BEFORE OIL11
economic change. The disparate sheikhdoms quickly integrated with
counterparts in the region and within the global economy. By 1971, all six
were members of the United Nations. Between 1960 and 1967, all but Bah-
rain and Oman joined the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC). In 1981, the six monarchies banded together to form
the Gulf Cooperation Council, or GCC, a loose union based on monar-
chical rule, self- defense, free movement, and coordinated laws. The
GCC states (shown in figure 1.1) comprise all the countries of the Ara-
bian Peninsula except Yemen, left out of the union because of its major
differences with the six monarchies. These start with Yemen’s chronic
instability and underdevelopment and extend to the country’s large
population and small natural resource base as well as its republican
(nonmonarchical) government.
SAUDI
ARABIA
OMAN
AFGH.
PAK.
YEMEN
DJIBOUTI
Gulf of Aden
RedSea
Arabian Sea
Socotra(YEMEN)
ERITREA
IRAQ IRAN
LEBANON SYRIA
PALESTINEISRAEL
KUWAIT
Q ATA R
Doha
Dubai OMAN
Muscat
Gulf ofOman
Gulf ofAqaba
Kuwait
JORDAN
EGYPT
SUDAN
ETHIOPIA
Tabuk
30
20
10
Salalah
DhabiAbu
UNITED ARABEMIRATES
Jeddah Mecca
Blue Nile
Medina
Ha’il Al-BatinHafar
Buraydah
Riyadh
Jubail
Persian Gulf
Al-KhobarDammamDhahran
Yanbu
AdministrativeBoundary
Abha
Jizan
BAHRAIN
FIGURE 1.1 The Persian Gulf countries.