Intro
The State of Kuwait was originally referred to as 'Qurain'
(or Grane) in the early 17th century. This name is
derived from the Arabic words 'Qarn' which means a
high hill and 'Kout' meaning a fortress. Some
historians believe that Barrak Bin Ghuraif, Sheikh
of the Bani Khalid tribe built Kuwait.
Located at the upper northwestern corner of the
Arabian Gulf, has an area of 17,818 square
kilometres and is bounded on the west and north by
Iraq, on the east by the Arabian Gulf, and on the
south by Saudi Arabia.
Topographically, Kuwait is mainly flat desert land,
the only relief areas being Muttla Ridge which
fringes the north coast of the Kuwait Bay, and the
Ahmadi Range, which runs between Burgan Oilfield and
the sea.
A territory of 5675 square kilometres was shared by
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as a neutral zone until
1969, when a political boundary was agreed upon.
Each of the two countries administers one-half of
the territory called the Divided Zone, but, as
before, they share equally the revenues from oil
production in the entire area. While the boundary
with Saudi Arabia is defined, the border with Iraq
remains disputed.
The capital city of Kuwait, a true desert
metropolis, is located on the southern shore of
Kuwait Bay. With almost all of its population
concentrated in or near the capital, Kuwait is one
of the world's most highly urbanized states. Kuwait
has a history of around 250 years as an independent
state. Its origin is usually placed at about the
beginning of the 18th century, when the Banu 'Utub,
a group of families consisting of several major
tribes such as Al Sabah, Al Khalifa, Al Zayed, Al
Jalahima and others of the 'Anizah tribe in the
interior of the Arabian Peninsula, migrated to the
area that is now Kuwait. The foundation of the
autonomous sheikhdom of Kuwait is dated from 1756,
when the settlers decided to appoint a Sheikh from
the Sabah family. During the 19th century, Kuwait
developed as a thriving, independent trading
community. Towards the end of the century one ruler,
'Abdallah II (reigned 1866-1892), began moving
Kuwait closer to the Ottoman Empire, although never
placing his country under Ottoman rule. This trend
was reversed with the accession of Mubarak the
Great. Mubarak cultivated a close relationship with
Britain in order to keep other European powers and
the Ottomans at bay. An 1899 treaty granted Britain,
control of Kuwait's foreign affairs. Following the
outbreak of World War I, Kuwait became a British
protectorate. Mubabrak was portrayed as a highly
competent ruler who managed tribal affairs very
well. He died in the year 1915.
At the 1922 Conference of Al Uqayr, Britain
negotiated the Kuwait-Saudi border, with substantial
territorial loss to Kuwait. A 1923 memorandum set
out the border with Iraq based on an unratified 1913
convention.
The first Iraqi claim to Kuwait surfaced in 1938,
the year oil was discovered in the sheikhdom.
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 Bubiyan and Al Warbah.
On June 19, 1961, Britain recognized Kuwait's
independence. Six days later, however, Iraq renewed
its claim, which was now rebuffed by first British,
then Arab League forces. It was not until 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. This
was the year when Kuwait became member of the United
Nations Organization.
The Iran-Iraq War of 1980-90 represented a serious
threat to Kuwait's security. Kuwait saw no
alternative to providing Iraq substantial financial
support and serving as a vital conduit for military
supplies. Iran attacked a Kuwaiti refinery complex
in 1981 and inspired terrorist acts of sabotage in
1983 and 1986. 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.
The effect of the war promoted closer relations with
Kuwait's conservative Gulf Arab neighbours - Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates,
and Oman. With them, in 1981, Kuwait had formed the
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to develop closer
cooperation on economic and security issues. With
the end of the Iran-Iraq War in 1990, Iraqi-Kuwaiti
relations began to deteriorate. On August 2, 1990,
Iraq unexpectedly invaded and conquered the country.
Although Iraq advanced several arguments in support
of its actions, the basic causes of the invasion of
Kuwait were the perennial ones that had led earlier
Iraqi regimes to seek the same result: the desire to
control Kuwait's oil and wealth; the military
benefits Iraq would gain from a greater frontage on
the Arabian Gulf; the urge to Pan-Arabism, Iraq
seeing the acquisition of Kuwait as the first step
toward the union of all the Arabs under Iraqi
leadership; the prestige such an adventure, if
successful, could confer on the political leadership
in Baghdad; and the feeling held by most Iraqis
(despite its historical inaccuracy) that Kuwait was
genuinely part of Iraq. On August 8, Iraq announced
the annexation of Kuwait, in spite of condemnations
from the United Nations, the major world powers, the
Arab League, and the European Community.
On January 16-17, 1991, a coalition of nations,
acting under the authority of the United Nations and
led by the United States and Saudi Arabia, began an
air strike against Iraqi forces. Just before the
ground war began on February 24, Iraqi troops set
afire hundreds of Kuwait's oil wells, creating an
unprecedented ecological disaster. By February 27
Kuwait was 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 non-nationals, notably the
Palestinians, were not permitted to do so. The
survival of the Iraqi regime in Baghdad spawned an
ambient fear among the people of Kuwait that the
events of 1990-91 would someday be repeated.
In 1992 a United Nations commission formally
delimited the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border in accordance
with UN Security Council Ceasefire Resolution 687
(which had reaffirmed the inviolability of the
Iraq-Kuwait border). The commission's findings were
generally favourable to Kuwait, moving the Iraqi
border 0.035 mile northward in the area of Safwan
and slightly north in the area of the contested Al-Rumaylah
oil field, thereby giving Kuwait not only an
additional six oil wells but also part of the Iraqi
naval base of Umm Qasr. Kuwait accepted the UN's
border designation; however, Iraq rejected it and
continued to voice its claim to Kuwaiti territory.
The Iraqi forces spread land mines all over Kuwait
except in north-west parts, as they were considered
strategic sites for the Iraqi forces. The major
reason to plant the mines was to hinder the expected
attacks of the coalition forces as they liberate
Kuwait. Other reasons for planting was to protect
the Iraqi units and battlefronts, prevent the
infiltration into the vital and strategic sites,
such as the camps, the airbases and the water
sources. Following the liberation of Kuwait in
February 1991, Kuwait's Defence Ministry started
taking the necessary preparations to clear up the
country from these explosive mines, in addition to
removing the remains of the war. By August 2001,
Kuwait was able to discard about 1.5 million land
mines that were planted by the Iraqi forces during
the period of the seven months of occupation by
Saddam Hussain. A report pointed out that in every
square kilometer, 92.4 mines were planted.