homeQatar travel guide > Qatar history
Qatar guide
Regions
Traveler café 
Travel directory
 
Last updated : Nov 2007
Qatar History
Qatar History - TravelPuppy.com
The families that rule the northern Arabian Gulf states are, almost without exclusion, descended from migrants from the central region of the Arabian peninsula in the 18 th and early 19 th centuries. The Al-Khalifas, who today govern Bahrain, also established a community on the small peninsula directly opposite the island, modern day Qatar. The Al-Khalifas were powerless to hold on to their mainland possession, however, and were displaced by the Al-Thani clan.

The Al-Thanis were part of the original wave of migration, but little else is known about their backgrounds. Although the Al-Khalifas had agreed a treaty with the British in 1868, this did not prevent Qatar being absorbed into the Turkish Ottoman empire, then undergoing a brief resurgence during a period of otherwise chronic decline in 1872.

After the Ottoman collapse during World War I, Qatar once again came under British suzerainty. The British recognised the Al-Thanis as rulers, providing military protection in trade for control of Qatar’s external affairs under treaties signed in 1916 and 1934. British troops were moved out of the Gulf in 1968 as part of the ‘East of Suez’ extractions. Plans to enhance Qatar’s security through federations with Bahrain and the Trucial States (now the United Arab Emirates) failed and in 1971 Qatar gained full independence under the rule of Sheikh Ahmad.

Rivalries within the Al-Thani family immediately started after independence culminated in a coup by the chief minister, Sheikh Khalifa Bin Hamad Al-Thani. Under Khalifa’s regime, Qatar has used its considerable oil revenues to develop a modern infrastructure, health and education services. It has allied itself closely with Saudi Arabia on regional and international issues (see below). Qatar was also 1 of the instigators of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), inaugurated in 1981, which has become the principal regional trade and security bloc. The security aspect of the Council’s work has received the greater attention throughout the last 15 years.

Qatar played a low key role in the Iran - Iraq war, usually on the side of Iraq, and was an active participant in the multinational alliance assembled to liberate Kuwait in 1990. During the early 1990's, the Emir adopted many independent initiatives in his conduct of foreign policy, there were burgeoning commercial relations with Israel and welcome support for American strategic objectives in the region, yet Qatar was 1 of the few governments to preserve relations of any kind with the Taleban regime in Afghanistan. Around the same time, Qatar became involved in several of territorial disputes with both Bahrain (over the oil rich Hawar islands) and Saudi Arabia, over the position of the border between the 2 countries.

The Emir’s conduct of Qatari foreign policy during this period undoubtedly aggravated the divisions within the ruling family. These came to a head in 1995 when the Emir was removed by his son, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, in a bloodless palace coup. Sheikh Hamad has consequently embarked on a very gradual process of democratisation, a woman was appointed to a ministerial post, and municipal elections were held for the 1st time in 1999.

In 2003, a national referendum supported the Emir’s plan for a national parliament. However, his announcement of his son, Prince Jassem, as his anointed successor, illustrates that the Emir has no intention of surrendering the al-Thanis’ control over the Qatar (Jassem has since been supplanted in his father’s favours by his brother, Prince Tamim.)

The territorial disputes with Saudi Arabia and Bahrain were both settled, with international mediation, in 2001. These were relatively minor matters compared to the Emir’s decision in late 2002 to allow the Americans to establish their major regional command centre at Sayliyah and expand the airbase at al-Udeid.

The American request was prompted by rising unease on the part of the Saudis who had hosted the centre during the 1991 Iraq war. Qatar has duly played a vital role in the American campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan.