Page 76 - The Persian Gulf Historical Summaries (1907-1953) Vol II_Neat
P. 76

62
                   from the centre and for uniform scales of pay were first accepted by the Ruler and
                   then put into cold storage owing to the opposition they encountered from members
                   ol the ruling family wno were heads 01 departments. Crichton therefore was
                   unable to pul the State's financial organisation on a proper footing but by the end
                   ol 1953 he had succeeded in extracting budgets from all except two departments and
                   in ensuring an equitable distribution of the Stale’s revenue between capital and
                   current expenditure and invested reserves.
                       17. As Crichton’s efforts to re-organise the State's administration appeared
                   to be meeting with so little success, Sir Roger Makins when he visited Kuwait in
                   1952 recommended that consideration should be given to the appointment of a
                  senior and experienced British Adviser there.(22) This proposal was discussed, the
                  Foreign Office lavouring the idea of appointing a senior adviser with the idea of
                  his becoming a " Belgravc/’p1) but in view of the unpopularity of the term
                    Adviser ” it was decided that the Ruler should be pressed to employ a senior
                  British Personal Assistant. In July the Political Resident was accordingly instructed
                  to ask the Ruler (1) to suppress Fahad, who had been giving much trouble to the
                  British experts, (2) to appoint a British Personal Assistant and (3) to delegate
                  authority for taking decisions to the Development Board and the Finance
                  Department.(21) The Ruler asked that these requests should be put into writing,
                  which was done so far as the second and third requests were concerned, it being
                  thought better that a further oral approach should be made regarding the first one.
                  He replied to the written requests to the effect that as things were now proceeding
                  satisfactorily he thought it desirable that the proposals should be kept in abeyance,
                  and averted the oral approach regarding Fahad by complaining about the behaviour
                  of Crichton and Hasted. In August 1953 the Political Resident delivered to the
                  Ruler a letter from the Prime Minister recommending the appointment of a British
                  Adviser but the Ruler politely but firmly refused to consider the appointment at
                  that time.
                      18. At the end of 1951 Major-General W. F. Hasted, C.B., C.I.E., C.B.E.,
                  D.S.O., accepted the appointment of Chief Engineer to the Kuwait Government.
                  He arrived early in the following year and a Development Board was set up in
                  which he and Crichton were the leading spirits. Hasted set to work with great
                  energy and a number of large construction projects were given to British contractors
                  working in partnership with British firms. He also employed a number of British
                  experts on his staff; by the middle of 1952 there were 24 British engineers in Kuwait
                  in Government employ. The Ruler in due course became alarmed at the rate of
                  expenditure and other members of the ruling family were jealous of the position
                  and patronage which Hasted had acquired. Furthermore all the biggest and most
                  profitable works were in the hands of five British contracting firms and their
                  Kuwaiti partners (paragraph 21 below). Hasted allowed himself to be identified
                  with these firms and became the main target of criticism directed against them, and
                  British enterprise in general, by Kuwaitis who had not obtained contracts or what
                  they regarded as their share of development expenditure. This criticism was still
                 vocal at the end of 1953. In May 1952 the Ruler virtually dissolved the Development
                  Board as it then existed by forbidding the directors of departments to attend it.(24)
                  In July he stated that the Development Board was purely technical and advisory and
                  that Fahad as head of the Public Works Department could revise any orders given
                 by Hasted.(2C) In December Fahad was made President of the Board and a proposal
                 was made that future construction contracts should be handled on a co-operative
                 basis through a holding company which would replace Hasted's organisation. This
                 proposal came to nothing, but in the spring of 1953 a Syrian called Jabri was
                 appointed Chief Engineer and Hasted was informed that his duties were entirely
                 advisory and not executive^27) Hasted made many complaints but accepted the
                 position. At the same time it was decided that all future contracts must be put
                 out to tender, and that priority should be given to Kuwaiti firms, other than those
                 already working in association with British firms, or mixed companies. All this
                 led to much ill-feeling between Hasted and Crichton. The former blamed the latter
                 for the instructions that had been issued to him, and the latter the former for
                 refusing to submit to financial control. The British contracting firms voiced their
                    f27) Para. 14 at p. 6 of Sir R. Makins’ Report,
                    f”) FO to P.R. EA 1055/5 G of April 10. 1952.
                    M Tel from FO. to P.R. 459 of July 14. 1952 (EA 1055/41 of 1952).
                    M Tel from Kuwait to P.R. 105 of May 9. 1952 (EA 1015/11 of 1952)
                     ’• Tel rom Kuwait to P.R. 165 of July 11. 1952 (EA 1055/40 of 1952).
                    n KuwakTo F O. 95/9/53 of April 9. 1953 (EA 1103/36 of 1953).
   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81