"Persian Gulf 101" for "National
Misinformation Geographic"
Manouchehr Saadat Noury
Nov 23, 2004, 13:08
Originally at: http://www.iranian.ws/cgi-bin/iran_news/exec/view.cgi/2/4591/printer
PERSIAN GULF: Location, History, & Importance, Name Alteration
& Ignorance!
The Persian Gulf is a 600-mile-long body of water, which separates
Iran from the Arabian Peninsula, and one of the most strategic waterways
in the world due to its importance in world oil transportation. At its
narrowest point (the Strait of Hormuz), the Gulf narrows to only 34
miles wide.
This inland sea of some 233,000 square km is connected to the Gulf
of Oman in the east by the Strait of Hormuz, and its western end is
marked by the major river delta of the Shatt al-Arab, called Arvand-Rood
by Iranians, which carries the waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris.
In 325 BC, Macedonian Alexander sent a fleet from India to follow the
eastern, or Persian coast of the area up to the mouth of the Tigris
and Euphrates rivers and sent other ships to explore the Arab side of
the waterway. The temporary Greek presence in the area increased Western
interest in the Persian Gulf during the next two centuries. Alexander's
successors, however, did not control the area long enough to make it
a part of the Greek world. By about 250 BC, the Greeks lost all territory
east of Syria to the Parthians, a Persian dynasty in the East.
The Parthians brought the Persian Gulf under Persian control and extended
their influence as far as Oman. The Parthian conquests demarcated the
distinction between the Greek world of the Mediterranean Sea and the
Persian Empire in the East. The Greeks, and the Romans after them, depended
on the Red Sea route, whereas the Parthians depended on the Persian
Gulf route. Because they needed to keep the merchants who plied those
routes under their control, the Parthians established garrisons as far
south as Oman. In the third century AD, the Sassanians, another Persian
dynasty, succeeded the Parthians and held the area until the rise of
Islam four centuries later.
Under Sassanian rule, Persian control over the whole area of the Persian
Gulf reached its height. Oman was no longer a threat, and the Sassanians
were strong enough to establish agricultural colonies and to engage
some of the nomadic tribes in the interior as a border guard to protect
their western flank from the Romans.
This agricultural and military contact gave people in the Persian Gulf
greater exposure to Persian culture, as reflected in certain irrigation
techniques still used in Oman. The Persian Gulf continued to be a crossroads,
however, and its people learned about Persian beliefs, such as Zoroastrianism,
as well as about Semitic and Mediterranean ideas. Judaism and Christianity
arrived in the Persian Gulf from a number of directions: from Jewish
and Christian tribes in the Arabian Desert; from Ethiopian Christians
to the south; and from Mesopotamia, where Jewish and Christian communities
flourished under Sassanian rule.
Whereas Zoroastrianism seems to have been confined to Persian colonists,
some Arabs adopted Christianity and Judaism. The popularity of these
religions paled, however, when compared with the enthusiasm with which
the Arabs greeted Islam.
In succeeding centuries Persians, Turks, Arabs, Brits and Western Europeans
contested control of the region. British presence in the Gulf dated
from the early 17th century, when the East India Company established
an agency, which became a residency in
1763 in the region. But it was only after a major military intervention
in 1820 that British influence really became dominant, the different
local states signing, in the course of the years between 1820 and 1835,
a serial of treaties limiting their sovereignty and bringing them at
the end, under British protectorate.
In 1853, Britain and the Arab sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf signed
the Perpetual Maritime Truce, formalizing the temporary truces of 1820
and 1835. The sheikhs agreed to stop harassing British shipping in the
Arabian Sea and to recognize Britain as the dominant power in the Persian
Gulf. An international agreement among the major powers in 1907 placed
the Persian Gulf in the British sphere of influence. Although oil was
discovered in the Persian Gulf in 1908, it was not until the 1930s,
when major finds were made, that keen international interest in the
region revived. Since World War II the Persian Gulf oil fields, among
the most productive in the world, have been extensively developed, and
modern port facilities have been constructed. Nearly 50% of the world's
total oil reserves are estimated to be found in the Persian Gulf. In
2003, the Persian Gulf countries (Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates) produced about 27% of the world's
oil, while holding 57% (715 billion barrels) of the world's crude oil
reserves. Besides oil, the Persian Gulf region also has huge reserves
(2,462 trillion cubic feet) of natural gas, accounting for 45% of total
proven world gas reserves. The Persian Gulf is also a large fishing
source and was once the chief center of the pearling industry.
In the late 1960s, following British military withdrawal from the area,
the United States and the Russia (USSR at the time) sought to fill the
vacuum. In 1971 the first US military installation in the Persian Gulf
was established at Bahrain. The Persian Gulf was among the scenes of
the Iran-Iraq War that lasted from 1980 to 1988, as with each side attacking
the other's oil tankers. In 1991 the Persian Gulf again was the background
for a Persian Gulf War as Iraq invaded Kuwait and was subsequently pushed
back during what is now predominantly known as the Persian Gulf War,
despite the fact that this conflict did not focus primarily on the Persian
Gulf.
As the Persian Cat, the Persian Lamb, and the Persian Rug, the name
of the Persian Gulf is also a very distinc term. The Persian name for
this body of water was borrowed by almost all the old languages (including
Greek term of Persis) as, the Persian Gulf, and has been in use everywhere
since ancient times, for it signifies the first major nation-state in
that area, namely the Persian Empire (Contemporary Iran).
In the 1960s, with the rise of Arab nationalism, Arab countries began
to call The Persian Gulf, the "Arabian Gulf". However, the
Iranian government led two resolutions in the United Nations to officially
recognize that body of water as the Persian Gulf. The first announcement
was made through the document UNAD, 311/Qen on March 5, 1971 and the
second was UNLA 45.8.2 (C) on August 10, 1984. Most countries and organizations
use the name Persian Gulf. Shortly after Islamic Republic was established
in Iran, Arab countries started to use the term "Arabian Gulf"
in Arabic and English, while some other people tend to use "the
Gulf".
Unfortunately, after August 10, 1984 the IR regime a avoided not only
strongly protest the Arabs and others using the wrong and misleading
terms, some Iranian clergies suggested to even name it as Islamic Gulf
to overcome the dipute between Iranians and Arabs! The suggestion was
so absurd that nobody could follow.
Recently, America's National Geographic Society (ANGS) has added the
phrase of "the Arabic Gulf" to the term of Internationally
recognized name of "the Persian Gulf" in the 2005 edition
of its World Atlas. Upon a worldwide protest of the patriotic Iranians,
ANGS has claimed that this alteration has been done after consulting
official authorities of the UN and of the governments concerned. Whether
ANGS is truthful or not, it remains to be seen. But one thing is clear.
ANGS people are exactly facing the same problem of geographic ignorance
as they surveyed 3000 young people in 2002. Here is a piece of news
published by BBC two years ago on November 20, 2002:
[If you are lost, don't ask a young person for directions, that is
the message coming out of an international survey of 18-24 year olds
conducted by America's National Geographic Society. More than 3000 young
adults in nine countries were tested on their geographical knowledge,
with some alarming results. The survey took place in June and July 2002
as a follow-up to a similar test carried out in 1988 by the National
Geographic Society. The president of the National Geographic Society,
John Fahey, bemoaned the results. "They highlight the urgency of
the problem of geographic ignorance and the need to broaden our efforts
beyond the classroom," he said. "If young people can't find
places on a map and lack awareness of current events, how can they understand
the world's cultural, economic and natural resource issues that confront
us?? he added.]*
That would be great if we all could remember Socrates who wisely said:
"The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance"!