The End of Pax Britannica in the Persian Gulf, 1968-1971

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Springer Nature, Nov 17, 2020 - History - 290 pages

This book examines how the rulers in the Persian Gulf responded to the British announcement of military withdrawal from the Gulf in 1968, ending 150 years of military supremacy in the region. The British system in the Gulf was accepted for more than a century not merely because the British were the dominant military power in the region. The balance of power mattered, but so did the framework within which the British exercised their power. The search for a new political framework, which began when the British announced withdrawal, was not simply a matter of which ruler would amass enough military power to fill the void left by the British: it was also a matter of the Gulf rulers – chiefly Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the ruling shaykhs of the lower Gulf – coming to a shared understanding of when and how the exercise of power would be viewed as legitimate. This book explores what shaped the rulers’ ideas and actions in the region as the British system came to an end, providing a much-needed political history of the region in the lead-up to the independence of the UAE, Bahrain, and Qatar in 1971.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
The End of Pax Britannica in the Persian Gulf
18
One Step Forward One Step Back
51
Iran The British Successor in the Gulf?
83
Nixon the Shah and King Faysal
113
Iran Shifting Gears
139
From Crisis to Clarity
163
A Sea Change in the Middle East and the Gulf
194
Grandeur and Independence
223
Conclusion
255
Bibliography
263
Index
275
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About the author (2020)

Brandon Friedman is the Director of Research at the Moshe Dayan Center (MDC) for Middle Eastern and African Studies, Tel Aviv University, where he is a member of the Faculty of Humanities, lecturing on modern Middle Eastern history and historiography.

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