Overview
Country, Middle East, southwestern Asia.
It is on the Arabian Peninsula at the northwest corner of the Persian
Gulf. Area: 6,880 sq mi (17,818 sq km). Population (2005 est.):
2,847,000. Capital: Kuwait city. Its population is overwhelmingly Arab.
Languages: Arabic (official), Persian, English. Religion: Islam
(official). Currency: Kuwaiti dinar. Except for Al-Jahrāʾ oasis, at the
western end of Kuwait Bay, and a few fertile patches in the southeastern
and coastal areas, it is largely desert; annual precipitation totals 1–7
in. (25–180 mm). Kuwait has almost no arable land, but there is a small
amount of pastureland for livestock. Its extensive petroleum and natural
gas deposits are the basis of its economy. Its estimated reserves of
petroleum represent roughly one-tenth of global reserves, ranking Kuwait
third, behind Iraq and Saudi Arabia. It is a constitutional monarchy
with one legislative body; the head of state and government is the emir,
assisted by the prime minister. Traces of civilization on Faylakah, an
island in Kuwait Bay, date to the 3rd millennium bc. These flourished
until c. 1200 bc, when they disappeared from the historical record.
Greek colonists again settled the island in the 4th century bc. The
nomadic ʿAnizah tribe of central Arabia founded Kuwait city in 1710, and
ʿAbd al-Raḥīm of the Ṣabāḥ dynasty became sheikh in 1756; the family
continues to rule Kuwait. In 1899, to thwart German and Ottoman
influences, Kuwait agreed to give Britain control of its foreign
affairs. Following the outbreak of war with the Ottoman Empire in World
War I (1914–18), Britain established a protectorate there. In 1961,
after Kuwait had gained full independence from Britain, Iraq laid claim
to Kuwait. British troops were sent to defend Kuwait; the Arab League
recognized its independence, and Iraq dropped its claim. Iraq reasserted
these claims in the aftermath of the Iraq-Iraq War and invaded and
occupied Kuwait in 1990. A U.S.-led military coalition drove the Iraqi
army out of Kuwait the next year (see Persian Gulf War). Iraqi forces
set fire to most of Kuwait’s oil wells, but these were extinguished, and
petroleum production soon returned to prewar levels.
Profile
Official name Dawlat al-Kuwayt (State of Kuwait)
Form of government constitutional monarchy with one legislative body
(National Assembly [501])
Head of state and government Emir assisted by the Prime Minister
Capital Kuwait (city)
Official language Arabic
Official religion Islam
Monetary unit Kuwaiti dinar (KD)
Population estimate (2008) 3,530,000
Total area (sq mi) 6,880
Total area (sq km) 17,818
1Excludes 15 cabinet ministers not elected to National Assembly serving
ex officio.
Main
country of the Arabian Peninsula located in the northwestern corner
of the Persian Gulf.
A small emirate nestled between Iraq and Saudi Arabia, Kuwait is
situated in a section of one of the driest, least-hospitable deserts on
earth. Its shore, however, includes Kuwait Bay, a deep harbour on the
Persian Gulf. There, in the 18th century, Bedouin from the interior
founded a trading post—the name “Kuwait” is derived from the Arabic
diminutive of the Hindustani kūt (“fort”). Since the emirate’s ruling
family, the Āl Ṣabāḥ, formally established a sheikhdom in 1756, the
country’s fortunes have been linked to foreign commerce. In time and
with accumulated wealth, the small fort grew to become Kuwait city, a
modern metropolis mingling skyscrapers, apartment buildings, and
mosques. Kuwait city has most of the country’s population, which makes
Kuwait one of the world’s most urbanized countries.
The tiny country, which was a British protectorate from 1899 until
1961, drew world attention in 1990 when Iraqi forces invaded and
attempted to annex it. A United Nations coalition led by the United
States drove Iraq’s army out of Kuwait within days of launching an
offensive in February 1991, but the retreating invaders looted the
country and set fire to most of its oil wells (see Persian Gulf War).
Kuwait has largely recovered from the effects of the war and again has
one of the highest per capita incomes in the world. Its generally
conservative government continues to provide generous material benefits
for Kuwaiti citizens, and, though conservative elements in its society
resisted such reforms as woman suffrage (women were not enfranchised
until 2005), it has remained relatively stable. It has been called an
“oasis” of peace and safety amid an otherwise turbulent region.
Land
Slightly larger in area than the U.S. state of Hawaii, Kuwait is
bounded to the west and north by Iraq, to the east by the Persian Gulf,
and to the south by Saudi Arabia.
Kuwait is largely a desert, except for Al-Jahrāʾ oasis, at the
western end of Kuwait Bay, and a few fertile patches in the southeastern
and coastal areas. Kuwaiti territory includes nine offshore islands, the
largest of which are the uninhabited Būbiyān and Al-Warbah. The island
of Faylakah, which is located near the entrance of Kuwait Bay, has been
populated since prehistoric times.
A territory of 2,200 square miles (5,700 square km) along the gulf
was shared by Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as a neutral zone until a
political boundary was agreed on in 1969. Each of the two countries now
administers half of the territory (called the Neutral, or Partitioned,
Zone), but they continue to share equally the revenues from oil
production in the entire area. Although the boundary with Saudi Arabia
is defined, the border with Iraq remains in dispute.
Relief
The relief of Kuwait is generally flat or gently undulating, broken
only by occasional low hills and shallow depressions. The elevations
range from sea level in the east to 951 feet (290 metres) above sea
level at Al-Shiqāyā peak, in the western corner of the country. The
Al-Zawr Escarpment, one of the main topographic features, borders the
northwestern shore of Kuwait Bay and rises to a maximum elevation of 475
feet (145 metres). Elsewhere in coastal areas, large patches of salty
marshland have developed. Throughout the northern, western, and central
sections of Kuwait, there are desert basins, which fill with water after
winter rains; historically these basins formed important watering
places, refuges for the camel herds of the Bedouin.
Drainage
Kuwait has no permanent surface water, either in the form of
standing bodies such as lakes or in the form of flows such as perennial
rivers. Intermittent water courses (wadis) are localized and generally
terminate in interior desert basins. Little precipitation is absorbed
beyond the surface level, with most being lost to evaporation.
Soils
True soils scarcely exist naturally in Kuwait. Those that exist are
of little agricultural productivity and are marked by an extremely low
amount of organic matter. Eolian soils and other sedimentary deposits
are common, and a high degree of salinity is found, particularly in
basins and other locations where residual water pools. One of the
environmental consequences of the Persian Gulf War was the widespread
destruction of the desert’s rigid surface layer, which held underlying
sand deposits in place; this has led to an increase in wind-borne sand
and the creation of larger and more numerous sand dunes in the country.
Climate
The climate is desert, tempered somewhat in the coastal regions by
the warm waters of the gulf. If there is enough rainfall, the desert
turns green from mid-March to the end of April. But during the dry
season, between April and September, the heat is severe—daytime
temperatures ordinarily reach 111 °F (44 °C) and on occasion approach
130 °F (54 °C). The winter is more agreeable (frost can even
occasionally occur in the interior, though never on the seacoast).
Annual rainfall averages only from 1 to 7 inches (25 to 180 mm), chiefly
between October and April, though cloudbursts can bring more than 2
inches (50 mm) of rain in a single day.
The frequent winds from the northwest are cool in winter and spring
and hot in summer. Southeasterly winds, usually hot and damp, spring up
between July and October; hot and dry south winds prevail in spring and
early summer. The shamāl, a northwesterly wind common during June and
July, causes dramatic sandstorms.
Plant and animal life
Except in the new green belt of Kuwait city and in a few desert
oases such as Al-Jahrāʾ, where cultivation and irrigation are carried
out, the vegetation consists of scrub and low bushes (and ephemeral
grass in the spring). Halophytes (salt-loving plants) grow on the marshy
stretches along the coast.
The harsh climate limits mammals to the occasional gazelle, fox, or
civet. Among lizards are the rare and venomous sand viper (Cerastes
vipera) and the monitor and vegetarian dab lizards (Uromastix spinipes).
People
Historically, there were several important class divisions in
Kuwait. These divisions emerged during the period when the country was a
trade entrepôt and were largely economic; thus, as the state became
Kuwait’s primary employer after oil was discovered in the 1930s and
these reserves were commercially developed in subsequent decades, this
class structure became less pronounced. The one historically important
class that remains politically important is the old merchant oligarchy,
the Banū (Banī) ʿUtūb—of which the ruling family is a member.
Ethnic groups
Despite a government policy to reduce the number of foreign workers
following the Iraqi invasion in 1990, Kuwaitis remain a minority in
their own country. Nearly two-thirds of the population are expatriate
workers, formerly from other Arab states but now largely from South and
Southeast Asia. These nonnationals do not enjoy citizenship rights,
economic or political, which are reserved for Kuwaiti citizens—defined
as those able to prove Kuwaiti ancestry prior to 1920. Naturalization is
strictly limited. Arabs—either Bedouin, sedentary, or descendants of
immigrants from elsewhere in the region—constitute the largest ethnic
group, and a small number of ethnic Persians have resided in the country
for centuries.
Languages
The native and official language is Arabic, fluency in which is a
requirement for naturalization. Kuwaitis speak a dialect of Gulf Arabic,
and Modern Standard Arabic is taught in schools. English is the second
language taught in public schools. Hindi, Urdu, Persian (Farsi), and
other languages also are widely spoken among the foreign population.
Religion
Kuwaiti citizens are almost entirely Muslim, and a law passed in
1981 limits citizenship to Muslims. The majority are Sunni, but about
one-third are Shīʿite. Both the Iranian revolution of 1979 and the
Kuwaiti government’s subsequent discrimination against Shīʿites fostered
a heightened sense of community among the country’s Shīʿite population
in the 1980s and ’90s, and this led to political tension between the two
groups.
Settlement patterns
The old town of Kuwait, although located in a harsh desert climate,
opened onto an excellent sheltered harbour. Kuwait developed in the 18th
and 19th centuries as a trading city, relying on the pearl banks of the
gulf as well as on long-distance sea and caravan traffic. The old
city—facing the sea and bounded landward from 1918 to 1954 by a mud
wall, the gates of which led out into the desert—was compact, only 5
square miles (13 square km) in area; its typical dwelling was a
courtyard house. After the discovery of oil in the 1930s and the
petroleum industry’s rapid expansion after World War II, Kuwait city
underwent a transformation. The ensuing urban explosion led to the
destruction of the semicircular city wall (its gates were preserved as a
reminder of the early years), and city planners formally laid out new
suburbs. The government invested large portions of oil revenues in
infrastructure and urban development, creating in the process a modern
metropolis.
Kuwaitis are now scattered at a relatively low density throughout the
urban area and surrounding suburbs. Non-Kuwaitis, largely excluded from
the restricted suburbs, live at higher densities in the old city and in
the suburbs of Ḥawallī and Al-Sālimiyyah, mostly in apartments.
Demographic trends
Until the Iraqi invasion, Palestinians, some of them
third-generation residents of Kuwait, were the largest single expatriate
group, numbering perhaps 400,000. Popular Palestinian support for Iraq
during the war and persistent Palestinian demands for political
inclusion led the Kuwaiti government to deport most of them following
the restoration of authority, and by early 1992 their number had fallen
to 50,000. They have been largely replaced by Egyptians, Syrians,
Iranians, and South Asians.
Life expectancy in Kuwait is high, with males living to about 75
years and females to 77. Although Kuwait’s birth rate is roughly equal
to the world average, its low death rate has led to a high rate of
natural increase. The leading cause of death is circulatory disease. The
country is young, with roughly three-fifths of the population under the
age of 21.
Economy
Virtually all of Kuwait’s wealth is derived directly or indirectly,
by way of overseas investments, from petroleum extraction and
processing. The most dramatic element of Kuwait’s economic development
has been the steady and rapid expansion of its oil industry since the
1970s. By the mid-1980s Kuwait was refining four-fifths of its oil
domestically and marketing some 250,000 barrels a day in its own
European retail outlets under the name “Q8.” This oil income and the
investment income it generated—the latter surpassed direct sales of oil
revenues by the 1980s—gave Kuwait one of the highest per capita incomes
in the world. However, both the Iraqi invasion (which nearly exhausted
Kuwait’s overseas investment revenues) and the increasing volatility of
the global oil market in the 1980s reduced this income substantially,
but income levels rebounded when oil prices rose dramatically in the
early 21st century. Other sectors of Kuwait’s economy are weak by
comparison; agriculture, manufacturing, and trade each constitute only a
small proportion of gross domestic product (GDP).
Agriculture and fishing
The possibilities of agricultural development are severely limited.
Only a small amount of the land is arable, and, because of scarcity of
water, soil deficiencies, and lack of workers trained in agricultural
skills, only a portion of that land area is under actual cultivation.
Agriculture’s contribution, therefore, is insignificant to the output of
the economy.
Fish are plentiful in the Persian Gulf, and fishing in Kuwait was a
leading industry before the discovery of oil. The United Fisheries of
Kuwait continues the tradition today. Shrimp was one of the few
commodities besides oil that Kuwait continued to export after World War
II. Shrimp production, devastated by the environmental havoc wreaked in
the gulf by the Persian Gulf War, had recovered by the mid-1990s.
Resources and power
Kuwait has nearly one-tenth of the world’s proven oil reserves.
Kuwait’s proven recoverable reserves are thought to be enough to sustain
current production levels for some 150 years, and, though the oil
industry sustained severe damage during the Iraqi invasion, most of that
was repaired by the mid-1990s. Kuwait also has considerable natural gas
reserves, almost all in the form of associated gas—i.e., gas that is
produced together with crude oil. There are no other important minerals.
Naturally occurring fresh water is scarce; until desalination plants
were built after World War II, water had to be imported.
The generation of electricity also has increased significantly as
population and industry have grown. Production is concentrated in
several large natural-gas–fired power stations, including one at
Al-Shuwaykh and another at Al-Shuʿaybah.
Oil
In 1934 the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), the ownership of which was
divided equally between what were then the British Petroleum Company and
the Gulf Oil Corporation (of the United States), obtained a concession
covering the whole territory except the Neutral Zone. Oil was struck in
1938, but World War II deferred development until 1946. Thereafter,
progress was spectacular. In 1953 the American Independent Oil Company
and the Getty Oil Company, which jointly held concessions for the
Neutral Zone, struck oil in commercial quantities, and in 1955 oil was
discovered in northern Kuwait. By 1976 Kuwait had achieved complete
control of the KOC, with the former owners retaining the right to
purchase at a discount. The government also achieved full ownership of
the Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC), which it had formed in
1960 with private Kuwaiti investors. The KNPC, designed to serve as an
integrated oil company, controlled the supply and distribution of
petroleum products within the country and began marketing operations
abroad. In 1980 the government founded the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
as an umbrella organization overseeing the KOC and the KNPC as well as
the Kuwait Oil Tanker Company, the Petrochemicals Industries Company,
and the Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company.
The relatively low cost of oil production in Kuwait stems from
certain unique advantages. Most important, there are a number of highly
productive wells, the output of which can be varied at short notice,
which thus eliminates the need for large numbers of storage tanks. Most
of the storage tanks themselves are placed on a ridge set back a few
miles from the seacoast at a height of some 300 feet (90 metres); this
enables loading operations to be carried out by gravity rather than by
pumps. There are also extensive refineries and bunkers for tankers.
While retreating from Kuwait at the end of the Persian Gulf War, Iraqi
forces set fire to more than 700 of the country’s 950 wells. By the fall
of 1991, the fires, which had consumed about six million barrels of oil
per day, had been extinguished, and production soon returned to
preinvasion levels.
Natural gas
Massive volumes of natural gas are produced in association with
crude oil. Although natural gas has great potential as a source of
foreign exchange, it principally has been used for reinjection in oil
fields to maintain pressure, generating electricity (notably for water
distillation), and producing (as raw material) petrochemicals and
fertilizers, some of which Kuwait exports in small quantities.
Water
For fresh water in earlier days, people depended on a few artesian
wells and on rainwater collected from the roofs of houses or from
cisterns at ground level. Dhows piloted by Kuwaiti seamen also brought
fresh water from the Shatt al-Arab near Al-Baṣrah, Iraq. With the rapid
growth of population, however, the government of Kuwait built
desalination plants at Kuwait city, Al-Shuʿaybah, and several other
locations. Important sources of fresh water have been discovered at
Al-Rawḍatayn and Al-Shiqāyā, but desalination still provides the great
bulk of Kuwait’s daily consumption of potable water.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing contributes roughly one-tenth of Kuwait’s GDP and
consists almost entirely of refined petroleum products, petrochemicals,
and fertilizers. Other, less-important manufactured products include
clothing and apparel, fabricated metal products, industrial chemicals,
and nonelectrical machinery.
Finance
The Central Bank of Kuwait (Bank al-Kuwayt al-Markazī) issues the
national currency, the Kuwaiti dinar, and is the country’s main banking
regulatory body. In addition to its central bank, Kuwait has specialized
banks operating in the areas of savings and credit, industrial loans,
and real estate. There are also commercial banks. No foreign banks may
operate in Kuwait, with the exception of the Bank of Bahrain and Kuwait,
based in Bahrain and owned equally by the two states. An Islamic
bank—one bound by stringent religious laws governing financial
transactions—has also been established. Before independence an
officially sanctioned stock exchange operated, growing to become one of
the largest in the world. The fall of the unofficial but wildly popular
stock market, the Sūq al-Manākh, in 1982 sent the local economy into a
mild recession. A resulting debt-settlement program supervised by the
government was not completed until the early 21st century.
Trade
Petroleum and petroleum-derived products account for all but a very
minor portion of Kuwait’s exports, with Asia and Europe being the most
important markets. Kuwait’s imports—largely machinery and transport
equipment, manufactured goods, and food—are principally from the United
States, Japan, and countries of the European Union.
Services
Kuwait has invested only marginally in local industry. As a result,
nearly all employed Kuwaitis work for the state, largely in education
(only a small fraction of these are in the oil industry). Almost
one-third of the government’s revenues are spent on salaries. Tourism
plays only a small role in the country’s economy. The Iraqi invasion
further limited its importance, and the sector has been slow to recover.
Labour and taxation
In both the public and private sectors, Kuwait remains heavily
dependent on foreign labour, despite repeated reforms aimed at reducing
this dependency. By the late 1990s only one-fifth of the country’s
workforce were Kuwaiti nationals; of that number, more than one-third
were women. Trade unions are allowed, but numerous restrictions limit
their establishment. Less than one-tenth of the country’s workforce
belongs to a union.
Kuwait has no individual income tax. Much of the government’s revenue
comes from oil as well as from taxes on foreign corporations and on the
foreign interests of Kuwaiti companies.
Transportation and telecommunications
Although there are no railways in the country, Kuwait has a modern
road system linking it with its neighbours, as well as a large
international airport, Kuwait International Airport, which is located
just south of the capital. Kuwait Airways Corporation, a state-owned
enterprise, serves a number of international routes. The country’s port
facilities and its fleet of oil tankers and general cargo ships have
been expanded.
Regular telephone service was established in Kuwait only in the
1950s; since that time the country has made significant progress in
telephone, cable, wireless communication, and Internet service. The
country’s communication infrastructure was badly damaged during the
Iraqi invasion, but the damage has largely been repaired, and the
Kuwaiti government—through its Ministry of Communications—has further
developed Kuwait’s communication grid by means of contracts with
international telecommunications firms.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Since gaining independence from Britain in 1961, Kuwait has been
governed by an emir from the Ṣabāḥ family. The emir rules through a
Council of Ministers—consisting largely of members of his own
family—that he himself appoints. Legislative power rests in the National
Assembly (Majlis al-Ummah), whose 50 members are elected to four-year
terms. This parliament, however, was suspended in 1976, in 1985, and
again in 1999.
Justice
Kuwait’s legal system has several sources. Personal and civil law
(roughly, family law and probate law) are based largely on Sharīʿah
(Islamic law). Commercial and criminal law, while also influenced by
Sharīʿah, borrows heavily from both European civil and common law as
well as from the legal codes of the Ottoman Empire and from those of
other Arab states, which are themselves heavily influenced by European
law. There are several lower courts and a system of appeals courts. The
emir sometimes acts as the final court of appeal.
Political process
In lieu of political parties, which are prohibited in Kuwait,
several quasi-political organizations have representatives in the
parliament. Voting is limited to natural-born Kuwaiti men who are at
least 21 years old; servicemen and police are barred from voting. Under
these qualifications, approximately one-tenth of the population forms
the electorate. Beginning in the 1990s, attempts to extend suffrage to
women increased. In 1999 the emir announced that he would allow women to
vote in future elections; the franchise was officially granted in 2005,
and in 2009 women were elected to parliament for the first time.
Security
Kuwait’s military expenditure per capita is among the highest in the
world. Such spending is largely a result of the hostile relationship
with Iraq; after the Persian Gulf War, Kuwait undertook significant
measures to modernize and increase its armed forces. U.S. troops have
been stationed there since the early 1990s, and Kuwait also has defense
agreements with other countries, including Russia, the United Kingdom,
and France. Kuwaiti males are required to serve two years in the armed
forces, although university students may receive exemptions for one year
of that service.
Health and welfare
Kuwait has a comprehensive scheme of social welfare. The needy
receive financial assistance; loans are provided to the handicapped to
start businesses; the disabled can get treatment and training; and
education is available for adult illiterates. The Ministry of Social
Affairs offers a program that provides adequate, affordable housing,
fully equipped with modern facilities, for citizens with limited
incomes. Kuwait also has a comprehensive and highly developed subsidized
national health-care system. In 1976 the government established Kuwait’s
Reserve Fund for Future Generations, and it has set aside 10 percent of
the state’s revenues annually for it. The government found it necessary,
however, to tap into that fund during the Iraqi occupation.
Housing
Housing in Kuwait is heavily subsidized by the government, and—since
the government has invested large amounts of money in development since
the oil boom—housing standards are generally high. Traditional housing
(mud-walled structures one to two stories tall) has largely given way to
modern-style homes and apartment complexes in most parts of the country.
Education
About four-fifths of the population is literate. General education
in Kuwait is compulsory for native Kuwaitis between the ages of 6 and
14. It is entirely free and also includes school meals, books, uniforms,
transportation, and medical attention. Non-Kuwaiti students typically
attend private schools. Kuwait University was founded in 1964. The vast
majority of its students are Kuwaitis, and about three-fifths are women.
In 2001 the university began segregating by gender, a move that was
called for by the National Assembly. Other institutions of higher
learning include the College of Technological Studies. The American
University of Kuwait was established in 2004. Several thousand students
attend colleges and universities overseas, principally in the United
States, Britain, and Egypt, usually on state scholarships.
Cultural life
Although Kuwait embraces many facets of Western culture, the country
remains culturally conservative. Its Arab-Islamic heritage permeates
daily life. As in much of the Middle East, the rise of Islamic
fundamentalism in the 1970s and ’80s was reflected in a general return
to traditional customs, as seen in the public dress of women, who began
wearing the ḥijāb, or veil, far more than in the past. The right of
women to drive automobiles and to work outside the home is generally
accepted and has not been a matter of public debate, yet the question of
granting women the right to vote has divided Islamists, some of whom
seek to enforce even more conservative Islamic standards such as those
found in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.
Daily life and social customs
At the heart of traditional Kuwaiti culture is the institution of
the diwāniyyah, a regular gathering of men—usually in a tent or a
separate room of the main house—which serves as a time to gather, enjoy
refreshments, talk, or play games. Kuwaitis observe all major Islamic
holidays, including Ramadan and the two ʿīds (festivals), ʿĪd al-Fiṭr
and ʿĪd al-Aḍḥā. The country’s Independence Day and Liberation Day (from
the Iraqi occupation of 1990–91) are important secular holidays.
Fūl, falafel, and hummus are the cornerstones of Kuwaiti cuisine,
though Western fast-food restaurants abound in Kuwait city. Fūl is a
paste based on fava beans, with garlic and lemon added. Formed from
fried balls of chickpeas and spices, falafel is often served in
unleavened bread (khubz) with vegetables. Chickpeas are also used to
make hummus, a dip for vegetables and bread. The traditional Kuwaiti
meal consists of spiced rice topped with meat or fish or shellfish taken
from the Persian Gulf.
The arts
Kuwaiti folk arts remain important, and Bedouin crafts are the most
prominent. Though few Bedouins now inhabit Kuwait, their art traditions,
especially weaving, have been maintained. The intricately woven fabrics
are made on a sadu, a Bedouin loom, and are common sights in souks
(bazaars). Sadu House, a museum for Bedouin crafts, offers classes on
weaving. Also popular are traditional dances, including the ʿarḍah,
which features swords and poetry singing. The government supports the
preservation of folk arts and funds numerous organizations, as well as
several troupes that perform across the country.
Cultural institutions
Kuwait has numerous museums, but the Iraqi invasion had a disastrous
effect on many institutions. Many artworks were stolen by the Iraqis,
and some buildings were severely damaged. The National Museum of Kuwait,
which once housed a comprehensive collection of Islamic art, was looted
and set ablaze; only a small portion of the building has been renovated
and reopened to the public. The loss has increased the importance of the
Tareq Rajab Museum (Matḥaf Ṭāriq), a private collection that features
paintings, pottery, metalwork, jewelry, and musical instruments, among
other items.
Sports and recreation
Kuwait’s sports culture, like that of other gulf states, combines
the traditional sports of nomadic Arabian society with contemporary
sports of Western origin. Traditional sports of enduring popularity
include camel and horse racing; Arabian horses are held to be among the
finest in the world. Falconry is enjoyed primarily by wealthy sheikhs,
although the overhunting of game and, after 1990, the presence of
unexploded land mines in the desert have reduced its practice. Kuwaitis
have competed at the national and international levels in the country’s
two most widely played sports, football (soccer) and golf. Oil revenues
have enabled the government to support sports generously, and the
country boasts a number of stadiums capable of hosting international
competitions. The country first participated in the 1968 Summer Olympic
Games, but it has never competed at the Winter Games.
Media and publishing
The Ministry of Information runs the government press and the radio
and television broadcasting stations. Much of the print media receives
financial support from the government. Although the constitution
guarantees freedom of the press, this right has often been suspended. In
1992 print restrictions were relaxed on the condition that the media
sources monitor themselves. Direct criticism of the emir, however, is
still prohibited.
Dawlat Ahmed Sadek
John Duke Anthony
Jill Ann Crystal
History
Early settlers
The origin of the city of Kuwait—and of the State of Kuwait—is
usually placed at about the beginning of the 18th century, when the Banū
(Banī) ʿUtūb, a group of families of the ʿAnizah tribe in the interior
of the Arabian Peninsula, migrated to the area that is now Kuwait. The
foundation of the autonomous sheikhdom of Kuwait dates from 1756, when
the settlers decided to appoint a sheikh from the Ṣabāḥ family (Āl
Ṣabāḥ). During the 19th century, Kuwait developed as a thriving,
independent trading community. Toward the end of the century, one ruler,
ʿAbd Allāh II (reigned 1866–92), began to move Kuwait closer to the
Ottoman Empire, although he never placed his country under Ottoman rule.
This trend was reversed with the accession of Mubārak the Great, who
came to power by assassinating his brother ʿAbd Allāh—an act of
uncustomary political violence in Kuwait. Ottoman threats to annex
Kuwait prompted Mubārak to cultivate a close relationship with Britain.
An 1899 treaty basically granted Britain control of Kuwait’s foreign
affairs. Following the outbreak of World War I (1914–18), Kuwait became
a British protectorate.
At the 1922 Conference of Al-ʿUqayr, Britain negotiated the
Kuwait-Saudi border, with substantial territorial loss to Kuwait. A
memorandum in 1923 set out the border with Iraq on the basis of an
unratified 1913 convention.
The first Iraqi claim to Kuwait surfaced in 1938—the year oil was
discovered in the emirate. Although neither Iraq nor the Ottoman Empire
had ever actually ruled Kuwait, Iraq asserted a vague historical title.
That year it also offered some rhetorical support to a merchant uprising
against the emir. Following the failure of the uprising, called the
Majlis Movement, Iraq continued to put forth a claim to at least part of
Kuwait, notably the strategic islands of Būbiyān and Al-Warbah.
On June 19, 1961, Britain recognized Kuwait’s independence. Six days
later, however, Iraq renewed its claim, which was now rebuffed first by
British and then by Arab League forces. It was not until October 1963
that a new Iraqi regime formally recognized both Kuwait’s independence
and, subsequently, its borders, while continuing to press for access to
the islands.
Iran-Iraq War
The Iran-Iraq War of 1980–88 represented a serious threat to
Kuwait’s security. Kuwait, fearing Iranian hegemony in the region, saw
no alternative to providing Iraq with substantial financial support and
serving as a vital conduit for military supplies. Iran attacked a
Kuwaiti refinery complex in 1981, which inspired subsequent acts of
sabotage in 1983 and 1986. In 1985 a member of the underground
pro-Iranian Iraqi radical group al-Daʿwah attempted to assassinate the
Kuwaiti ruler, Sheikh Jābir al-Aḥmad al-Ṣabāḥ.
In September 1986 Iran began to concentrate its attacks on gulf
shipping, largely on Kuwaiti tankers. This led Kuwait to invite both the
Soviet Union (with which it had established diplomatic relations in
1963) and the United States to provide protection for its tankers in
early 1987. The effect of the war was to promote closer relations with
Kuwait’s conservative gulf Arab neighbours (Saudi Arabia, Bahrain,
Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Oman), with whom Kuwait had formed
the Gulf Cooperation Council in 1981 in order to develop closer
cooperation on economic and security issues. With the end of the
Iran-Iraq War in 1988, Iraqi-Kuwaiti relations began to deteriorate. On
August 2, 1990, Iraq unexpectedly invaded and conquered the country,
precipitating the Persian Gulf War.
The Persian Gulf War and its aftermath
Although Iraq advanced several arguments in support of its
actions, the basic reasons behind the invasion of Kuwait were the
perennial ones that had led earlier Iraqi regimes to seek the same
result: control of Kuwait’s oil and wealth, the military advantage of
frontage on the Persian Gulf, Pan-Arabism under Iraqi leadership, and a
way to generate popular support in the wake of its defeat in the
Iran-Iraq War. On August 8 Iraq announced its annexation of Kuwait, in
spite of condemnations from the United Nations, the major world powers,
the Arab League, and the European Community (now the European Union).
The vehement anti-Iraqi feelings harboured by virtually all Kuwaitis, in
conjunction with diplomatic efforts by the Kuwaiti government-in-exile
in Saudi Arabia, did not stop Iraq from harshly imposing its rule on
Kuwait.
In mid-January 1991 a coalition of nations, acting under the
authority of the United Nations and led by the United States and Saudi
Arabia, began launching air strikes against Iraqi forces, and five weeks
later it conducted a ground assault into Kuwait and Iraq. By late
February Kuwait had been liberated from Iraqi control. As hundreds of
thousands of Kuwaitis returned from foreign refuges to their homes in
May, the full extent of the damage created by the invasion, looting, and
war became clear.
The invasion and occupation affected every aspect of Kuwaiti life.
More than half the population fled during the war. Although most
nationals returned during 1991, many nonnationals, notably the
Palestinians, were not permitted to do so. A division emerged between
those who had stayed behind in the resistance and those who had fled.
Another developed between the majority pressing for political
liberalization (specifically, for parliamentary elections) and the
ruling family, whose behaviour in exile had stirred considerable popular
disfavour in Kuwait. The government’s initial response—instituting
martial law and staging show trials—gave way as reconstruction proceeded
to a more liberal stance. This led to elections to the National Assembly
in 1992, in which Islamic candidates and independent candidates
sympathetic to them were successful.
In 1992 a United Nations commission formally delimited the
Iraqi-Kuwaiti border in accordance with a resolution of the UN Security
Council passed in April 1991, which had reaffirmed the border’s
inviolability. The commission’s findings were generally favourable to
Kuwait, moving the Iraqi border slightly to the north in the area of
Safwān and slightly north in the area of the contested Al-Rumaylah oil
field and thereby giving Kuwait not only additional oil wells but also
part of the Iraqi naval base of Umm Qaṣr. Kuwait accepted the UN’s
border designation, but Iraq rejected it and continued to voice its
claim to Kuwaiti territory.
The survival of the Baʿth regime of Ṣaddām Ḥussein in Iraq spawned an
ambient fear among Kuwaitis of a repeat of the events of 1990–91. A
tense standoff atmosphere prevailed, exacerbated by Iraqi troop
movements along the border, until 2003, when U.S. and British forces
launched an invasion of Iraq, largely from bases inside Kuwait. The fall
of the Baʿth regime in the Iraq War was greeted with great relief in
Kuwait, which offered critical logistic support to the United States and
its allies. However, the subsequent occupation of Iraq (and the
attraction of some Kuwaitis to the guerrilla insurgency that it
produced) led to new political tensions.
John Duke Anthony
William L. Ochsenwald
Jill Ann Crystal
Political conflict and reform in the early 21st century
After suffering a stroke in 2001, Sheikh Jābir al-Aḥmad al-Ṣabāḥ,
the ruling emir, carried out only few public activities. Following
Sheikh Jābir’s death in 2006, crown prince Sheikh Saʿd al-ʿAbd Allāh
al-Sālim al-Ṣabāḥ briefly acceded as emir. Although considered too ill
to rule, Sheikh Saʿd, who had been crown prince since the late 1970s,
sparked a political crisis when he refused to abdicate in favour of
Sheikh Ṣabāḥ al-Aḥmad al-Jābir al-Ṣabāḥ, the country’s former foreign
minister and already its de facto leader. The succession crisis was
resolved after nine days, when the Kuwaiti parliament voted to remove
him from office moments before Saʿd himself agreed to abdicate.
Political deadlock and crisis led to frequent legislative elections
in Kuwait in the early 21st century, sometimes with less than a year
between them. On several occasions, crises precipitated by potential
inquiries of government figures and the votes of confidence that would
likely ensue led Sheikh Ṣabāḥ to dissolve parliament and call for fresh
elections. Although this sidestepped crisis in the short term, it meant
that the source of the deadlock was not resolved. At the same time,
important political reforms did occur: in 2006 the 25-constituency
system in place since 1980 was replaced with a new, five-constituency
format meant to discourage voting along tribal lines and to make the
buying of votes more difficult. Women won the right to vote in 2005, and
in the legislative elections of May 2009 four female candidates became
the first women to win seats in parliament. In spite of such advances,
observers suggested that the country’s patterned encounters with
deadlock that only the emir was positioned to resolve would continue to
recur unless the Kuwaiti political system were more thoroughly
reorganized.
Ed.