Political History of UAE
n the 1820s, it was quite a common thing that the British ships were being often
attacked by the local pirates of the Arab region. But everything was brought
under control after the local Arab rulers signed a treaty with the British in 1853,
under which they accepted British military protection and in turn promised to refrain
from piracy.
In the 1950s, the British sought
to weld the seven distinct regimes of the Trucial States
into a single administrative bloc. The discovery of oil that gave a sudden and rapid
boost to the economy of the region, and withdrawal of British military forces from
the Gulf area, set the future course of the territory.
The
United Arab Emiratescame
into being as an independent state on
2 December 1971
. Internal politics were prone to instability, but the ruling families in the two
main emirates,
Dubai (the
Al-Makhtoums) and
Abu Dhabi
(the Al Nahyans whose ruler, Sheikh
Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayan, is the current president of the UAE) have managed to stabilize the federation.
After a quiet start
on the international stage, the UAE have taken an active role in Eastern politics
both as a member of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), of which they were a founder,
and in offering itself, successfully on several occasions, as a mediator in disputes
between Israel and the Palestinians, Morocco and Algeria, Iran and Iraq, and between
Oman and Yemen. It also developed links further afield,
in anticipation of the East-West thaw and before other countries in the region,
by establishing diplomatic relations with
China and
the former
USSR .
The prospects of peace offered by the end of the Iran-Iraq war in 1988 were briefly
threatened when the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait
in August 1990, once again put the Emirates close to the center of a major regional
dispute.
In common with other
members of the Gulf Co-operation Council, the UAE gave their firm backing to the
US-led anti-Iraqi coalition. In the years after the war, the Emirates participated
in augmenting the Peninsular Shield deterrent force set up under the auspices of
the GCC, and based in
Saudi Arabia
. It also signed security agreements with both the
USA and
the
UK . In
1992, a territorial dispute with
Iran over ownership of three small Gulf islands – Greater and Lesser Tunbs,
and Abu Musa – flared up again. The islands occupy a
strategic position close to Gulf shipping lanes; moreover, the discovery of large
offshore gas fields gives them economic significance. The American-sponsored strategy
of ‘dual containment’ (of
Iran and
Iraq )
required that the Iranian claims be resisted. But in the case of
Iraq ,
the UAE has been leading Arab calls for an end to sanctions against
Iraq and
has made several moves (such as re-opening its
Baghdad embassy) to improve ties with the Iraqis.
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