Page 319 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 319

Chapter Eight

                   This so called Exclusive Agreement integrated the Trucial States
                 into the screen of semi-independent Stales and principalities which
                  was created right across the British Indian Empire’s northern
                  frontiers and western seaboards and along its vital communication
                 lines with Europe. It was designed to impede the progress into any of
                  these areas of the rival powers France, Russia, and the German-
                 Turkish alliance of interests/10 For the shaikhdoms in the Gulf this
                 agreement made it virtually impossible to conduct their own affairs
                 with outside powers or even with their Arab neighbours, such as the
                  Wahhabi State, without the close scrutiny of the British authorities.
                 Thus the British Government secured enough exclusive influence
                 and practical political leverage over these shaikhdoms without
                 formally making them protectorates.47 During the first decades of the
                 20lh century this predominantly political and military leverage48 was
                 turned to economic advantages. In 1911 the Trucial Shaikhs pledged
                 not to give concessions for pearling and sponge-fishing without
                 consulting the Political Resident.40 Practical matters such as safe­
                 guarding the telephone cable across the Musandam Peninsula and
                 the construction of a lighthouse on Tunb Island were also regulated
                 by agreements.




                 5 British anticipation of economic benefits



                 Move to exclude non-British economic interests
                 By the time the First World War broke out, the prime objectives of the
                 “cordon-sanitaire” policy of the British Government with regard to
                 the Arab principalities in the Gulf had been achieved. Formal treaties
                 and undertakings as much as informal political tutelage had made
                 it impossible for these principalities to respond to any diplomatic
                 overtures from the Turkish and German enemies or from any other
                 rivals to the British position. This, in turn, also secured the British
                 military objectives by preventing the establishment of foreign bases.
                 Even the economic benefits which could be derived from these
                 shaikhdoms, though they were considered to be meagre enough in
                 the case of the Trucial States, were put securely out of the reach of
                     outsiders and made almost inaccessible even for British
                 any
                 subjects.50
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