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Chapter Eight

                 7 British involvement in the 1950s and 1960s

                 A change of attitude
                 While the British authorities had kept the closest watch for possible
                 infringements of Britain’s confirmed rights and privileges, her duty
                 towards the people of the area was seen in India to be confined to
                 keeping the peace at sea. A few years after the Second World War
                 Britain’s policy towards the Trucial States changed to include a novel
                 feature: it was maintained by many of those who then influenced
                 Britain’s policy towards its weaker proteges that she should  assume
                 a certain amount of responsibility for the betterment of the welfare of
                 the population in those areas.
                   This voice of social conscience was stirring throughout the
                 western world of the post-war decades, strongly enough to  arouse
                 bad feelings if such responsibility was not shouldered and no
                 development assistance was rendered. Yet reality always fell short of
                 this idealistic notion of brotherly responsibility for the weaker
                 partners, for no nation can sustain for long a largely altruistic foreign
                 policy. Development help of all kinds necessarily also serves in the
                 first place the donor nation’s interests, be they the need to secure the
                 supply of raw materials, to guarantee the stability of a vital region or
                 to pacify pressure-groups at home. Great Britain, too, was in the
                 event able to make only the minimum contribution to the social
                 development of the people in the Trucial Stales: a minimum as
                 compared to the requirements of the then impoverished and
                 backward region; a maximum if looked at in the light of British
                 commitments to similar tasks in its overpopulated former colonies.
                 During the decades while Britain’s former wealth, resources and
                 world power were vanishing fast, her development assistance to the
                 Trucial States had to be fairly accurately tailored to match whatever
                 benefit she could hope to derive in return for maintaining her
                 influence over this area.
                 Growing financial commitments of the oil companies
                 In the 1950s, the commencement of large-scale oil exploration
                 channelled relatively vast amounts of foreign investment into the
                 Trucial States for the first time. The two main oil companies were
                 British-based, although some of the shares were held by foreign
                 companies,79 and this placed the British authorities under some
                 obligation to safeguard the investments. After a winter of seismic
                 work in the Trucial States in early 1949, Petroleum Development

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