Archeological evidence
indicates that human activity in Kuwait dates as
far back as 8,000 BCE. The area is thought to have been part of the Bronze
Age Dilium civilization, which was probably centered in what is now Bahrain from 2,200 to about 1,800
BCE. This civilization was advanced for its
time, on a par with the contemporary civilizations in Mesopotamia and the Indus
Valley with which it traded. The Greeks settled on the island of Faylaka about the
4th century BCE.
Islam was
brought to Kuwait in the 7th century
CE. One of the early
battles between the Muslims and the Sasanian (Persian) Empire was fought
in Kuwait in 632, from which the Muslims emerged victorious. For the next thousand years, however, it remained isolated from world events, the
largely desert landscape only sparsely inhabited by nomadic tribes. The area came
under the nominal suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire during the reign of Suleiman the Magnificent (152066), but in actual fact, the Ottomans
exerted virtually no power or influence there.
Instead,
control rested with the tribes of the Arabian Peninsula. By the 17th
century, the Bani Khalid tribe controlled the northeastern area of the
Arabian Peninsula, and their leader built his kuta small
fortress-shaped houseon the Kuwaiti coast in about 1672. The Bani Khalid were joined some years
later by the Utub, a federation of tribes who had been driven out
of the interior by drought. Initially, the Utub accepted the sovereignty of the
Bani Khalid, but when the latter became preoccupied with internal disputes and external
threats, the Utub became essentially independent. In 1756, they elected one of their members, Sheikh Sabah bin Jaber, as their leader,
establishing the Sabah family as rulers of Kuwait.
The small village of Kuwait
prospered under the
Sabah rule. Fishing and pearling were the primary economic activities initially, and over time,
Kuwaits rise as an important port led to the development of
shipbuilding as a significant industry. The strategic location of Kuwait eventually drew
the attention of the Ottoman authorities. The Sabahs managed to balance Turkish interests with their own, and a generally friendly coexistence
continued until 1899. That was when the Ottoman and German powers announced their plans to build a railroad from Constantinople all the way
to the port of Kuwait. This would have resulted in full Ottoman control
over Kuwait. Lacking his own means of resisting this move, Sheikh Mubarak
al-Sabahwho was ruler at the timeturned to the British for help. The
resulting treaty ensured British military protection of Kuwait in return
for British control over Kuwaits foreign affairs. This relationship
continued until Kuwaits independence in 1961.
Over the
next several decades, Kuwaits prosperity declined. A worldwide
recession led to decreased trade, which in turn resulted in a decline in Kuwaits importance as an international port. The introduction of
cultured pearls in the early 1900s almost destroyed the pearling industry in Kuwait
and nearby countries, and local economies suffered.
The
discovery of oil in the Persian Gulf region quickly changed things.
The British-American-owned Kuwait Oil Company was granted a concession for oil exploration in 1934, and oil was discovered four years later on
the eve of World War II. The development of Kuwaits oil fields did not
begin in earnest until after the war, and when export finally began in 1946, the
resulting economic boom transformed Kuwait almost overnight. In additional
to the infrastructure necessary to support the oil industry, modern
health facilities, schools, markets, offices, houses, and mosques were built with
the assistance of large numbers of foreign workers. Services such as
health and education improved dramatically. With only limited freshwater
resources, desalination plants were built to provide water for domestic as
well as industrial purposes. By 1960, per capita income in Kuwait was among the
highest in the world.
In 1961,
Kuwait signed a new Treaty of Friendship with Britain, which
ended the protectorate and accorded Kuwait international recognition as a
sovereign and independent state. Iraq initially refused to recognize
Kuwaiti independence and threatened to annex it, asserting an historical
claim to the country. When Britain and other Arab countries demonstrated their
readiness to defend Kuwait militarily, Iraq relinquished its claim and in 1963 signed a border treaty with Kuwait. This was followed three years
later by a treaty with Saudi Arabia and an agreement to share oil production
in the border area.
An
economic boom in the 1970s, fueled by an increase in oil prices and the
nationalization of the Kuwait Oil Company, was followed by a decade of
uneasiness. Kuwait joined other members of the Arab League in supporting
Iraq in the Iraq-Iran war, rhetorically as well as financially. Iran
reacted by bombing Kuwaiti oil installations and tankers, and Shi`a groups within
Kuwait attempted to destabilize the country. In 1985, Kuwait expelled 27,000 foreign workers, most of whom were
Shi`a.
Relations
with Iraq worsened in 1990, when Iraq accused Kuwait of taking more than its share of oil from a contested reserve that straddles the
border between the two countries. Efforts to resolve the question
peacefully failed, and Iraq invaded Kuwait in early August and announced its annexation
several days later. A U.S.-led international force eventually evicted Iraq
from Kuwait in early 1991. The years that followed were devoted to putting out
oil-well fires, decontaminating the Gulf waters into which oil had flowed,
and rebuilding the countrys infrastructure. In 1994, Iraq officially
recognized Kuwaiti sovereignty and its borders as defined by the United Nations.
Some effects of the war have continued for more than a decade, including Kuwaiti prisoners of war still held by Iraq and the ongoing
international embargo against Iraq.
Kuwaits
constitution, which became official in early 1963, defines the
country as a hereditary emirate with succession limited to descendants
of Sheikh Mubarak al-Sabah. The emir presides over a 16-member
cabinet, the members of which he appoints. A National Assembly
(Parliament) is composed of 50 members elected to four-year terms. The balance of power among the cabinet, the emir, and the assembly has
been uneasy at times. The emir has suspended the constitution and
dissolved the assembly for an extended period twice: once from 19761981, and a second time from 19861990.
Suffrage in Kuwait is limited to
Kuwaiti males, and to naturalized Kuwaitis and their descendants who have
resided in Kuwait for at least 30 years. Opposition groups in Kuwait
continue to push for greater political participation, including the right
of women to vote. In 1999, the emir decreed that women would be able to vote and run for office, but
the newly elected National Assembly, dominated by conservatives, rejected the
decree by a narrow margin, just three votes short of a majority.
Learn
more about Kuwaits political system:
-
Kuwaits
Political System: Part I, The Al-Sabah Family, The Estimate, June
4, 1999
-
Kuwaits
Political System: Part II, Parliament, The Estimate, June 18,
1999
-
Kuwait
Information Office, India
-
Kuwait
Information Office, Washington, DC
Learn
more about Kuwaits history:
|