JMD on NBN External Powers and the Gulf Monarchies
JONATHAN FULTON AND LI-CHEN SIM, EDS.
External Powers and the Gulf Monarchies
ROUTLEDGE 2018
December 28,
2018 James M. Dorsey
Jonathan Fulton and Li-Chen Sim’s edited
volume, External Powers and the Gulf
Monarchies (Routledge, 2018) is a timely contribution to
understanding the increasingly diversified relations between the Gulf’s six
oil-rich monarchies and external powers. Traditionally reliant on the United
States for their security, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar,
Kuwait and Bahrain have become far more assertive in the wake of the 2011
popular Arab revolts and mounting doubts about the reliability of the United
States. The newly found assertiveness of the Gulf states, despite the fact that
they remain largely dependent for their security on the United States, have
forged closer ties with a host of external powers, including China, Russia,
India, Turkey, Brazil, Japan and South Korea. Coupled with shifts in the oil
market as the United States emerges as the world’s largest producer and
exporter, Asian nations topping the Gulf’s oil clients, and OPEC’s need to
coordinate with non-OPEC producers like Russia to manipulate prices and
production levels, external powers have seen significant business opportunities
in the Gulf states’ effort to wean themselves off oil and diversify their
economies. In doing so, they have benefitted from the US defence umbrella in
the region at no cost to themselves. This volume breaks ground by looking at
the Gulf’s expanding relations from the perspective of the various major
external powers rather than that of the Gulf states themselves. In doing so, it
makes a significant contribution to an understanding not only of the Gulf but
also of the nuts and bolts in the global rebalancing of power the potential
emergence of a new world order.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Singapore’s S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies.
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