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Richard Nixon, Great Britain and the Anglo-American Alignment in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Peninsula - Making Allies Out of Clients (Paperback)
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Richard Nixon, Great Britain and the Anglo-American Alignment in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Peninsula - Making Allies Out of Clients (Paperback)
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When the British Labour party announced the withdrawal of British
forces from the Persian Gulf in January 1968, the United States
faced a potential power vacuum in the area. The incoming Nixon
administration, preoccupied with the Soviet Union and China, and
the war in Vietnam, had no intention of replacing the British in
the Gulf. To avoid further military commitments, the US encouraged
Iran and Saudi Arabia to maintain area security. A critical policy
decision, overlooked by most scholars, saw Nixon and Kissinger
engineer the rise in oil prices between 1969 and 1972 to enable
Saudi Arabia and Iran to purchase the necessary military hardware
to serve as guardians of the Gulf. For all their bluster about
reversing Labours withdrawal decision, after their surprise victory
in the election of June 1970 the Conservatives adhered to Labours
policy. But in contrast to Labours wish to cut the umbilical cord
of empire, the Tories wanted to retain influence in the Persian
Gulf, pursuing policies largely independent of the US by the
creation of the United Arab Emirates, deposing the sultan of Oman,
and trying to solve the dispute over the Buraimi oasis with Saudi
Arabia. By trying to maintain its empire on the cheap, Britain
turned into an arms supplier supreme. But offering and selling arms
does not a foreign policy make, leaving Britain in the long run
with less influence in regional affairs. This was true also for the
US, whose arms sales were to prove no realistic an alternative to
foreign policy. The US hid under the Iranian security blanket for
almost a decade. Given the weakness of the regime and the Shahs
nonsensical dreams of turning Iran into one of the top five
industrial and military powers in the world, the policy was
cavalierly irresponsible. Similarly, leaving Saudi Arabia wallowing
in oil money and medieval stupor a seedbed for Islamic
fundamentalists created major future problems for the United
States, as evinced by 9/11.
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