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The Gulf War: Its Origins, History and Consequences

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Traces the history of the war between Iran and Iraq, discussing how eight years of apparently futile warfare affected the politics of the Middle East and America's position in the region

304 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1984

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John Bulloch

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Daren.
1,603 reviews4,591 followers
June 12, 2022
Published in 1984, this is a really readable narrative covering many aspects of The Gulf - Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. They are kept in context with Iraq and Oman, both of which have a large influence.
With chapters dedicated to Less recent history; the dividing of land (into countries); the discovery of oil; slavery and servants; trade and piracy; pearling and the sudden end to that industry; some ancient history and a look to the future.

This was a surprisingly easy to read book. There were plenty of interesting aspects for, which I have chosen to just write a sentence or two on each below.
Iraqi claims to Kuwait, and Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion foreshadowed in this book; and the arguments between Qatar and Bahrain over the island of Hawar, which sits just off the shore of Qatar, but is part of Bahrain. Similarly Iran claimed all of the islands - why else would it be called the Persian Gulf? was their argument!

I was also unaware the original prospector for oil in Bahrain, where it was first discovered in The Gulf was a New Zealander, Frank Holmes, a mining engineer. The slavery chapter compared modern day (1980s) with traditional slavery, with details of house servants (Filipino, Sri Lankan and Thai were common) and oil industry workers (many Indian and Pakistani).

Pearling had played a huge part (almost all) of the Gulf economy before oil, and the perfecting the method of mass producing cultured pearls in Japan ended the industry practically overnight.

The chapter on piracy returned to the 18th century and continued to the early 19th century, with lots of detail around British scouring the gulf destroying pirate ships, punishing towns which aided and abetted pirates, multiple agreements and treaty's and plenty of loss of life on both sides. Colourful, but particularly confusing with lots of dates, Arab names and place names all circling around.
The final chapter throws out some predictions for the future of the Gulf. Some must have seemed more likely than others when written in 1984, but approaching 40 years on, some have not come to fruition. For example - peak oil demands would occur in 1990, and demand would reduce from there on, due to new technology - well that is taking a lot longer than predicted. Another that was interesting - the Gulf countries would amalgamate under an Emirates style banner - not any more likely now than then, i don't think. That the Gulf states will become more of an mixture of cultures and peoples - no doubt there are still many expats and foreign workers, but I believe citizenship remains hard to obtain. Interestingly one of the predictions is tension between Russia and the USA over the Gulf.

3.5 stars, rounded up to 4 stars.
Profile Image for Diaa El-masry.
178 reviews13 followers
June 10, 2020
كتاب أكثر من رائع قدم صورة شاملة لتاريخ دول الخليج ونشأتها وصراعاتها التي لم تنتهي حتى اليوم! قرأته مترجما للعربية بترجمة دهام موسى العطاونة التي كانت ترجمة رائعة ومحترفة حتى ليبدو وكأن الكتاب كتب بالعربية أصلا.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews