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oil refining centres in the region. 161   Although the company was registered in

                   Canada with its shares owned by the Standard Oil Company of California and the


                   Texas Oil Company, the majority of its management was British and its status was


                   that of a British-operated company. 162

                          From a global perspective and in light of the Cold War, Bahrain and its oil


                   fields were of a strategic importance to the British in view of the threat of Soviet

                   advance into the region as a COS memorandum from April 1952 revealed.  The


                   British had devised a plan to protect Bahrain, its oil fields, refinery, and oil passage

                   from any dreaded Soviet penetration into the area.  For the defense plan twenty-


                   four frigates and thirty-four minesweepers, one infantry division, and ten squadrons

                   were allocated.  The plan was devised with the assumption that both Iraq and Iran


                   had fallen into the hands of the enemy.

                          The plan was broached with Mosaddegh still in power as it was feared that


                   the Soviets might wish to take advantage of the situation in the Gulf.  The

                   memorandum estimated that the Soviets could reach Bahrain’s oil fields within sixty


                   days after gaining complete control of both Iraq and Iran.  Furthermore the

                   importance associated with Bahrain’s oil fields was attached to the anxiety that


                   Kuwait’s oil fields (also under British protection) would capitulate following Soviet

                   annexation of Iraq and Iran.  Hence the next line of defence for Britain would be


                   Bahrain and its oil fields. 163







                   161  S.H. Longrigg, Oil in the Middle East: Its Discovery and Development (London: 1961), 219.
                   162  Hay, The Persian Gulf, 94; and J.H.D. Belgrave, Welcome to Bahrain (London: 1973), 48.
                   163  TNA, DEFE 4/53/58, C.O.S. (52)58H, Defence of the Bahrein Oil Area in Isolation, 9 April 1952.


                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        52
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