd Allah as Salim Al
Sabah (1950-65), who oversaw the distribution of now substantial oil
revenues, the consequent emergence of a large bureaucratic state, and
the transformation of Kuwait into a wealthy oil-producing shaykhdom. In
terms of internal developments, Abd Allah as Salim made two
transformative political decisions. The first was to distribute these
new revenues broadly throughout the population, primarily through
wide-ranging social services, notably education and health care. The
second was to introduce a greater degree of political participation to
Kuwait in the form of the newly elected National Assembly. This body
held its first elections in 1963. Abd Allah as Salim also oversaw
Kuwait's transformation into a formally independent state on June 19,
1961, when he and British representatives signed new letters of
friendship to replace the treaty of 1899.
When Abd Allah as Salim died in 1965, he was succeeded by his brother
Sabah as Salim Al Sabah--a somewhat unusual choice in that he, like Abd
Allah as Salim, came from the Salim line rather than the Jabir line of
the family, breaking the alternation between the two sides of the family
that had existed since the rule of Mubarak's sons Jabir and Salim.
Nonetheless, Sabah as Salim's rule proved to be largely a continuation
and consolidation of policies set in place by Abd Allah as Salim. When
Sabah as Salim died in December 1977, he was succeeded by Shaykh Jabir
al Ahmad al Jabir Al Sabah, a succession that returned the former
pattern of alternation between the lines of Jabir and Salim.
The influence of external events has dominated Jabir al Ahmad's rule.
The first was the Iran-Iraq War, which rapidly increased the level of
political violence in this historically relatively peaceful shaykhdom.
Major events included the 1983 bombing of the United States embassy and,
probably most notable, the dramatic public assassination attempt on the
amir in 1985. The tension associated with the war also exacerbated
divisions within Kuwaiti society, notably that between Sunnis and Shia,
and prompted the amir increasingly to limit public participation in
political life. Although in 1980 Shaykh Jabir al Ahmad restored the
National Assembly (which Sabah as Salim had abolished in 1976), the
increasing political tension prompted him to do away with it again in
1986 and to introduce new measures curtailing civil and political
rights. These measures prompted a wide range of opposition
leaders--including old parliamentarians, Islamists (sometimes seen as
fundamentalists), and merchants--to form the Constitutional Movement of
1989-90, a prodemocracy movement calling for the restoration of the
National Assembly.
The second external event was the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August
1990, which, for the first time in Kuwait's history, placed the state
under direct foreign rule. Although sovereignty was restored in February
1991, events leading up to the invasion and the amir's behavior during
and after the occupation prompted open grumbling about the ruling family
itself. The criticism centered on the amir and the fact that most of the
ruling family spent the time of the Iraqi occupation in comfortable
exile abroad and delayed their return to the country after the war
ended.
In 1993 Shaykh Jabir al Ahmad still ruled Kuwait; his designated
successor, Prime Minister Saad al Abd Allah as Salim Al Sabah, also came
from the Al Sabah ruling family. Although the Al Sabah remained
paramount, the family as a ruling institution had changed dramatically
since it assumed its leading role in the mid-eighteenth century. First,
succession patterns within the family had changed. In the nineteenth
century, rule passed regularly from father to son. With the accession of
Mubarak in the late nineteenth century, a new pattern was established
that excluded all but Mubarak's line from the top position. This custom
is formalized in the Kuwaiti constitution and in practice created a new
pattern of alternation of rulers between the two lines of Mubarak's
sons, Jabir and Salim. It was in keeping with this pattern that Shaykh
Jabir al Ahmad (from the Jabir line) named as his crown prince and heir
apparent Saad al Abd Allah as Salim, from the Salim line.
The relationship between the ruling family and Kuwaiti society also
changed in more subtle ways. Members of the family other than the ruler,
once first among equals in a society where merchants and other elites
played an important role in decision making, became in the years after
oil was discovered far wealthier because their wealth was guaranteed by
a civil list--a list of sums appropriated to pay the expenses of a ruler
and his household. Ruling family members also became socially more
prominent and politically more important as they took over many of the
state's highest posts. In part, this transformation occurred as a result
of the emergence of a large state bureaucracy and the need Kuwaiti
rulers felt to fill the state's highest posts with loyal supporters,
notably kin.
<>Bureaucracy
<>Legislature
<>Constitution
<>The Media
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Bureaucracy
Persian Gulf States
Bureaucracy
Kuwait's large state bureaucracy emerged in the post-World War II
period as a result of the vast government revenues generated by oil.
Under the first oil concession, oil payments went directly from the oil
companies to the amir, who, along with his advisers, decided--initially,
rather informally--how much of the oil revenues would be spent and in
what ways. The historical elite, notably the merchants, objected to this
arrangement, most notably in the Majlis Movement of 1938. In time the
government instituted ministries, budgets, financial controls, and other
aspects of modern public administration, partly in response to such
public protests and partly from the practical necessities of carrying
out a variety of new state functions related to oil and to popular
distribution of revenues through state services.
At the top of this bureaucracy is the cabinet, under the prime
minister, a post that historically has been held by the crown prince.
The cabinet is appointed by the amir, who has the power to dismiss it
along with almost every senior executive official, including the crown
prince, local governors, and officers in the armed forces. Members of
the Al Sabah play an important role in the cabinet. Twelve of the
fifteen members in the original postindependence cabinet appointed in
January 1962 were from the ruling family. Although public criticism led
to a reduction in their numbers, in the 1970s and 1980s a large number
of ministers, including those in the most important posts, came from the
ruling family. The remaining cabinet ministers often came from prominent
families and from members of the National Assembly. These ministers were generally young (in their thirties and
forties), highly educated (nearly half with college degrees, some with
advanced degrees, especially in economics and business, often from
United States universities), and mostly Sunni.
In addition to the cabinet, Kuwait has several autonomous agencies
and public corporations. Their employees and those of the various
ministries comprise the bulk of the nation's civil servants. The civil
service grew tremendously in the years after independence as the state
developed a large bureaucracy devoted to spending oil revenues. The
largest state institutions are those providing social services, notably
education. Historically, this bureaucracy has been staffed largely by
foreigners. Although the government's policy has been to staff the civil
service with Kuwaitis to the extent possible, and although most employed
Kuwaitis work for the state, the government nonetheless relied heavily
on foreigners to fill positions at all levels before the Iraqi invasion.
A second factor contributing to the growth of the bureaucracy is the
government's guarantee of jobs to all citizens. Not only does the state
guarantee jobs, but it also offers Kuwaitis preferential treatment in
employment, including higher salaries and preference in advancement over
non-Kuwaitis. The government is the largest employer in the country.
Many Kuwaitis prefer government employment to other positions even when
it means undertaking routine tasks that underuse their skills and time.
Others hold jobs in both the public and the private sectors, working in
a government office in the morning and working privately in the
afternoon. Observers frequently have commented on the country's
excessive bureaucracy and overstaffing, to the extent that several
people are often assigned to what could be one job. Several efforts to
reform the civil service have not reduced the inefficiency and underuse
of available labor.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Legislature
Persian Gulf States
One of the most remarkable aspects of Kuwaiti politics in the
postindependence period is the National Assembly--one of the few elected
legislative bodies in the region. Preinvasion Kuwait was one of the most
politically open states in the region and the most open in the gulf. It
had a relatively free press and an assembly elected by a small
electorate of adult male citizens. The authors of the postindependence
constitution of 1962, aware of the precedent set in the 1938 Legislative
Assembly, saw the creation of an elected legislative body as an
important means to widen the popular consensus and thereby further
legitimize the rule of the Al Sabah, especially at a time when the
family's position was threatened by the Iraqi claim to the entire
territory of the new state. After the January 1963 election of the first
National Assembly, the body evolved to serve as a broad forum for
discussion and dissent. The men who dominated this assembly, however,
were not the historical elite but, with some exceptions, were Kuwaitis
who benefited from the state's generous welfare system. The historical
opposition, the merchants on whom the amir relied for money in the lean
pre-oil years, refrained from politics, devoting themselves instead to
investing the money the amir sent their way.
Although the constitution affords the assembly considerable power,
the body is limited by two major restrictions: the small size of the
electorate as defined by law, which restricts suffrage to most adult
male nationals whose ancestors were present in Kuwait in 1920; and the
power of the amir to dissolve the assembly virtually at will.
Nonetheless, the assembly plays a prominent role in raising issues of
public importance, reviewing and challenging government policies and
programs, and responding to constituent concerns. It helps give Kuwait a
much more open and public political life than that in other gulf states.
The roots of the National Assembly began in the 1961 elections for
the Constituent Assembly, which drafted a constitution and laid the
groundwork for elections in 1963 to the first National Assembly. The
1963 elections produced a solid opposition in the National Bloc, which
challenged government policy in a number of areas. The opposition was so
volatile that when elections were next held in 1967, opponents charged
the government with widespread election fraud in an effort to restrict
the contentious body. The new assembly indeed proved more pliable.
However, the 1971 elections returned a more confrontational assembly,
one that devoted much of its energies to the nationalization of the oil
company. Elections for the fourth assembly took place in 1975 and
produced a body more strongly opposed to the government than its
predecessor. In August 1976, Sabah as Salim dissolved the assembly and
introduced new restrictions on public assembly and speech. But in 1980,
because of renewed concern for popular support in light of the Iranian
Revolution of 1979 and the regional tension that accompanied the
subsequent Iran-Iraq War, the new amir, Shaykh Jabir al Ahmad, allowed
elections to be held. The fifth assembly was highly confrontational, as
was the sixth, elected in 1985. When in 1986 the assembly began
attacking members of the ruling family, primarily in connection with the
handling of the 1982 Suq al Manakh stock market crash, the amir again
suspended the assembly. The minister of justice, a member of the ruling
family, was forced to resign because of allegations he had used public
influence for personal gain in resolving the crash. As in 1976, external
pressures from Saudi Arabia, which was highly critical of Kuwait's more
participatory system, probably played a role in the amir's decision.
Opposition to the decision again to suspend the assembly manifested
itself in the Constitutional Movement of 1989-90. In 1989 members of the
dissolved assembly began organizing and calling for reinstitution of the
assembly and articles of the 1962 constitution that the amir had
suspended as well in 1986. They were joined by many merchants,
previously politically quiescent--but now alienated by the ruler's
inability to provide the level of economic support they had come to
expect owing to the fall in oil prices--and by such others as
professionals, liberals, and Islamists. The movement quickly spread
through the diwaniyat (sing., diwaniyah), private
weekly social meetings in the homes of prominent families, until it
became a series of popular antigovernment demonstrations. As the
movement developed, the amir and the crown prince responded with both
carrots and sticks. In an effort to divide the opposition, the
government announced in 1990 that although it would not restore the
National Assembly it would establish a National Council comprising fifty
elected members and twenty-five appointed members. The new body would
thus be less representative than the old assembly. It would also have
less power: for example, it could not enact legislation directly. The
opposition opposed such an extra-constitutional council, viewing it not
only as an effort to preclude a genuinely representative assembly but
also as a way for the government to prepare loyalist candidates in the
event that genuine assembly elections were held. (Indeed, when National
Assembly elections were eventually scheduled in the postinvasion period,
a large number of National Council members announced they would run.)
Although opposition leaders and others boycotted the elections, the new
body was nonetheless constituted following elections for the
nonappointed seats in June 1990. This new body had just begun meeting
when the Iraqi invasion rendered it obsolete. The National Council met
again on several occasions after the end of the Persian Gulf War in 1991
but was eliminated when the National Assembly was reconstituted by
elections in October 1992.
Elections for the National Assembly were held on October 5, 1992, by
amiri decree, in accordance with the 1962 constitution. Seven political
groups (parties remained banned) backed candidates in the campaign. The
groups included the Islamic Constitutional Movement, the Islamic
Parliamentarian Alliance, the Islamic National Alliance (a Shia group),
and the Democratic Forum (progressive former Arab nationalists). The
election proceeded without major incident. Opposition and independent
candidates, including many associated with the prodemocracy movement,
won the majority, thirty to thirty-five of the assembly's fifty seats.
Progovernment candidates won the remaining fifteen to twenty seats,
primarily in tribal constituencies. Islamist candidates won nineteen
seats, a dramatic increase over the nine they had held in the former
assembly. Seventeen of the elected members had served in previous
assemblies.
Among the issues the members promised to raise in the new assembly
were public spending and related financial concerns, foreign policy and
the events leading up to the Iraqi invasion, the political status of
women (many of whom demonstrated for suffrage during the elections), and
Islamic law. Following the elections, Prime Minister and Crown Prince
Saad al Abd Allah announced the formation on October 17 of the new
cabinet. The cabinet included fewer members of the ruling family than
had previous cabinets and six National Assembly opposition members among
the sixteen ministers. The new cabinet, however, still left family
members holding key posts, including that of minister of foreign
affairs, which was returned to the long-serving but unpopular Sabah al
Ahmad Al Sabah.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Constitution
Persian Gulf States
In June 1961, following independence and under the shadow of an Iraqi
threat, Amir Abd Allah as Salim announced that he would establish a
constitution for Kuwait. In December, elections were held for a
Constituent Assembly, which then drafted a constitution promulgated as
Law Number 1 on November 11, 1962. Although articles of the constitution
have since been suspended twice, the document nonetheless remains the
basic statement of intent for the Kuwaiti political system.
The constitution opens with the declaration that Kuwait is "an
independent sovereign Arab State," and its people are "a part
of the Arab Nation." Islam is "the religion of the
state," and the sharia (Islamic law) is "a main source of
legislation." The latter phrase has been the source of much debate,
with Islamist opposition members pressing to have Islam made
"the" source of legislation.
The constitution defines Kuwait as "a hereditary Amirate, the
succession to which shall be in the descendants of the late Mubarak Al
Sabah." This clause codifies what has become practice: the
semiformal alternation of power since 1915 between the lines of
Mubarak's two ruling sons: Jabir and Salim.
Although granting the amir substantial power, the constitution also
provides for political participation by the citizens. The system of
government is defined in Article 6 as "democratic, under which
sovereignty resides in the people, the source of all powers."
Articles 79 to 122 establish the National Assembly and lay out the rules
governing its formation, rights, and duties.
Individual rights protected by the constitution are extensive and
include personal liberty and equality before the law, freedom to hold
beliefs and express opinions, and freedom of the press. The residences
of citizens are inviolable, the torture and the deportation of Kuwaiti
citizens are prohibited, and the accused are assumed innocent until
proven guilty. Also guaranteed is the freedom to form associations and
trade unions. The constitution guarantees the independence of the
judiciary and designates the Supreme Council of the Judiciary as its
highest body and guarantor of judicial independence.
The constitution also grants citizens a number of social rights,
which form the basis for Kuwait's extensive welfare system. The state is
constitutionally obligated to care for the young and to aid the old, the
ill, and the disabled. It is obliged to provide public education and to
attend to public health. The constitution provides for state involvement
in the national economy to the degree that these obligations
necessitate. However, Articles 16 through 19 protect private property,
stating that "private property is inviolable" and reminding
citizens that "inheritance is a right governed by the Islamic
Sharia." Article 20 stipulates that "the national economy
shall be based on social justice. It is founded on fair cooperation
between public and private activities. Its aim shall be economic
development, increase of productivity, improvement of the standard of
living and achievement of prosperity for citizens, all within the limits
of the law." Duties of citizens include national defense,
observance of public order and respect for public morals, andpayment of
taxes. These rights and obligations, however, apply only to Kuwaiti
citizens. The remainder of the population have few political and civil
rights and enjoy restricted access to the benefits of the state welfare
system.
In August 1976, in reaction to heightened assembly opposition to his
policies, the amir suspended four articles of the constitution concerned
with political and civil rights (freedom of the press and dissolution of
the legislature) and the assembly itself. In 1980, however, the
suspended articles of the constitution were reinstated along with the
National Assembly. In 1982 the government submitted sixteen
constitutional amendments that, among other things, would have allowed
the amir to declare martial law for an extended period and would have
increased both the size of the legislature and the length of terms of
office. In May 1983, the proposals were formally dropped after several
months of debate. Nonetheless, the issue of constitutional revisions
continued as a topic of discussion in both the National Assembly and the
palace. In 1986 the constitution was again suspended, along with the
National Assembly. As with the previous suspension, popular opposition
to this move emerged; indeed, the prodemocracy movement of 1989-90 took
its name, the Constitutional Movement, from the demand for a return to
constitutional life. This opposition became more pronounced following
the Iraqi occupation, which abrogated all constitutional rights, and
following Kuwait's return to sovereignty in 1991. In early 1992, many
press restrictions were lifted. After the October 1992 election, the
National Assembly exercised its constitutional right to review all amiri
decrees promulgated while the assembly was in dissolution.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - The Media
Persian Gulf States
According to Kuwait's 1991 constitution, "freedom of opinion is
guaranteed to everyone . . . within the limits of the law." The
1961 Press and Publishing Law establishes fines and prison terms for the
publication of banned material, which includes reports critical of the
government. In practice, this provision has been used only rarely, and
Kuwait is known for its press freedom. In 1986, however, the government
took a number of measures to repress political dissent. New censorship
regulations formed a part of these measures. The Ministry of Information
requires all publications to submit copy to the ministry in advance for
approval and forbids criticism of the ruler and his family, other Arab
leaders, or Islam, as well as the acceptance of foreign funding.
As a result of the Iraqi invasion, Iraqi forces took over all media.
A few Kuwaiti newspapers and Radio Kuwait managed to operate outside the
country. After the war, in April 1991 the six opposition groups joined
in calling for a free press. In January 1992, the government lifted
censorship, but journalists continued to experience various
restrictions. As of 1993, the press, radio, and television were
gradually recovering and rebuilding facilities the Iraqis had destroyed.
The Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) is theoretically independent but in
practice is an arm of the Ministry of Information. Newspapers are
generally privately owned and consist of seven dailies, five in Arabic
and two in English (the Arab Times and Kuwait Times),
as well as a number of weeklies. The largest daily is Al Qabas
(Firebrand), which is independent and had a circulation of about 120,000
before the war. Two smaller dailies, Al Anba (News) and Ar
Ray al Amm (Public Opinion), each with a prewar circulation of
80,000, are more conservative and support the government. With regard to
other information media, the Ministry of Information operates the three
stations of Radio Kuwait and the Kuwait Television station.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Foreign Relations
Persian Gulf States
As the Iraqi invasion demonstrated, Kuwait's large oil revenues and
inherently small defense capabilities gave it tremendous vulnerability.
Historically, until the Iraqi invasion, Kuwaiti leaders had always dealt
with that vulnerability through diplomacy, trying to find allies that
would protect them while maintaining as much independence as possible
from those allies by playing them off against each other. Historically,
the most important ally was Britain. Kuwait's relationship with Britain
came about at the bidding of the early Kuwaiti leader Shaykh Mubarak in
an effort to deter a still more troublesome actor, the Ottoman Empire.
As one consequence of the 1899 treaty, which gave Kuwait a better status
than was the case in British treaties with other possessions, the
British presence remained somewhat distant, and British officials
meddled less frequently in local politics.
The relationship with Britain continued beyond independence on June
19, 1961, and the new agreement between independent Kuwait and Britain
promised continued British protection as necessary. That protection
proved necessary when Iraq, six days after Kuwait's independence,
declared Kuwait a part of Iraq and sent troops toward the amirate in
support of that claim. Because Kuwait's army was too small to defend the
state, British troops arrived, followed soon after by forces from the
League of Arab States (Arab League), in the face of which Iraqi forces
withdrew.
As Britain increasingly withdrew from the gulf in the 1970s and
1980s, Kuwait was forced to look for other sources of support. Although
Kuwaiti leaders tried to maintain a degree of neutrality between the
superpowers--Kuwait had an early and sustained economic, military, and
diplomatic relationship with the Soviet Union--in the end it was obliged
to turn to the United States for support. The Iran-Iraq War was the
decisive factor in consolidating closer ties with the United States.
Although at the outset of the war Kuwait was an outspoken critic of
United States military presence in the gulf, during the war this
position changed. When Kuwaiti ships became the target of Iranian
attacks, Kuwait's security situation deteriorated, and Kuwait approached
the Soviet Union and the United States with requests to reflag and thus
protect its beleaguered tankers. As soon as the Soviet Union responded
positively to the request, the United States followed. The ground was
thus laid for subsequent United States support.
<>Persian
Gulf War
<>RECONSTRUCTION
AFTER THE PERSIAN GULF WAR
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - Persian Gulf War
Persian Gulf States
On August 2, 1990, Iraqi forces invaded and occupied Kuwait. On
February 26, 1991, United States-led coalition forces restored Kuwaiti
sovereignty. These paired events represented both the failure and the
success of Kuwait's foreign policy.
The primary impetus for the invasion lay in the dynamics of internal
Iraqi politics--economic and political concerns after the long,
debilitating, and ultimately unsuccessful Iran-Iraq War. However,
economic and political relations between Iraq and Kuwait provided the
context for conflict.
Iraq's first financial disagreement with Kuwait related to oil
policy. Iraq objected to Kuwait's production beyond OPEC quotas and the
consequent contribution that overproduction made to lowering oil prices
internationally. Iraq also claimed Kuwait was siphoning oil from the
shared Ar Rumaylah oil field straddling the Iraq-Kuwait border. During
the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq ceased production from its side of the field
while Kuwait continued operations. Kuwait asserted it had taken oil only
from its own side of the field; Iraq claimed it had poached. Another
financial disagreement with Kuwait concerned the estimated US$13 billion
that Kuwait had lent Iraq during the Iran-Iraq War, a debt that Iraq
wished Kuwait to forgive. These financial claims were set in a broader
context. The Iraqi government experienced serious financial strains
following the war with Iran; nearby Kuwait had apparently ample
resources. To obtain these resources, Iraq put forward whatever
financial claims it could.
In addition to economic issues, Iraq also disagreed with Kuwait over
borders. This claim had two somewhat contradictory dimensions. Iraq
first disputed the location of the border and then reaffirmed its claim
to all of Kuwait. The latter claim rested on the argument that Iraq had
once ruled Kuwait. This assertion to historical sovereignty over Kuwait
was not solidly grounded: Kuwait had always been a self-governing
political entity. Despite Ottoman Iraq's historic interest in Kuwait, it
had never ruled the shaykhdom. When Kuwait was first established, the
area was under the control of the Bani Khalid of Arabia, not the
Ottomans. For a brief period in the late nineteenth century, Kuwait
moved closer to the Ottomans, and for a short time Abd Allah as Salim
held the Ottoman title of qaimaqam, or provincial governor;
part of the Iraqi claim invoked this fact. After Britain and Kuwait signed the 1899 treaty,
Ottoman forces, anxious to overthrow Mubarak, had no place in the
shaykhdom. British forces came to Mubarak's support as needed in favor
of Kuwaiti independence.
Kuwait's status was again a matter of international discussion in the
period around World War I. In 1913 British and Ottoman representatives
drew up the draft Anglo-Ottoman Convention in which Britain recognized
Ottoman suzerainty over Kuwait but at the same time declared Kuwait an
autonomous district of the Ottoman Empire. The convention conditioned
recognition of Ottoman interests in Kuwait on the promise of Ottoman
noninterference in the internal affairs of Kuwait. The Iraqi
government's later assertion that this constituted British recognition
of Iraqi jurisdiction in Kuwait was weak. The document specifically
recognized Kuwait's historical political autonomy and disallowed Iraqi
interference in Kuwait's domestic affairs. In any event, the document
was never ratified, and at the beginning of World War I, Britain moved
closer to Kuwait, not further away. At the end of World War I, the
Ottoman Empire was dissolved. In the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, Turkey
renounced claims to all former Ottoman provinces.
In the interwar years, the border question again arose. In 1922 the
British convened a conference at Al Uqayr in Saudi Arabia that set Saudi
Arabia's borders with Kuwait and Iraq but not Kuwait and Iraq's border
with each other. However, in 1923 the British high commissioner in Iraq
sent a memorandum to the political agent in Kuwait laying out the border
between Kuwait and Iraq. When in 1932 Iraq applied to the League of
Nations for membership as an independent state, it included information
on the borders from the memorandum.
Iraq thus seemed to be moving toward acceptance of its border with
Kuwait when the discovery of oil, the promise of more Kuwaiti oil
revenues, and the related Majlis Movement occurred. As the Majlis
Movement grew, Iraq began to support dissidents in Kuwait and
simultaneously put forward claims to Kuwait. Iraq also explored the idea
of building a port on Kuwait's coast to give Iraq an alternative to its
port of Basra. Iraq began expressing interest in the islands of Bubiyan
and Warbah as well. The Majlis Movement in Kuwait failed, however, and
Iraq had to await another opportunity.
As long as Britain was there to support Kuwait, Iraq could do little
more than assert a verbal claim. When Kuwait became independent in 1961,
the Iraqi government tested Britain's resolve by bringing forces to
Kuwait's border in support of its claims on the shaykhdom. British and
Arab League forces, however, forestalled any Iraqi military action.
In 1963 a new government came to power in Iraq. Anxious to mend
fences, this government formally recognized Kuwait and signed an
agreement recognizing the borders between the two states as those set
forth in Iraq's 1932 application to the League of Nations. Iraq then
dropped its objection to Kuwait's membership in the UN and in the Arab
League and established diplomatic relations, including the exchange of
ambassadors, with Kuwait.
Nonetheless, tensions lingered. During the 1960s and 1970s, a series
of border incidents took place, and there was continuing Iraqi pressure
for Kuwait to relinquish, or at least offer longterm leases on, the
islands of Warbah and Bubiyan. In the 1980s, relations between the two
states appeared to improve as Iraq, desperate for Kuwaiti financial
support in its war with Iran, was careful not to press its unpopular
claims. Both sides claimed sincerity in their historical effort to
negotiate the border issue. When the war ended, however, the border
issue reappeared.
The dispute itself does not seem to have been a precipitating factor
in the invasion. When Iraq entered Kuwait in August 1990, it claimed to
do so in support of a Kuwaiti rebellion. When no pro-Iraqi rebellion (or
even bloc) emerged, and Iraq found itself unable to set up a pliable
Kuwaiti government, it was forced to resort to direct occupation. It was
only at this point that the Iraqi claim to Kuwait resurfaced. On August
9, one week after the invasion, Iraq formally annexed Kuwait, adding the
northern part of the country, including the Ar Rumaylah oil field and
the islands of Warbah and Bubiyan, to Iraq's province of Basra and
creating a separate province out of the rest of Kuwait.
After Kuwait's liberation, the UN established a five-member boundary
commission to demarcate the Kuwait-Iraq boundary in accordance with UN
Security Council Resolution 687, which reaffirmed the inviolability of
the Iraq-Kuwait border. In April 1992, the commission announced its
findings, which demarcated the Kuwaiti border with Iraq about 570 meters
to the north near the Iraqi town of Safwan and slightly north in the
region of the contested Ar Rumaylah oil field. These modifications gave
Kuwait six oil wells in the field and part of the Iraqi naval base of
Umm Qasr. Kuwait accepted the commission's finding and announced it
intended to build a security fence along its border with Iraq as an
advance warning system. Iraq responded to the findings with an angry
letter in May to the UN secretary general rejecting the commission's
findings. Domestically, it continued to refer to Kuwait's territory as
an integral part of Iraq. Physical demarcation of the land boundary was
completed in November 1992.
The postwar period thus opened with many of the issues still
unresolved that had played a role in precipitating the invasion and war.
In Iraq the government of Saddam Husayn continued to assert its prewar
claim to Kuwait, coloring Kuwait's postwar foreign policy. As long as
Saddam Husayn remains at the helm in Iraq, Kuwait can feel no real
security. Even were he to be replaced, much of the insecurity that
haunts Kuwait and drives its foreign policy would remain. Kuwaitis see
the war as one waged by the Iraqi people and remember previous Iraqi
promises to respect Kuwait's sovereignty. Kuwait will continue to see
Iraq as a serious threat, regardless of what transpires in Iraq's
leadership.
Kuwait's postwar foreign policy is therefore based on two
assumptions. The first is that security, notably with regard to Iraq, is
its primary concern. The second is that security ultimately can be
guaranteed only by the United States. It is clear that Kuwait alone, or
even Kuwait with the support of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC),
established in May 1981, and other Arab members of the coalition--a
formal plan, known as the Damascus Declaration, to include Egypt and
Syria in gulf defense arrangements was moribund soon after its
issuance--cannot provide for its own defense needs. In August 1991,
Kuwait and the United States signed a US$81 million Foreign Military
Sales agreement. In September 1991, Kuwait signed a formal ten-year
defense agreement with the United States that permits the United States
to pre-position weapons and conduct military exercises in Kuwait at
Kuwaiti expense. However, the agreement does not provide for
establishing a permanent United States base there. In 1992 Kuwaiti and
United States forces carried out joint exercises under the defense
agreement. Kuwait has backed up its formal security arrangements with a
close political and economic relationship with the United States. It has
given much of its postwar reconstruction business to United States
firms, including civil reconstruction contracts that have been awarded
through the United States Army Corps of Engineers and many contracts
directly related to defense needs. The new pro-United States policy is
not without its detractors. In the summer of 1992, the speaker of
Kuwait's since-disbanded National Council asserted that the United
States ambassador was interfering in internal Kuwaiti affairs. The
Kuwaiti government and numerous Kuwaitis, however, condemned these
remarks.
Kuwait maintains similarly close ties with other members of the
coalition, signing defense agreements with Britain and in 1992
negotiating an agreement with France. It is seeking similar agreements
with the remaining Security Council permanent members, Russia and China.
It remains very close to Saudi Arabia. Relations with a regionally
resurgent Iran remain ambivalent. Kuwait's relationship with Iran
improved dramatically after the Iraqi invasion, which, in drawing
attention to Iraq's expansionist ambitions, seemingly vindicated Iran's
wartime position. An inevitable conflict remains, however, between
Kuwait's postwar aim of maintaining a high and visible level of United
States support and Iran's desire to limit United States presence in the
gulf. In mid-1992 this tension was seen in a minor dispute over the fate
of Kuwait Airways passenger aircraft flown by Iraq to Iran during the
war. Kuwait demanded the swift return of the aircraft, whereas Iran
demanded US$90 million for servicing them while they remained in Iran.
Kuwaiti policy toward states that had supported Iraq has been
unforgiving. One of the hard lessons Kuwait's rulers learned from the
Iran-Iraq War is that foreign aid does not buy popularity or enduring
political support. Some of its largest aid was to Jordan, Sudan, and
Yemen, countries that nonetheless failed to support the coalition.
Kuwait cut those countries from its foreign aid program once sovereignty
was restored. Kuwait was also a major donor to the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO). The PLO's wartime support of Iraq also resulted in
severance of Kuwaiti monetary and political support. In June 1992, the
National Council approved denying economic aid to Arab countries that
supported Iraq's invasion. Although foreign aid will continue as a
feature of Kuwait's foreign policy, Kuwait's limited postinvasion
revenues and its experience during the occupation indicate that such aid
would decrease.
Persian Gulf States
Kuwait - RECONSTRUCTION AFTER THE PERSIAN GULF WAR
Persian Gulf States
Postwar Society
The invasion and occupation had a transformative effect on virtually
every aspect of Kuwaiti life. Iraqi troops plundered and looted the city
of Kuwait. Iraqi occupation forces, according to reports of human rights
monitoring groups, tortured and summarily executed those suspected of
involvement in the underground opposition movement that quickly emerged.
In the course of the occupation, more than half the population,
foreigner and citizen alike, fled Kuwait. After the reestablishment of
Kuwaiti sovereignty in February 1991, and the restoration of basic
services soon afterward, the population began to return. In May 1991,
the government opened the doors to all Kuwaiti citizens who wished to
return. The government was far more reluctant to readmit nonnationals,
whom it considered a security risk and whom it regarded as not needed in
prewar numbers owing to the postwar constriction of the economy.
Consequently, relatively fewer nonnationals were allowed to return. A
National Bank of Kuwait report estimated the total population of Kuwait
in March 1992 at 1,175,000 people, 53 percent of whom were Kuwaitis,
compared with an estimated 27 percent Kuwaitis of the 2,155,000
population on the eve of the Iraqi invasion in 1990.
The postoccupation Kuwaiti population differs sharply from that
before the invasion. The population is divided psychologically between
those who experienced the direct horror of the Iraqi occupation and
survived and those who spent the war abroad in what seemed a relatively
comfortable exile to many of those who stayed in Kuwait. But the shared
experience has unified the country in other ways. Because Kuwait is a
small country with large family groups, almost every Kuwaiti lost family
members to the Iraqi forces, and there is continuing uncertainty over
the 600 or more Kuwaitis that remain prisoners in Iraq. The fate of
those who disappeared is an issue of national concern. Regardless of
personal losses and experiences during the occupation, the society as a
whole has been traumatized by the memory of the invasion and by the
uncertain future. A government led by a ruling family that fled in the
face of the Iraqi danger can do little to dispel this ambient fear. One
expression of the insecurity is a general concern about lawlessness,
both a breakdown in some of the peaceable norms that had united prewar
Kuwait and a breakdown in the government's ability to enforce those
norms owing to the widespread possession of guns (a result of the war)
and the reluctance of a still fearful population to return those guns to
the state. After the initial lawless months following liberation, the
government recovered control of internal security and reinstituted the
rule of law.
The position of nonnationals in postwar Kuwait is very different from
that of citizens. Perhaps two-thirds of the foreign population fled
during the invasion and occupation. Most of those who fled have not been
allowed to return, notably the large Palestinian population, who, owing
to the public support of Iraq by many prominent Palestinians outside
Kuwait, became the target of public and private animosity in the months
after liberation. Before the war, Palestinians composed Kuwait's largest
foreign population, numbering perhaps 400,000. By 1992 that number had
fallen to fewer than 30,000. In the first postwar days, many
Palestinians who remained became victims of private vigilante groups, of
which some were apparently linked to members of the ruling family. Human
rights monitoring organizations such as Amnesty International and Middle
East Watch have reported the murder of dozens of Palestinians and the
arrest and torture of hundreds more. The most dramatic transformation is
the exodus of the bulk of the Palestinian population. The reaction
against Palestinians and other members of groups or states whose leaders
had supported Iraq expressed itself in 1991 in a series of show trials
of alleged collaborators, carried out, according to international
observers and human rights monitoring groups, with little regard for due
process. In the face of international criticism, the amir commuted the
many death sentences, some given for rather small offenses, that the
court had handed down. Trials that took place in late 1992, however,
were regarded by international human rights groups as being fair and
respecting due process.
One of the first policy decisions the government made on returning to
Kuwait was to reduce Kuwait's dependence on foreign labor in an effort
to ensure that Kuwaitis would henceforth remain a majority in their
country. Former foreign workers are unhappy with this policy, but there
is little they can do. Divided between those who oppose Iraq and those
who do not, they pose no unified threat. Their energy has been
dissipated by individual efforts to arrange to stay. The government and
population alike remain deeply suspicious of the nonnational population.
After the war, the government announced it planned to restrict the
number of resident foreigners, to keep the nonnational population below
50 percent of the total population, and to ensure that no single
non-Kuwaiti nationality would make up more than 10 percent of the total
population. In December 1991, the government closed most domestic staff
employment agencies and drew up new regulations covering the licensing
of domestic staff. In early 1992, the Ministry of Interior announced new
rules for issuing visas to dependents of expatriate workers, limiting
them to higher wage earners. Looking further into the future, the
government approved a resolution in March 1992 doubling to US$14,000 the
sum given to young men at marriage in an effort to encourage local
population growth. In June 1992, the government announced it had set
aside US$842 million for end-of- service payments to foreigners.
The new policy of limiting the number of foreign workers has had
serious economic consequences. Foreigners represent many of Kuwait's top
technical and managerial workers. The exodus of most of the nonnational
population has created special problems for an education system that in
1990 was still heavily dependent on foreign teachers. The direct damage
inflicted on school property and looting by Iraqi forces aggravated the
education problem. Nonetheless, in September 1991 the university and
vocational schools reopened for the first time since the occupation.
The exodus of foreigners also has hampered the health care system, as
did the systematic looting of some the country's modern health equipment
by Iraqi forces. The invasion and war added some new health concerns,
which include long-term deleterious health effects owing to the
environmental damage and to the psychological impact of the war.
Nevertheless, the same forces that generated a prewar need for labor
remain operative. A number of years are needed to train Kuwaitis for
many of the positions held by foreigners. In the interim, indications
are that the preinvasion shift away from Arab and toward Asian labor
will continue. One small benefit of the new labor policy is that the
government will save some money on services previously provided to the
larger foreign population. The basic shortage of sufficient quantities
of national manpower, coupled with a political and social reluctance to
increase womanpower, limit the extent to which the government can do
without imported labor.
Despite the devastation of the Kuwaiti economy during the invasion
and occupation, recovery has proceeded with surprising speed. This was
partly because some damage, particularly of the infrastructure, was not
as serious as first feared and partly because the government, anxious to
restore the population's weakened confidence in its ability to
administer, has given reconstruction and recovery of basic services a
high priority.
The oil industry, which was badly damaged, has been a top priority
because it is the source of revenues to sustain other government
spending programs. The most dramatic economic reconstruction effort went
toward capping the more than 700 oil wells set afire by retreating Iraqi
forces. In addition to an estimated 2 percent of the country's 100
billion barrels of reserves lost in the oil fires, Kuwait had to pay for
putting out fires and repairing damaged refineries, pipelines, and other
oil infrastructure. By January 1992, oil output had risen to 550,000
bpd. By June 1992, it was back to nearly 1 million bpd. Nineteen new
wells were drilled to replace those damaged by the occupation.
The government hoped to raise production to 2 million bpd by the end
of 1993. During the invasion, Iraq destroyed or incapacitated Kuwait's
entire 700,000 bpd refining capacity at its three refineries. But by
April 1992, production levels rose to 300,000 bpd. Nonetheless, there
was concern that the rapid return to production might have damaged
Kuwait's oil reservoirs beyond the damage done by retreating Iraqi
forces, lowering its total future reserves. Accordingly, KOC contracted
with several international companies to assess reservoir damage.
However, the government also has been under tremendous pressure to
increase oil production quickly to pay for war and postwar expenses. In
the mid-1980s, overseas investments outstripped oil as the primary
source of revenues. The expenses of war, postwar reconstruction, and
investment irregularities that were being uncovered in late 1992 have
forced the government to use substantial portions of its investment
principal, and in the 1990s oil is again expected to be the major
revenue source.
Restoring oil operations was expensive. In January 1992, the minister
of oil announced Kuwait had already spent US$1.5 billion for putting out
fires and planned to spend another US$8 to US$10 billion to repair
further damage. A National Bank of Kuwait report in mid-1992 estimated
that reconstruction expenses in the oil sector for the 1992-95 period
would reach US$6.5 billion.
The rest of the economy also suffered, although the effects were not
as severe as the oil-well fires. The banking sector, suffering the shock
waves of the Suq al Manakh stock market crash in 1982, recovered slowly
from the combined effects of that crash and the invasion. The agenda of
the returned government included bank reform. In December 1991, the
government announced a comprehensive settlement plan for bad debts, the
outstanding issue of the Suq al Manakh crash. The plan involved
government purchase of the entire domestic loan portfolio of the
country's local banking system. The government agreed to buy US$20
billion of domestic debt from eleven commercial banks and investment
companies in exchange for bonds. This plan removed the concerns of
Kuwaitis, who would be obliged to repay debts, if at all, on more modest
terms, and of banks, concerned about nonperforming loans. Although
Shaykh Salim al Abd al Aziz Al Sabah, governor of the Central Bank of
Kuwait, said the plan is needed to prevent the collapse of banks, it
clearly also is intended as part of a series of government payments to
Kuwaiti nationals and businesses aimed at restoring confidence in the
government prior to the October election. The plan, announced but as yet
incomplete, left the entire banking system in a state of limbo in late
1992.
Banks have suffered less from the physical damage of the war and more
from the sudden reduction in the number of employees, many of whom in
the prewar period were foreigners. Some banks reported postwar staff
levels at half that before the invasion. Although there has been
speculation that postwar reform will include mergers involving
state-controlled banks (notably the Kuwait Investment Company, the
Kuwait International Investment Company, and the Kuwait Foreign Trading,
Contracting, and Investment Company, known together as the three Ks) and
privatesector banks, no formal action had been taken as of late 1992.
The bank that survived the invasion in the best shape was the largest
commercial bank, the National Bank of Kuwait. It handled the exiled
government's finances during the crisis.
According to a National Bank of Kuwait report issued in mid-1992,
several additional factors hurt the private sector's recovery. The first
was the government's decision to restrict the number of nonnationals,
which hampered efforts to import skilled and unskilled labor and left
Kuwait with a smaller market. The second was the lower level of
government investment in industry as a result of reduced government
income and the government decision to invest more in defense and focus
in the short run on restoring basic services. The non-oil manufacturing
sector, although small, was hurt by the looting and damage done by Iraqi
troops. The government has been in no position to subsidize industries
at the level it had in the past. Infrastructure projects incomplete
before the invasion have not been resumed or have been delayed.
The only sector of the economy to prosper in the immediate postwar
period is trade because of the need to replace inventory emptied during
the occupation. Returning Kuwaitis and the government have created a
small boom for investors. By mid-1992, however, the return demand
largely had been met, and many goods, notably automobiles and consumer
durables, were available in excess supply. In an effort to boost the
private sector, the government approved an offset program in July 1992
requiring foreign companies to reinvest part of their government-awarded
contracts locally. Companies with contracts valued at more than US$17
million have been obliged to reinvest 30 percent of the contract sum.
Despite some speculation that the government would turn more
functions over to the private sector following its return, widespread
privatization has not occurred. In February 1992, the government
announced plans to start privatizing the public telecommunications
network, a move that was expected to generate US$1 billion for the
government. In May the government announced it would privatize
seventy-seven local gas stations. There have been, however, no
indications of more substantial denationalizations.
Reconstruction costs, which some foreign observers initially put as
high as US$100 billion, appear to be more modest, perhaps in the range
of US$20 to US$25 billion. The largest postwar expense the government
faces is not reconstruction, but the debt it incurred to coalition
allies to help pay for Operation Desert Storm, an amount that came to at
least US$20 billion, and continuing high defense expenditures.
Reconstruction costs have been met largely from Kuwait's reduced
investments (the Financial Times estimated in February 1992
that Kuwait had lost as much as US$30 billion of its prewar investment
portfolio); from returning oil revenues, which for fiscal year 1992 were
only expected to generate US$2.4 billion; and from borrowing on
international money markets. In October 1991, the government announced
plans to borrow US$5 billion for the first phase of a five-year loan
program. The loan would be the largest in history. In mid-1992 one study
indicated that as much as 30 percent of 1993 revenue will be needed to
pay interest on various government debts, which were expected to exceed
US$37 billion by the end of 1992.
Despite the apparently dire economic situation, the government has
felt politically obliged to sustain insofar as possible the prewar
standard of living. Some of the largest domestic postwar government
expenditures have gone directly to Kuwaiti households. The banking debt
buyout was but one of a series of measures taken by the government to
help nationals hurt by the invasion. The government decided to pay all
government employees (the majority of working nationals) their wages for
the period of the occupation. In March 1992, the government raised state
salaries. The government also agreed to write off about US$1.2 billion
in consumer loans, a measure benefiting more than 120,000 Kuwaitis. It
wrote off US$3.4 billion worth of property and housing loans made before
the invasion. Each Kuwaiti family that stayed in Kuwait through the
occupation received US$1,750. In July 1992, the government exempted
Kuwaitis from charges for public services due as a result of the
occupation, such as bills for electricity, utilities, and telephone
service and for rents on housing.
The invasion also changed the dynamics of Kuwaiti politics. The
crisis of invasion, occupation, and exile further solidified the Kuwaiti
opposition, which had begun emerging in the Constitutional Movement
before the invasion. During the invasion, much of the opposition and the
government regrouped in exile in Saudi Arabia. There, opposition leaders
reiterated their preinvasion concerns and called on the amir to promise
a return to a more democratic system in restored Kuwait.
The showdown came in October 1990 when the ruler met with 1,200
opposition leaders in Saudi Arabia and publicly promised liberalization
following liberation. The elite opposition, however, finally unified
just as it was losing its popular base to the resistance groups inside
Kuwait. Kuwaitis who spent months fighting the occupation had little
need for those who spent the war in relatively comfortable exile. To
them, opposition leaders in exile became figures as distant as the amir.
These divisions surfaced as goods waited in warehouses while resistance
leaders argued with returned administrators over the right to feed the
population. The opposition, so briefly united, redivided. Several
identifiable factions emerged. These included the Democratic Forum,
representing the liberal progressives. In defiance of the law, the
Democratic Forum declared itself a political party in 1991. The Sunni
Islamist opposition broke into the historically Muslim
Brotherhood-oriented Islamic Constitutional Movement and the Islamic
Alliance. The National Islamic Coalition represented Shia.
Had the amir returned quickly to Kuwait, stood above the factions,
and appealed to the natural desire of a population tired by war to
retreat from politics to the private world of reunited families, he
might have scuttled the prodemocracy movement and reimposed a relatively
benign authoritarianism. Instead, the amir hesitated and unwittingly
forged a broad united prodemocratic front that could truly challenge his
rule. Instead of fracturing, the Kuwaiti opposition came together,
voicing a unified demand for a more open, participatory political
system. The amir finally agreed to hold elections for the National
Assembly in October 1992. In the interim, the National Council continued
to meet.
There is little postwar change in the ruling family's dominant
position in the country, although probably more grumbling occurs in
private about the family's behavior. The Al Sabah continue to control
the highest posts, although there have been changes in personnel. In
April 1991, the government announced a new cabinet. Whereas the overall
presence of the ruling family changed little, the number of cabinet
members from the Salim branch rather than the Jabir branch increased, a
shift that usually had occurred only after a succession. In the cabinet,
Sabah al Ahmad Al Sabah, minister of foreign affairs since the 1960s,
was replaced by Salim as Salim Al Sabah, formerly minister of interior.
In addition, Minister of Finance Ali al Khalifa Al Sabah stepped down,
and Minister of Defense Nawwaf al Ahmad Al Sabah was appointed to the
less significant post of minister of social affairs and labor. The
opposition hoped that the primary check on the royal family and the
cabinet would be the National Assembly. Following the October 1992
election, the Salim and Jabir branches' representation in the cabinet
became more balanced.
In 1993 the government continued to express a profound ambivalence
about political liberalization. Although it lifted press censorship in
January 1992, journalists face some continuing restrictions and
criticism of political coverage and debate by the government. The
government has banned several public meetings by opposition groups and
private associations. The October 1992 election revealed the basic
forces that are likely to continue to shape Kuwait's political future
into the twenty-first century. The first force is an historically
grounded and popular impulse toward political liberalization. Although
the prodemocracy movement may experience times of relative quiescence as
it has in the past, it is unlikely to be extinguished. The second is
what appeared in the immediate postinvasion period to be a growing
impulse toward more authoritarian rule. Whereas Kuwait historically has
not experienced heavy-handed government, pockets of its population (some
foreigners and Shia) have felt the heavier hand of the state at times.
The amir's efforts to develop a larger internal security apparatus to
use first against the resident Palestinian population and then against
the national opposition threatens Kuwait's prodemocracy movement. These
efforts also ran into strong opposition when the National Assembly
convened in October 1992. Like the prodemocracy movement, the new
security force will not vanish unless compelled to do so. The invasion
thus appears to have activated both a more authoritarian impulse in the
government and a more prodemocratic impulse among the population. The
postinvasion period has seen the struggle between these two forces.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Geography and Population
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain (from the Arabic word for "two seas") comprises an
archipelago of thirty-three islands situated midway in the Persian Gulf
close to the shore of the Arabian Peninsula. The islands are about
twenty-four kilometers from the east coast of Saudi Arabia and
twenty-eight kilometers from Qatar. The total area of the islands is
about 691 square kilometers, or about four times the size of the
District of Columbia. The largest island, accounting for 83 percent of
the area, is Bahrain (also seen as Al Bahrayn), which has an extent of
572 square kilometers. From north to south, Bahrain is forty-eight
kilometers long; at its widest point in the north, it is sixteen
kilometers from east to west.
Around most of Bahrain is a relatively shallow inlet of the Persian
Gulf known as the Gulf of Bahrain. The seabed adjacent to Bahrain is
rocky and, mainly off the northern part of the island, covered by
extensive coral reefs. Most of the island is low-lying and barren
desert. Outcroppings of limestone form low rolling hills, stubby cliffs,
and shallow ravines. The limestone is covered by various densities of
saline sand, capable of supporting only the hardiest desert
vegetation--chiefly thorn trees and scrub. There is a fertile strip five
kilometers wide along the northern coast on which date, almond, fig, and
pomegranate trees grow. The interior contains an escarpment that rises
to 134 meters, the highest point on the island, to form Jabal ad Dukhan
(Mountain of Smoke), named for the mists that often wreathe the summit.
Most of the country's oil wells are situated in the vicinity of Jabal ad
Dukhan.
Manama (Al Manamah), the capital, is located on the northeastern tip
of the island of Bahrain. The main port, Mina Salman, also is located on
the island, as are the major petroleum refining facilities and
commercial centers. Causeways and bridges connect Bahrain to adjacent
islands and the mainland of Saudi Arabia. The oldest causeway,
originally constructed in 1929, links Bahrain to Al Muharraq, the second
largest island. Although the island is only six kilometers long, the
country's second largest city, Al Muharraq, and the international
airport are located there. A causeway also connects Al Muharraq to the
tiny island of Jazirat al Azl, the site of a major ship-repair and
dry-dock center. South of Jazirat al Azl, the island of Sitrah, site of
the oil export terminal, is linked to Bahrain by a bridge that spans the
narrow channel separating the two islands. The causeway to the island of
Umm an Nasan, off the west coast of Bahrain, continues on to the Saudi
mainland town of Al Khubar. Umm an Nasan is the private property of the
amir and the site of his personal game preserve.
The other islands of significance include Nabi Salah, which is
northwest of Sitrah; Jiddah, to the north of Umm an Nasan; and a group
of islands, the largest of which is Hawar, near the coast of Qatar. Nabi
Salah contains several freshwater springs that are used to irrigate the
island's extensive date palm groves. The rocky islet of Jiddah houses
the state prison. Hawar and the fifteen small islands near it are the
subject of a territorial dispute between Bahrain and Qatar. Hawar is
nineteen kilometers long and about oneand onehalf kilometers wide. The
other islands are uninhabited and are nesting sites for a variety of
migratory birds.
Bahrain has two seasons: an extremely hot summer and a relatively
mild winter. During the summer months, from April to October, afternoon
temperatures average 40� C and can reach 48� C during June and July.
The combination of intense heat and high humidity makes this season
uncomfortable. In addition, a hot, dry southwest wind, known locally as
the qaws, periodically blows sand clouds across the barren
southern end of Bahrain toward Manama in the summer. Temperatures
moderate in the winter months, from November to March, when the range is
between 10� C and 20� C. However, humidity often rises above 90
percent in the winter. From December to March, prevailing winds from the
southeast, known as the shammal, bring damp air over the
islands. Regardless of the season, daily temperatures are fairly uniform
throughout the archipelago.
Bahrain receives little precipitation. The average annual rainfall is
seventy-two millimeters, usually confined to the winter months. No
permanent rivers or streams exist on any of the islands. The winter
rains tend to fall in brief, torrential bursts, flooding the shallow
wadis that are dry the rest of the year and impeding transportation.
Little of the rainwater is saved for irrigation or drinking. However,
there are numerous natural springs in the northern part of Bahrain and
on adjacent islands. Underground freshwater deposits also extend beneath
the Gulf of Bahrain to the Saudi Arabian coast. Since ancient times,
these springs have attracted settlers to the archipelago. Despite
increasing salinization, the springs remain an important source of
drinking water for Bahrain. Since the early 1980s, however, desalination
plants, which render seawater suitable for domestic and industrial use,
have provided about 60 percent of daily water consumption needs.
In 1992 an estimated 550,000 people lived in Bahrain. This number
included 363,000 Bahraini citizens and 187,000 foreign nationals.
Citizens accounted for 66 percent of the total population, a decline
from the 70 percent they represented in the 1981 census and the 82.5
percent they represented in 1971. The unofficial estimate indicated that
the population had increased by 57 percent, or at an average annual
growth rate of 5.2 percent, since 1981. In 1992 the growth rate was 3.1
percent. The non-Bahraini community, which grew from 112,000 in 1981 to
187,000 in 1992, increased by 67 percent, while the number of citizens
increased by 52.5 percent in the same eleven-year period.
In 1992 an estimated 58 percent of the population was male and only
42 percent female. The gender disparity resulted from the exceptionally
high number of men among Bahrain's foreign residents: 76 percent of
foreign residents were male. The maleto -female ratio was more balanced
among Bahraini citizens: about 50.3 percent were male and 49.7 percent
female. The age distribution also was skewed: about 80 percent of the
foreign population was more than fourteen years of age, but less than 60
percent of citizens were more than fourteen. For the total population,
33.4 percent were in the age-group of zero to fourteen; 62.8 percent
were in the age-group of fifteen to fiftynine ; and a mere 3.8 percent
were in the age-group of sixty years and older. Life expectancy for
Bahraini children born in 1990 was seventy years for males and
seventy-five years for females.
The population of Bahrain is overwhelmingly urban. About 85 percent
of the people live in cities or suburbs. Most working-age men who reside
in villages commute to jobs in urban areas. The largest city, Manama, is
the principal commercial and cultural center. It had an estimated
population of 152,000 in 1992. Manama's expansion since 1960, when its
population was only 62,000, resulted in entire villages, fields, and
palm and fruit groves--located to the east, north, and south of the
city--being incorporated as part of the urban sprawl. Manama also spread
to the west through the reclamation of hundreds of hectares from the
sea. Traditional brick houses, built with central courtyards and wind
towers in the architectural style of southern Iran, and covered bazaars
are found in the old sections of the city. In the newer and less
congested neighborhoods, multistory apartment complexes, high-rise
hotels and office buildings, and supermarkets predominate. Because most
of Bahrain's foreign workers tend to live in the city, their presence
provides Manama with a cosmopolitan atmosphere.
The city of Al Muharraq, which had an estimated population of 75,000
in 1992, is the country's only other major city. Until the 1930s, the
ruler lived in Al Muharraq; thus, for more than a century, the city
served as Bahrain's political center, and its commercial importance
rivaled that of Manama. Al Muharraq declined after the Al Khalifa family
moved to the island of Bahrain, and for nearly forty years the city
stagnated. During the 1970s, however, the construction of the US$60
million Arab Shipbuilding and Repair Yard adjacent to the fishing
village of Al Hadd, located southeast of Bahrain International Airport,
helped to stimulate an investment and development boom in the city.
Bahrain's main towns are Jidd Hafs, Ar Rifaa, Sitrah, and Madinat
Isa. Throughout the nineteenth century and during the first half of the
twentieth, Jidd Hafs was a relatively prosperous village renowned for
its extensive date palm groves and the manufacture of medicinal drugs
from the buds, flowers, and pollen of palm trees. By 1975, however, Jidd
Hafs had been transformed into Manama's largest suburb. Ar Rifaa, which
originally consisted of two adjacent villages--Ar Rifaa ash Sharqi and
Ar Rifaa al Gharbi, established in the nineteenth century near natural
springs in the central region of Bahrain-- grew rapidly after 1952 when
Shaykh Salman ibn Hamad established his official residence there. Ar
Rifaa's importance as the country's political center has continued under
Shaykh Isa ibn Salman, who constructed his palace in the town, as did
several other members of the Al Khalifa. The town of Sitrah formerly
consisted of several palm-cultivating villages, but extensive
residential construction during the 1970s fused the villages into one
large suburban town. Madinat Isa was a planned community built to
relieve the congestion in Manama and such close suburbs as Jidd Hafs and
Sanabis.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Society
Persian Gulf States
Education
Bahrain has the oldest public education system in the Arabian
Peninsula. The system was established in 1932 when the government
assumed responsibility for operating two preexisting primary schools for
boys. Subsequently, separate facilities for girls and various secondary
programs were established. Since the 1970s, education has been one of
the largest current government expenditures. Despite the intensity of
government efforts, however, the literacy rate for adult citizens was
only about 75 percent as recently as 1985. The literacy rate for 1990
was estimated by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization to be 77 percent for adults (82 percent for males
and 69 percent for females). Nevertheless, literacy levels among
Bahrainis born since independence in 1971 were high because an estimated
70 percent of primary and secondary school-age children attended school.
In the 1986-87 academic year, 88,152 students attended 139 public
schools. Education in the public system, which included
six-year primary schools, three-year intermediate schools, and
three-year secular secondary schools, is free. Students receive
supplies, uniforms, meals, and transportation to and from school at no
charge. Almost all children in the six- to eleven-year-old age-group
attend primary school, and about two-thirds of all twelve- to
fourteen-year-olds are enrolled in intermediate schools. However, there
was a significant drop-out rate, especially for girls, after the
completion of intermediate school. In the 1986-87 academic year, only 41
percent of fifteen- to seventeen-year-olds attended secondary schools.
In addition to the public education system, there are fortyeight
private and religious schools, including the United Statesoperated and
accredited Bahrain International School, which offers classes from
primary school through secondary school. There were 5,000 teachers in
1988, of whom 65 percent were native Bahrainis. Egyptians constituted
the largest group of foreign teachers.
In 1927 the first group of Bahrainis to receive a university
education enrolled at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon. The
first institution of higher education in Bahrain, the Gulf Polytechnic,
was established in 1968 as the Gulf Technical College. In 1984 Gulf
Polytechnic merged with the University College of Art, Science, and
Education (UCB), founded in 1979, to create a national university
offering bachelor of arts and bachelor of science degrees. During the
1991-92 academic year, more than 4,000 students, one-half of whom were
women, studied at the two campuses of UCB/Polytechnic.
Bahrain had three additional institutions of higher education in
1993. The College of Health Services, established in 1976, offers
various medical technology and nurses' training programs. The Hotel and
Catering Training Center offers postsecondary vocational courses in
management and culinary arts. The newest institution, the Arabian Gulf
University (AGU), was established outside Ar Rifaa in 1984 and funded by
the six member countries of the GCC. Construction of AGU facilities,
however, was delayed by the decline in oil revenues experienced by all
GCC states in the mid-1980s. The first faculty, the College of Medicine,
opened in the fall of 1989 and provided medical education for fiftyeight
aspiring physicians. The projected completion date for the AGU campus is
2006; officials anticipate that AGU will accommodate 5,000 students
annually, once the university becomes fully operational.
In 1925, when Bahrain was a British protectorate, the government
established free medical service, including immunization, outpatient
treatment, and hospitalization. The availability of preventive and
curative health care led to the virtual eradication of such endemic and
infectious diseases as smallpox, trachoma, and dysentery. By the 1980s,
life expectancy was estimated at sixty-five years. In 1993 Bahrain's
comprehensive health care system included facilities for inpatient and
outpatient dental care, general medical care, maternity care, orthopedic
care, pediatric care, and psychiatric care. Almost all primary and
secondary treatment within the public health system is free to citizens
and foreign residents.
The largest public hospital is the 1,000-bed Salmaniya Medical
Center, which opened in 1978. The center is a general teaching hospital
that has accident and emergency facilities and fully equipped
laboratories. More than one-half of Bahrain's 400 physicians work at
Salmaniya. The public health system also includes twenty-seven regional
health centers that provide such primary care as diagnostic services,
minor surgery, dentistry, prenatal and postnatal care, and general
family medical care. In addition, the system includes sixteen child
welfare centers. The government also maintains the 135-bed Bahrain
Military Hospital, which is reserved for members of the armed forces and
their families.
In 1992 there were two small private hospitals in Bahrain. The
forty-five-bed American Mission Hospital, operated by the United
States-based Arabian Mission of the Dutch Reformed Church, is the oldest
hospital in the country and is one of the oldest on the Arab side of the
Persian Gulf. Many members of the country's ruling elite were born at
this hospital, and they continue to come to it for medical care. The
newer, twenty-three-bed International Hospital caters to very wealthy
patients.
The government established a social security system in 1976. The
General Organization of Social Insurance (GOSI) was set up to administer
the program, which provides pensions (since 1986) and compensation for
work-related accidents. Only Bahraini citizens are eligible for
retirement pensions, but both nationals and foreign workers are covered
against accidents. GOSI required all companies employing at least ten
persons to participate in the program. GOSI collects 7 percent of an
employee's monthly salary for the pension program and requires employers
to contribute an additional amount equivalent to 11 percent of a
Bahraini's monthly pay. Employers pay an extra 3 percent of their
payrolls to cover all employees against accidents.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - The Economy
Persian Gulf States
Agriculture and Fishing
Despite the scant rainfall and poor soil, agriculture historically
was an important sector of the economy. Before the development of the
oil industry, date palm cultivation dominated Bahrain's agriculture,
producing sufficient dates for both domestic consumption and export. At
least twenty-three varieties of dates are grown, and the leaves,
branches, buds, and flowers of the date palm also are used extensively.
From the 1950s through the 1970s, changing food consumption habits, as
well as the increasing salinity of the aquifers that served as
irrigation sources, led to a gradual decline in date cultivation. By the
1980s, a significant number of palm groves had been replaced by new
kinds of agricultural activities, including vegetable gardens, nurseries
for trees and flowers, poultry production, and dairy farms.
By 1993 Bahrain's cultivated area had been reduced from 6,000
hectares before independence to 1,500 hectares. The cultivated land
consists of about 10,000 plots ranging in size from a few square meters
to four hectares. These plots are distributed among approximately 800
owners. A minority of large owners, including individuals and
institutions, are absentee landlords who control about 60 percent of all
cultivable land. The ruling Al Khalifa own the greatest number of plots,
including the largest and most productive ones, although public
information pertaining to the distribution of ownership among family
members is not available. Absentee owners rent their plots to farmers,
generally on the basis of three-year contracts. There are approximately
2,400 farmers, 70 percent of whom do not own the land they cultivate.
The small size of most plots and the maldistribution of ownership has
tended to discourage private investment in agriculture. In addition, the
number of skilled farmworkers progressively declined after 1975 because
an increasing number of villagers obtained high-paying, nonagricultural
jobs. Despite these impediments, official government policy since 1980
has aimed at expanding domestic production of crops through such
programs as free distribution of seeds, technical assistance in adopting
new and more efficient irrigation technologies, and lowinterest credit.
Although these programs have contributed to significant increases in the
production of eggs, milk, and vegetables, the circumscribed extent of
Bahrain's cultivable area limits the island's potential productive
capacity. Consequently, agricultural imports remain a permanent aspect
of the country's international trade. In 1993 the main food imports
included fruits, vegetables, meat, live animals (for slaughter),
cereals, and dairy products.
The waters surrounding Bahrain traditionally have been rich in more
than 200 varieties of fish, many of which constitute a staple of the
diet. Before the development of the oil industry, most males engaged in
some form of fishing. In addition, the pearl industry constituted one of
the most important bases of the island's wealth, and more than 2,000
pearling boats operated during the late 1920s. After 1935 both fishing
and pearling as occupations steadily declined. Although the prospect of
steady wages attracted many pearl divers to oil-related jobs, pearling
was even more adversely affected by the development in Japan of the
cultured pearl. By 1953 only twelve pearling boats remained, and these
all disappeared within a decade. Fishing declined more gradually, but by
the early 1970s fewer than 1,000 fishermen continued to ply their trade.
Fewer fishermen meant less fish available in the market despite rising
consumer demand, and this situation led to the annual importation of
tons of fish to supplement the local catch. In 1981 the government
launched a program to revitalize the fishing industry by introducing
trawlers, motorizing the traditional dhows, expanding jetties,
constructing cold storage facilities, and offering training courses on
the use and maintenance of modern fishing equipment. These initiatives
contributed to an increase in the total fish catch, which according to
estimates of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, was 9,200 tons in 1989.
Pollution in the Persian Gulf became a problem in the 1970s. Shrimp
in the northern gulf seemed particularly sensitive to marine pollution,
and by 1979 they had almost disappeared from waters near Bahrain.
Pollution was seriously aggravated in 1983 and again in 1991 by major
oil slicks that emanated from wardamaged oil facilities and covered
several thousand square kilometers of water in the northern Persian
Gulf. The slicks were detrimental to the unique marine life in the
vicinity of Bahrain, including coral reefs, sea turtles, dugongs
(herbivorous sea mammals similar to manatees), oyster beds and shrimp
beds, numerous fish species, and water fowl. The oil slicks, especially
those of 1991, adversely affected the fishing industry, but as of early
1993, marine biologists remained uncertain about the longterm ecological
impact of the pollution.
<>Petroleum Industry
<>Other Industry
<>Labor
<>Banking and Finance
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Petroleum Industry
Persian Gulf States
In 1929 the San Francisco-based Standard Oil Company of California
(Socal)--now known as Chevron--set up a subsidiary to acquire an oil
exploration and production concession on the island of Bahrain. Socal
drilling crews discovered oil in 1932, and two years later the first
shipment of crude oil was exported from Sitrah. By 1935, when sixteen
oil wells were in production and construction of the Bahrain refinery
commenced, the royalties that Socal paid to the government constituted
more than 40 percent of the state budget. In 1936 Socal sold half of its
oil interest to Texas Oil Company (Texaco) and, with its new corporate
partner, formed the Bahrain Petroleum Company (Bapco). In the years up
to independence in 1971, Bapco oil revenues annually averaged 60 percent
of government income and helped to finance major development, education,
and health programs. The government of Bahrain acquired a 60 percent
interest in Bapco in 1975 and assumed control of the remaining 40
percent in 1980.
Bahrain's proven oil reserves are limited in comparison with the
extensive oil fields of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. As early as 1965, Bapco
estimated that one-half of the island's total oil had been depleted. Oil
production peaked in 1977 at 77,000 barrels per day and steadily
declined thereafter.
During the 1970s and early 1980s, two developments helped to maintain
the government's relatively high income from oil revenues despite
declining production. First was Bahrain's share of profits from the
offshore Abu Safah oil field in the Persian Gulf between Bahrain and
Saudi Arabia. When the two countries demarcated their marine boundaries in
1958, Bahrain ceded its claims to an area of the gulf north of the
island in return for a Saudi agreement to share the profits from any oil
that might be discovered there. Subsequently, oil in commercial
quantities was found in the seabed, and from 1968 to 1986, revenues from
the Abu Safah field contributed significantly to Bahrain's overall oil
income. Since production from the Abu Safah field ceased in early 1987,
Saudi Arabia has provided Bahrain with 75,000 bpd of crude oil as
compensation for this loss.
The second development was the more than tenfold increase in oil
revenues that followed the December 1973 decision by the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to triple the international
price of crude oil. During 1974 and 1975, income from oil accounted for
an unprecedented 80 percent of government revenues, although this
percentage gradually declined in subsequent years. Nevertheless, as long
as oil prices remained high, oil revenues remained high. At the end of
1985, however, Saudi Arabia significantly increased its own oil
production, which resulted in a glut of oil on international markets and
caused prices to fall by more than 50 percent in just a few months.
Bapco could not increase production from its declining oil fields beyond
42,000 bpd, and consequently Bahrain's oil revenues in 1986 were 65
percent less than in 1985. Oil revenues did not increase substantially
until 1990, when the regional political crisis that accompanied Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait precipitated a rise in oil prices. In 1991 oil
revenues constituted about 62 percent of revenues in the government's
budget.
Although Bahrain has had an oil-based economy since 1935, by 1993
proven reserves were estimated at 200 million barrels, and the
government anticipated that all oil would be depleted by 2005.
Nevertheless, the country's economists expected oil to remain important
long beyond that date because of the large refinery Bapco has operated
at Sitrah since 1937. Periodically expanded and modernized, the refinery
has the capacity to process 250,000 bpd of crude oil, at least five
times the amount produced by the island's oil wells. During 1992 the
United States firm Bechtel Corporation began expanding the refinery's
capacity to 360,000 bpd. More than 80 percent of the petroleum that the
refinery processes comes via pipeline from Saudi Arabia. The Sitrah
refinery has been refining Saudi crude oil since 1938 and expects to
continue to do so well into the twenty-first century. Its refined
petroleum products, most of which are exported, include aviation fuel,
fuel oil, and gasoline.
Substantial deposits of natural gas are associated with Bahrain's oil
fields. Before 1979, when the government established the Bahrain
National Gas Company (Banagas), an estimated 3 million cubic meters per
day of this gas were being vented to the atmosphere. Banagas opened a
gas liquefaction plant that collected this gas and processed it into
propane, butane, and naphtha. There are also large deposits of natural
gas in the Khuff field, which is separate from the oil fields. Banagas
has drilled more than fifteen wells to tap this gas, which is used for
fuel to power the oil refinery, electric generators, and the water
desalination plant. Some of the gas is reinjected into the oil fields to
maintain reservoir pressure and stimulate production. In 1990 Banagas
estimated total natural gas reserves at 209 trillion cubic meters; daily
production averaged about 20 million cubic meters.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Other Industry
Persian Gulf States
By 1965 the government recognized that the island's long-term
prosperity could not depend on the limited extent of its oil reserves.
Accordingly, the government adopted industrial diversification as a
primary objective of its economic policy. Tax incentives and
low-interest loans encouraged private entrepreneurs to construct several
small-scale manufacturing plants, including factories producing
plastics, ceramic tiles, paper products, and carbonated beverages. The
government assumed a more active role in the establishment of
large-scale industry, as a result of which manufacturing contributed 13
percent of the gross domestic product in 1986. The two most important examples of large-scale
industry were the aluminum plant and the ship-repair yard.
Aluminium Bahrain (Alba) was incorporated in 1968 as a joint
government and private investment company for the construction of a mill
to process imported raw alumina. Located near the Bapco refinery, the
Alba plant began production in 1971 with an initial capacity of 99,000
tons of aluminum ingots. Since commencing operations, the Alba
facilities have expanded considerably and by 1990 had an annual
productive capacity of more than 215,000 tons. Associated with Alba are
two other aluminum factories built during the 1980s. The Gulf Aluminium
Rolling Mill Company (Garmco), a joint venture of the six member
countries of the GCC, produces aluminum strip and sheet. The Bahrain
Aluminium Extrusion Company (Balexco), owned 100 percent by the
government, produces aluminum doors, window frames, and other products
used by the construction industry. A third concern, the jointly owned
Bahrain-Saudi Aluminium Marketing Company (Balco), markets Alba's
products throughout the Middle East and Asia.
In 1977 the Arab Shipbuilding and Repair Yard Company (ASRY) was
inaugurated near Al Hadd. ASRY was a joint venture of Bahrain and the
six other members of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OAPEC). This large dry-dock facility has accommodations for
up to ten supertankers simultaneously, and it annually repairs an
average of seventy ships.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Labor
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain's total labor force was estimated at 160,000 in 1992. Foreign
workers constituted about 55 percent of the labor force, a slight
decline from the 58 percent they had constituted in 1981. Foreign
participation in the labor force increased dramatically after 1971, when
such workers had constituted 37 percent of the economically active
population. The composition of the foreign work force also has changed
significantly. During the 1960s, more than one-half of all foreign
workers came from Oman and Iran. Since the late 1970s, one-half of all
foreign workers have come from South Asia, predominantly from India and
Pakistan but also from Bangladesh, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and
Thailand. South Asian workers constituted 13 percent of the total
population in 1990 and Iranians, 6 percent. Less than 10 percent of
foreign workers come from other Arab countries. Egyptians, about
one-half of whom teach in Bahrain's public schools, constitute the
largest group of foreign Arabs, followed by Palestinians, most of whom
hold Jordanian passports, and Lebanese. Arabs are more likely than
Asians to be accompanied by dependents.
The government requires all foreign workers to possess valid
residence and work permits. Although work permits are renewable after
the expiration of the original contract period, authorities do not
encourage long-term residency of foreign nationals. Most of the foreign
workers, who are unskilled and semiskilled laborers, have few incentives
to live in Bahrain permanently because their families generally remain
in their native countries. These workers consequently remit a
considerable portion of their employment income to their families in
their countries of origin.
As the proportion of citizens declined to less than one-half the
labor force, government planners drew up specific programs and laws
designed to replace foreign workers with Bahraini nationals. Within the
private sector, which provides jobs for more than two-thirds of all
foreign nationals, employers have the option of designing their own
special courses for training citizens or providing funds to finance
government-operated training courses. Companies pay a special levy,
equal to 4 percent of the salary of every employed foreigner but only
equal to 2 percent for every local employee. At the completion of a
foreign worker's contract, officials of the Ministry of Labor and Social
Affairs urge the hiring company to take on more nationals.
Efforts to make employment indigenous encourage the participation of
women in the labor force. Women, who constituted about 15 percent of all
employees in the early 1990s, work outside the home in far greater
numbers in Bahrain than in any other state of the Arabian Peninsula. The
most dramatic rise in female employment occurred during the decade of
the 1970s. Between 1971 and 1981, the proportion of women in the labor
force increased from 3.8 to 13.3 percent. Bahraini women predominate in
such traditionally female occupations as teaching and nursing, but,
since the early 1980s, increasing numbers of women have been employed in
administration, banking, commerce, finance, engineering, and the civil
service. Despite the trend toward greater female participation in the
work force, about 82 percent of Bahraini women do not work outside the
home. The overwhelming majority of working women tend to be single women
who work for two to five years after completing secondary school or
university and before marriage.
In an effort to encourage continued participation of women in the
labor force after marriage, the government has enacted labor legislation
favorable to working mothers. For example, all employers are required to
grant new mothers forty-five days of full-pay maternity leave plus
fifteen days at half-pay. In addition, employers are obligated to
provide nursing periods for new mothers. The law also forbids
discrimination against working mothers.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Banking and Finance
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain's first commercial bank, a branch of the Britishowned Eastern
Bank, opened in 1921. Two decades passed before a second bank, the
British Bank of the Middle East, set up an office. It was not until 1957
that the first bank wholly owned by Bahraini citizens--the private
National Bank of Bahrain-- commenced activities. Prior to 1965, when the
government introduced the Bahraini dinar, the Indian rupee had
functioned as the most commonly accepted currency for local
transactions. The lack of an indigenous currency probably impeded the
development of the banking sector. Once the Bahraini dinar replaced the
Indian rupee and established itself as a strong, internationally
convertible currency, banks began to find the island a more attractive
location; by 1974 fourteen commercial banks operated in Bahrain.
The increase in the number of banks after independence prompted the
government to consider creating a central monetary authority to regulate
banking activities. In 1973 Shaykh Isa ibn Salman issued a decree that
established the Bahrain Monetary Agency (BMA) as a legal entity
possessing the powers of a central bank. In addition to its regulatory
responsibilities, BMA issues currency, sets the official exchange rates
for the Bahraini dinar, serves as a depository for government funds from
petroleum production and its foreign currency reserves, and manages
thegovernment's investments.
In 1975 BMA promulgated regulations for the creation of offshore
banking units (OBUs) modeled on those operating in Singapore. OBUs are
branches of international commercial banks exempted from
foreign-exchange controls, cash reserve requirements, taxes on interest
paid to depositors, and banking income taxes that are required of other
banks in Bahrain. In return for these privileges, OBUs pay the
government annual license fees, are prohibited from accepting deposits
from citizens and residents of Bahrain, and must refrain from
transactions involving Bahraini dinars. The OBU program has been
successful; twenty-six OBUs were established during the first year. The
civil war in Lebanon probably stimulated the OBU boom because several
international banks based in Beirut transferred their Middle East
operations to Bahrain after 1975. By the early 1980s, a total of
seventy-five OBUs having assets in excess of US$62 billion were
operating out of Bahrain.
Beginning in 1985, falling oil prices and a corresponding decline in
oil revenues dramatically reduced the funds deposited in both onshore
banks and OBUs. Several banks decided not to renew their OBU licenses,
resulting in a net loss of OBUs. Nevertheless, a majority of OBUs,
including those that are branches of leading United States, Arab,
European, and Japanese banks, continue to operate from Bahrain-based
offices. In 1990 a total of fifty-five OBUs were located on the island.
Despite the fluctuations in gulf financial markets of the 1980s, Bahrain
is well established as the principal banking and financial center of the
gulf region.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Government and Politics
Persian Gulf States
In 1993 Bahrain was a constitutional monarchy in the form of an
amirate with an executive-cabinet form of government and a separate
judiciary. The amir is head of state and also supreme commander of the
Bahrain Defense Force (BDF); he exercises ultimate authority in all
matters pertaining to the government. In addition to the amir, Shaykh
Isa ibn Salman, principal government officials include his eldest son
and heir apparent, Hamad ibn Isa, who is commander in chief of the BDF
and deputy prime minister, and several other members of the ruling Al
Khalifa. In accordance with the constitution adopted in 1973, the office
of amir passes from father to eldest son unless the amir designates
another male relative to succeed him. This clause of the constitution is
not subject to amendment.
Although the amir has substantial executive powers, in practice he
has delegated decision-making authority to a cabinet since 1956, when an
amiri decree created the Administrative Council, an eleven-member body
that advised the ruler on policy and supervised the growing bureaucracy.
In 1970 Shaykh Isa ibn Salman issued a decree that transformed the
Administrative Council into a twelve-member Council of Ministers. The
president of the Council of Ministers, the prime minister, serves as the
head of government. The amir appoints the prime minister, who then forms
a government by selecting members of the Council of Ministers, albeit in
consultation with the amir. The ministers are directly responsible to
the prime minister, who, like the amir, has authority to veto a decision
by any member of the council.
The Council of Ministers gradually expanded to include eighteen
members, including the prime minister and the deputy prime minister. In
late 1992, the prime minister, deputy prime minister, and seven of the
sixteen ministers were members of the ruling Al Khalifa. The prime
minister, Khalifa ibn Salman, is the brother of the amir. The amir's son
holds the cabinet rank of deputy prime minister. The amir's uncle, Major
General Khalifa ibn Ahmad, is minister of defense; and the amir's two
first cousins, Muhammad ibn Khalifa and Muhammad ibn Mubarak, are
minister of interior and minister of foreign affairs, respectively.
Khalifa ibn Salman, the son of the amir's second cousin, is minister of
labor and social affairs. A more distantly related cousin, Abd Allah ibn
Khalid, a first cousin of the amir's grandfather, is minister of justice
and Islamic affairs.
<>The Constitutional Experiment
<>Legal System
<>Foreign Relations
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - The Constitutional Experiment
Persian Gulf States
On December 16, 1971, the day Bahrain formally became independent of
Britain (Bahrain technically gained its independence earlier in the
year, on August 15), Shaykh Isa ibn Salman announced that the country
would have a constitutional form of government. Six months later, he
issued a decree providing for the election of representatives to a
Constituent Assembly, charged with drafting and ratifying a
constitution. The assembly was to consist of twenty-two elected
delegates plus twenty additional members, including eight delegates
appointed by the amir and the twelve members at the time of the Council
of Ministers. The election, which was held in December 1972, was the
first national election in Bahrain's history. The electorate was
restricted, however, to native-born male citizens aged twenty years and
older.
The relative openness of political debate permitted during the
election campaign for the twenty-two contested Constituent Assembly
seats encouraged individuals dissatisfied with the lack of democratic
rights to demand more civil liberties. The primary focus of concern was
the 1965 Law of Public Security, a series of three amiri decrees that
authorized the ruler to maintain indefinitely a virtual state of
emergency in order to protect national security from suspected foreign
and domestic enemies. A group of mostly university-educated
professionals, led by Abd al Aziz Shamlan, unsuccessfully petitioned the
amir to rescind the law's harshest provisions, especially those
pertaining to arrest and detention. They believed these measures had
been used arbitrarily to silence dissent and peaceful opposition.
Several women's groups also organized to protest the exclusion of women
from the franchise. They presented a petition to the amir requesting
support for extending voting rights to female citizens, but they failed
to receive a positive response.
The Constituent Assembly was in session during most of 1973. It
approved a constitution of 108 articles. The constitution, enacted by
amiri decree in December 1973, provided for an advisory legislative
body, the National Assembly, consisting of thirty members elected for
four-year terms, plus all the members of the Council of Ministers whose
terms were not fixed. The assembly was not empowered to initiate or
enact legislation, but it was authorized to give advice and consent to
laws proposed by the Council of Ministers. The assembly had the right to
question individual ministers about policies and to withdraw confidence
from any minister except the prime minister. The constitution stipulated
that the amir could dissolve the assembly at his discretion, provided he
make public the grounds for so doing. If the assembly were dissolved by
decree, new elections had to take place within two months or the
dissolution would be invalidated and the dismissed members reinstated.
Election for the National Assembly took place in December 1973, with
the franchise restricted, as in the Constituent Assembly election, to
male citizens. In theory, the thirty elected representatives were
independents because political parties were not permitted; in practice,
several of the assemblymen openly supported the positions and views of
banned political organizations, including the National Front for the
Liberation of Bahrain, which espoused Marxist economic ideas.
Consequently, two distinct coalitions emerged in the assembly: the
People's Bloc, consisting of eight members who advocated the
legalization of labor unions and the abolition of the 1965 security
measures; and the Religious Bloc, consisting of six Shia members who
supported labor reforms and various social restrictions, such as a ban
on the sale of alcoholic beverages. The majority of elected
members--sixteen representatives-- comprised a heterogeneous group of
independents whose individual positions shifted with the issues. The
People's Bloc and the Religious Bloc tended to refer to the independents
pejoratively as the Government Bloc because they usually tried to effect
compromises between the ministers and their National Assembly critics.
Although the National Assembly lacked authority to prevent the
government from enacting legislation that assembly members opposed, this
situation did not impede policy debates. The unprecedented public
debates attracted wide interest and, from the perspective of the regime,
seemed to erode its legitimacy. During the winter and spring of 1975, a
prolonged debate over a new state security decree proved especially
troubling for the government. It appeared that most independents, as
well as the Religious Bloc, supported the demand of the People's Bloc
that the decree, issued in December 1974 without prior consultation with
the assembly, be submitted to the legislature for ratification before
its implementation. The issue was unresolved in May 1975, when the
assembly recessed for the summer. In August, before the members
reconvened, the amir dissolved the National Assembly, citing its
inability to cooperate with the government. Although the constitution
stipulated that new elections had to take place within two months of a
dissolution, this did not occur. One year later, in August 1976, Shaykh
Isa ibn Salman announced that the National Assembly would remain
dissolved indefinitely.
Although there are no political parties through which citizens can
express views, they can petition the amir for redress of grievances. The
amir holds a regular majlis, or public meeting, at which he listens to
views of citizens and accepts petitions for his intervention in dealing
with the bureaucracy or some other problem. Officials of the islands'
eleven municipalities follow the amir's example and hold local versions
of the national majlis.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Legal System
Persian Gulf States
The legal system of Bahrain in 1993 was based on several sources,
including customary tribal law (urf), three separate schools of
Islamic sharia law, and civil law as embodied in codes, ordinances, and
regulations. Sharia law includes the Maliki school of Islamic law (from
Abd Allah Malik ibn Anas, an eighth-century Muslim jurist from Medina)
and the Shafii school of Islamic law (from Muhammad ibn Idris ash
Shafii, a late eighth-century Muslim jurist from Mecca). Both of these
schools are recognized by Sunni Muslims. The third school is the
eighth-century Jaafari (from Jaafar ibn Muhammad, also known as Jaafar
as Sadiq, the Sixth Imam) school of Twelver Islam, recognized by Shia.
Civil law is heavily influenced by British common law, inasmuch as it
was developed by British legal advisers beginning in the 1920s and
continuing up to the eve of independence in 1971.
According to the constitution of 1973, the judiciary is an
independent and separate branch of government. However, the highest
judicial authority, the minister of justice and Islamic affairs, is
appointed by, and responsible to, the prime minister. The amir, who
retains the power of pardon, is at the pinnacle of the judicial system.
Bahrain has a dual court system, consisting of civil and sharia
courts. Sharia courts deal primarily with personal status matters (such
as marriage, divorce, and inheritance). Sharia courts of first instance
are located in all communities. A single sharia Court of Appeal sits at
Manama. Appeals beyond the jurisdiction of the sharia Court of Appeal
are taken to the Supreme Court of Appeal, which is part of the civil
system.
The civil court system consists of summary courts and a supreme
court. Summary courts of first instance are located in all communities
and include separate urf, civil, and criminal sections. The
supreme courts hear appeals from the summary courts. The Supreme Court
of Appeal is the highest appellate court in the country. The Supreme
Court of Appeal also decides on the constitutionality of laws and
regulations.
Persian Gulf States
Bahrain - Foreign Relations
Persian Gulf States
Since independence in 1971, one of the most important objectives of
Bahrain's foreign policy has been to contain perceived threats to the
country's security. As the smallest state in the region, Bahrain feels
vulnerable to political influences emanating from more powerful
neighbors, in particular Iran and Iraq, and it regards close ties to
Saudi Arabia and other Arab monarchial regimes as a means of countering
these potentially harmful influences. During the 1970s, for example, the
Baath socialist media in Baghdad frequently denounced Manama as an enemy
of Arab nationalism and a puppet of Washington's imperialism because it
allowed United States naval vessels to use a naval base in Bahrain. The
government also believes that Baghdad has provided financial and other
support to Bahraini opposition groups calling for the overthrow of the
Al Khalifa dynasty. Although Iraq moderated its policies toward Bahrain
in the late 1970s, the Iranian Revolution of 1979 confronted the
government with new ideological challenges. Some Shia clergy in Tehran
denounced the institution of monarchy as un-Islamic, and some Shia
political dissidents in Bahrain embraced this message enthusiastically.
During the 1980s, government officials suspected Iranian complicity in
four separate plots that it maintained were aimed at the overthrow of
the regime.
The outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980 aroused security concerns
that Bahrain shared with the other five Arab monarchies in the gulf:
Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Oman, and Saudi Arabia. During the 1970s,
Bahrain lobbied these countries to cooperate in defense matters, but,
other than bilateral agreements, little came from these efforts. By
early 1981, when the fighting between Iran and Iraq appeared to have
settled into a long-term conflict, attitudes changed, and all five
Arabian Peninsula oil-producing states joined Bahrain in the GCC.
Ostensibly, the GCC agreement emphasized economic cooperation, but the
level of cooperation in security matters increased annually. For Bahrain
this meant financial assistance for expanding its defense forces and
facilities and the opportunity to participate in joint training
maneuvers. When fellow GCC member Kuwait was invaded by Iraq in 1990,
Bahrain joined the collective military effort against Iraq by sending a
small contingent of troops to the front lines in Saudi Arabia. It also
permitted United States military forces to use its naval and air
facilities.
Since 1981 Bahrain's most important foreign relations have been with
its GCC allies, although problems with individual members of the GCC
have developed. The most serious problems have been with Qatar. Bahrain
and Qatar have unresolved territorial disputes stemming from the
nineteenth century when the Al Thani of Qatar foreswore allegiance to
the Al Khalifa and established a separate amirate. In the twentieth
century, the two states have contested sovereignty over Hawar and the
adjacent islands, the closest of which is fewer than two kilometers from
Qatar's west coast. In 1939, when both countries were still dependencies
of Britain, London ruled that the islands belonged to Bahrain. Qatar
never accepted this decision and periodically has raised the issue.
Incidents connected with this dispute occurred in 1978, in 1982, and in
1986, but each time they were defused by the mediation of other GCC
states. The most serious crisis, from April to June 1986, involved
Qatari forces raiding the Fasht ad Dibal coral reef island north of Al
Muharraq and seizing twentynine foreign workers who were building a
coast guard station for the government of Bahrain. The repercussions
from this incursion have continued into the 1990s. These incidents
tended to strain overall relations with Qatar.
Outside the Persian Gulf region, Bahrain has cordial relations with
other countries. The two non-Arab countries with which it maintains the
closest relations are Britain and the United States. After the Persian
Gulf War, Bahrain held negotiations with Washington that culminated in
1992 in the signing of a defense cooperation agreement. The terms of
this agreement permit the United States to pre-position military
supplies and equipment in Bahrain and to use its military facilities.
Bahrain is a member of several international organizations, including
the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, and the World
Health Organization. It also belongs to several regional organizations,
the most important of which is the League of Arab States, as well as to
OPEC and the Organization of the Islamic Conference.
Persian Gulf States
Oman - Geography, Climate and Population
Persian Gulf States
Geography
Oman is located in the southeastern quarter of the Arabian Peninsula
and, according to official estimates, covers a total land area of
approximately 300,000 square kilometers; foreign observer estimates,
however, are about 212,000 square kilometers, roughly the size of the
state of Kansas. The land area is composed of varying topographic
features: valleys and desert account for 82 percent of the land mass;
mountain ranges, 15 percent; and the coastal plain, 3 percent.
The sultanate is flanked by the Gulf of Oman, the Arabian Sea, and
the Rub al Khali (Empty Quarter) of Saudi Arabia, all of which
contributed to Oman's isolation. Historically, the country's contacts
with the rest of the world were by sea, which not only provided access
to foreign lands but also linked the coastal towns of Oman. The Rub al
Khali, difficult to cross even with modern desert transport, formed a
barrier between the sultanate and the Arabian interior. The Al Hajar
Mountains, which form a belt between the coast and the desert from the
Musandam Peninsula (Ras Musandam) to the city of Sur at Oman's
easternmost point, formed another barrier. These geographic barriers
kept the interior of Oman free from foreign military encroachments.
Natural features divide the country into seven distinct areas: Ruus
al Jibal, including the northern Musandam Peninsula; the Al Batinah
coastal plain; the Muscat-Matrah coastal area; the Oman interior,
comprising Al Jabal al Akhdar (Green Mountain), its foothills, and
desert fringes; the barren coastline south to Dhofar; Dhofar region in
the south; and the offshore island of Masirah.
The northernmost area, Ruus al Jibal, extends from the Musandam
Peninsula to the boundary with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at Hisn al
Diba. It borders the Strait of Hormuz, which links the Persian Gulf with
the Gulf of Oman, and is separated from the rest of the sultanate by a
strip of territory belonging to the UAE. This area consists of low
mountains forming the northernmost extremity of the Al Hajar al Gharbi
(Western Al Hajar) Mountains. Two inlets, Elphinstone (Khawr ash Shamm)
and Malcom (Ghubbat al Ghazirah), cleave the coastline about onethird
the distance from the Strait of Hormuz and at one point are separated by
only a few hundred meters of land. The coastline is extremely rugged,
and the Elphinstone Inlet, sixteen kilometers long and surrounded by
cliffs 1,000 to 1,250 meters high, has frequently been compared with
fjords in Norway.
The UAE territory separating Ruus al Jibal from the rest of Oman
extends almost as far south as the coastal town of Shinas. A narrow,
well-populated coastal plain known as Al Batinah runs from the point at
which the sultanate is reentered to the town of As Sib, about 140
kilometers to the southeast. Across the plains, a number of wadis,
heavily populated in their upper courses, descend from the Al Hajar al
Gharbi Mountains to the south. A ribbon of oases, watered by wells and
underground channels (falaj), extends the length of the plain,
about ten kilometers inland.
South of As Sib, the coast changes character. For about 175
kilometers, from As Sib to Ras al Hadd, it is barren and bounded by
cliffs almost its entire length; there is no cultivation and little
habitation. Although the deep water off this coast renders navigation
relatively easy, there are few natural harbors or safe anchorages. The
two best are at Muscat and Matrah, where natural harbors facilitated the
growth of cities centuries ago.
West of the coastal areas lies the tableland of central Oman. The Al
Hajar Mountains form two ranges: the Al Hajar al Gharbi Mountains and
the Al Hajar ash Sharqi (Eastern Al Hajar) Mountains. They are divided
by the Wadi Samail (the largest wadi in the mountain zone), a valley
that forms the traditional route between Muscat and the interior. The
general elevation is about 1,200 meters, but the peaks of the high ridge
known as Al Jabal al Akhdar (Green Mountain)--which is considered a
separate area but is actually part of the Al Hajar al Gharbi
Mountains--rise to more than 3,000 meters in some places. Al Jabal al
Akhdar is the only home of the Arabian tahr, a unique species
of wild goat. In the hope of saving this rare animal, Sultan Qabus ibn
Said has declared part of Al Jabal al Akhdar a national park. Behind the
Al Hajar al Gharbi Mountains are two inland regions, Az Zahirah and
inner Oman, separated by the lateral range of the Rub al Khali.
Adjoining the Al Hajar ash Sharqi Mountains are the sandy regions of Ash
Sharqiyah and Jalan, which also border the desert.
The desolate coastal tract from Jalan to Ras Naws has no specific
name. Low hills and wastelands meet the sea for long distances. Midway
along this coast and about fifteen kilometers offshore is the barren
island of Masirah. Stretching about seventy kilometers, the island
occupies a strategic location near the entry point to the Gulf of Oman
from the Arabian Sea. Because of its location, it became the site of
military facilities used first by the British and then by the United
States, following an access agreement signed in 1980 by the United
States and Oman.
Dhofar region extends from Ras ash Sharbatat to the border of Yemen.
Its exact northern limit has never been defined, but the territory
claimed by the sultan includes the Wadi Mughshin, about 240 kilometers
inland. The southwestern portion of the coastal plain of Dhofar is
regarded as one of the most beautiful in Arabia, and its capital,
Salalah, was the permanent residence of Sultan Said ibn Taimur Al Said
and the birthplace of the present sultan, Qabus ibn Said. The highest
peaks are about 1,000 meters. At their base lies a narrow, pebbly desert
adjoining the Rub al Khali to the north.
Climate
With the exception of Dhofar region, which has a light monsoon
climate and receives cool winds from the Indian Ocean, the climate of
Oman is extremely hot and dry most of the year. Summer begins in
mid-April and lasts until October. The highest temperatures are
registered in the interior, where readings of more than 50� C in the
shade are common. On the Al Batinah plain, summer temperatures seldom
exceed 46� C, but, because of the low elevation, the humidity may be as
high as 90 percent. The mean summer temperature in Muscat is 33� C, but
the gharbi (literally, western), a strong wind that blows from
the Rub al Khali, can raise temperatures from the towns on the Gulf of
Oman by 6� C to 10� C. Winter temperatures are mild and pleasant,
ranging between 15� C and 23� C.
Precipitation on the coasts and on the interior plains ranges from
twenty to 100 millimeters a year and falls during mid- and late winter.
Rainfall in the mountains, particularly over Al Jabal al Akhdar, is much
higher and may reach 700 millimeters. Because the plateau of Al Jabal al
Akhdar is porous limestone, rainfall seeps quickly through it, and the
vegetation, which might be expected to be more lush, is meager. However,
a huge reservoir under the plateau provides springs for low-lying areas.
In addition, an enormous wadi channels water to these valleys, making
the area agriculturally productive in years of good rainfall. Dhofar,
benefiting from a southwest monsoon between June and September, receives
heavier rainfall and has constantly running streams, which make the
region Oman's most fertile area.
Population
A comprehensive population census has never been conducted, but in
1992 the sultanate solicited help from the United Nations (UN) Fund for
Technical and Financial Assistance in taking a full census. For planning
purposes, the government in 1992 estimated the population at 2 million,
but the actual figure may be closer to 1.5 million, growing at a rate of
3.5 percent per annum. The population is unevenly distributed; the
coastal regions, the Al Batinah plain, and the Muscat metropolitan area
contain the largest concentration.
The population is heterogeneous, consisting of an ethnic and
religious mix derived in large part from a history of maritime trade,
tribal migrations, and contacts with the outside world. Although Arabs
constitute the majority, non-Arab communities include Baluchis--from the
Makran coast of Iran and Pakistan--who are concentrated in Muscat and
the Al Batinah coast and play a significant role in the armed forces;
ex-slaves (a legacy of Oman's slave trade and East African colonies);
and Zanzibari Omanis, who are well represented in the police force and
the professions. The integration of Omanis of African descent is often
circumscribed by a language barrier (they often speak Swahili and
English but not always Arabic). The presence of Omanis of Indian descent
in Muscat reflects the historical commercial ties between the sultanate
and the Indian subcontinent. The Khoja community in Matrah, of Indian
origin, is perhaps the richest private group in Oman, and its members
are among the best educated. The Shihuh of the northern Musandam
Peninsula numbered about 20,000 in the early 1990s. They speak Arabic
and a dialect of Farsi and engage primarily in fishing and herding.
Because of the small indigenous population, the government has been
obliged to use foreign labor. In 1992 about 60 percent of the labor
force was foreign. Some 350,000 foreign workers and their families
(primarily Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Filipinos, and Sri
Lankans) live in Oman. The high percentage of foreigners in the work
force, combined with improvements in the country's education system, has
prompted the government to institute a program of indigenization whereby
Omani nationals gradually replace foreigners.
Updated population figures for Oman.
Persian Gulf States
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