A New Persian Gulf Security Structure
Publish place: 16th Persian Gulf Conference
Publish Year: 1385
Type: Conference paper
Language: English
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Document National Code:
IPIS16_001
Index date: 31 March 2010
A New Persian Gulf Security Structure abstract
Nearly three years after the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime at the hands of the US military, no clear Persian Gulf alternative security architecture is in place.1 In the absence of a security structure, the Persian Gulf Cooperation Council (PGCC: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman) states feel increasingly vulnerable to a multiplicity of threats to their stability and their resources. The threat profile is unexpectedly ominous in light of the fall of Saddam Hussein, who had previously been viewed as the greatest challenger to Persian Gulf security and whose downfall was expected by the Bush Administration to pave the way for a "golden age" of automatic and effortless Persian Gulf stability. Yet, many of the Persian Gulf states now feel more vulnerable than ever, even if they face no systematic violence or clear internal threats at this time.
A New Persian Gulf Security Structure authors
Kenneth Katzman
Research Service of the United States Congress, Washington DC