The GCC joint regional security effort : utopia or possibility?

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Date

2018-05-03

Authors

Krylov, Aleksandr, M.A.

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Abstract

Today, the Gulf Cooperation Council (the GCC) is often praised to be the most successfully integrated economic/political union after the European Union. A considerable number of scholars devoted their works to this union. However, a large part of the analysis overlooks or does not pay enough attention to the fact that historically the GCC’s main purpose was not economic integration but maintaining regional security by means of a joint effort. Since its establishment in the year 1981 the GCC has faced several issues those became “litmus tests” for these efforts’ success. Before studying these issues closely, the thesis quickly analyzes the background of the union, examining the threats which brought it into being and the first patterns of maintaining regional security. Further on, it discusses the main conflicts and contradictions within the GCC, including the recent Qatari conflict. It continues by analyzing the condition of each country’s army (arms, doctrine, and competency) and evaluating the success of the GCC’s joint effort in Yemen. In this thesis, I argue that that due to the contradictions between the states, lack of flexibility in the mechanisms of coordination and relatively low effectiveness of very expensive armies, the purpose of maintaining regional security solely by means of the GCC has not been reached yet.

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