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Chapter Eight

                 5th of February; the Rulers of 'Ajman and Umm al Qaiwain   went
                 aboard ship to sign on the 15th of March when Keir was already on
                 his way to the Persian coast. The Shaikh of Rams soon lost the
                 support of most of his people, and he and the Shaikh of Jazirah al
                 Hamra’ were later deposed by the British authorities, and Sultan bin
                 Saqr was eventually recognised as the Ruler over all the ports of the
                 Qawasim, which did not include ’Ajman nor Umm al Qaiwain.
                 Sayyid Sa’fd of Oman, although benefiting most from the downfall of
                 the Qawasim, did not participate in the drafting of the treaty, nor did
                 he slay in Ra’s al Khaimah for long enough to witness its signatures.
                 Impact of the treaty on the relationships between Arab Rulers
                 The general treaty laid down the foundation for a new type of
                 relationship between the British Indian Empire and the Arabs of the
                 lower Gulf. This treaty was only one of many which the authorities in
                 India concluded over the generations with tribal societies on the
                 fringes of the empire.
                   More significant is that this treaty began to change the relation­
                 ship among the littoral Arab Rulers themselves: they had now made
                 a truce with each other through making a truce with the British
                 authorities. It was expected by both parties that the British would
                 police the Gulf to prevent violation of the treaty. This was, however,
                 not very effective because the British authorities lacked the means to
                 patrol constantly in the Gulf. They also avoided the resentments
                 which close observation would inevitably have created among the
                 Arabs of the Gulf. As it was the Arab Rulers became accustomed to
                 the idea that there was a British “fire-brigade” which any one of them
                 could call in if a settlement could not be reached by diplomacy or by
                 war. It therefore needed little effort on the part of the British
                 authorities to persuade the Rulers to depend more and more on the
                 outside guarantor in the subsequent treaties of 1835 and 1853. For
                 the small price of maintaining five cruisers al Bushire, which gave the
                 impression that prompt diplomatic and naval action was forth­
                 coming if the treaties were violated, the British authorities eventually
                 gained a position from which they could shape politics on these
                 shores if they so wished, under the pretext of any of the wide range of
                 issues covered by the treaties.

                 Practicalities of peace-keeping
                 The General Treaty of Peace of 1820 was important not so much
                 because it was an attempt to bring about complete peace, for in this it

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