Thirty-three years have passed since the invasion of Kuwait, yet its impact is felt to this day. Kuwait and its Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) neighbours have largely been treading opposite paths, catapulting Kuwait into stagnation and advancing other Arab Gulf states to unparalleled growth.
Putting any Gulf state in a box would be reductionist. Kuwait has had its bouts of prosperity and comparative advantages as much as the other Gulf states have faced immense challenges. But the general direction of the past three decades reinforces divergent trends between Kuwait on the one hand and the Gulf states on the other.
This has further led to tradeoffs, reflected in the choice of political, economic, and social systems taking shape across the GCC. The influence of Kuwait and its occupation on itself and the rest of the Gulf cannot be underestimated.
Without discounting the importance of other factors, the invasion has acted as a main catalyst for change — both positive and negative — unfolding in the region.
Surging nationalism coupled with denial
The loss of a country in a few hours under a post-World War II order that safeguards the nation-state system and promotes international order took many by shock.
Naturally, the invasion hit Kuwait the hardest. The trauma of occupation has led to two salient yet contradictory features in post-liberation Kuwait.
Kuwait entered into chronic survival mode, understandably putting its security first following a seven-month occupation and the continuation of Saddam’s regime in power.
As a result, nationalism, localism, and emotions surged well into the 1990s when realpolitik, development, and regional integration were needed the most. Existential considerations, therefore, trumped a much-needed focus on sustainable development. Such development would have reinforced Kuwait’s security.