Page 386 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
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The Formation of Ihc Federation

        Dubai, Qatar and Abu Dhabi met informally to discuss the future of
        the Union.
          The British Government sent Sir William Luce on his fourth visit to
        the Gulf, starling in Teheran in May. Me was primarily concerned
        there with negotiations regarding the ever more persistent Iranian
        claim to the islands of Abu Musa and the two Tunbs.92 He also paid
        several visits to Bahrain and the other Emirates, following which the
        Residency in Bahrain circulated a memorandum to all the nine Rulers
        containing Sir William Luce’s suggestions for compromises on the
        four points which were still in dispute after the second Saudi-
        Kuwaiti mission. His proposals met the same fate as those of the
        mission in that they failed to bring about agreement on these points.
        After his return to London a new round of visits and frantic
        deliberations recommenced in the Gulf.93

        Bahrain and Qatar opt out while Abu Dhabi prepares
        for the worst
        During early 1971 Bahrain became increasingly preoccupied with
        normalising its relationship with Iran. The continental shelf between
        the two countries was demarcated in an agreement signed on 17 June.
        The Iranian Foreign Minister, Ardeshir Zahedi, arrived on 23 June,
        from the start reiterating Iran’s claim to the three islands near the
        Straits of Hormuz and emphasising that his country would oppose
        the federation if the question of the islands was not settled first. It
        was rumoured that the big neighbour tried to impose certain
        conditions94 on Bahrain in return for allowing it a free hand in
        choosing its political destiny.
          It became increasingly obvious that the authorities in Bahrain
        were still hoping that their country would be part of the federation
        and thus be less vulnerable to Iranian pressure. But the majority of
        the educated population of Bahrain did not really want to be
        integrated with a society which in their eyes still had some way to go
        to reach Bahrain’s sophistication. By June 1971 it became clear that
        Bahrain could be reasonably secure on her own, enjoying peaceful
        co-existence with Iran, Saudi economic and moral support, as well as
        the prospect of close technical co-operation with other Gulf States.
        So, the would-be partners in the federation of nine Emirates were
        privately informed that Bahrain would soon “go it alone’’. The
        declaration of independence was broadcast by the Ruler, Shaikh 'Isa,
        on 14 August 1971 after the formation of the United Arab Emirates,
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