Restoration of Omani rule
Aḥmad ibn Saʿīd, the governor of Ṣuḥār, drove out the Persian invaders and was elected imam in 1749, thus establishing the Āl Bū Saʿīd dynasty that still rules Oman today. Under the rule of his grandson, Saʿīd ibn Sulṭān (1806/07–56), Oman reasserted control over Zanzibar, but upon his death the Āl Bū Saʿīd empire was split between two sons: one received Zanzibar, which remained under Āl Bū Saʿīd rule until 1964, and the other ruled Oman.
The fortunes of the Āl Bū Saʿīd state in Oman declined throughout the second half of the 19th century. However, the dynasty remained in power with the help of the British, who supported the Āl Bū Saʿīd sultans in Muscat against periodic revivals of the Ibāḍī imamate in the interior.
Periodic civil unrest
Tribal attacks in the name of the imam were made on Muscat and Maṭraḥ in 1895 and 1915. In 1920 the Agreement of Al-Sīb was negotiated by the British between the tribal leaders and Sultan Taymūr ibn Fayṣal, who reigned in 1913–32. By its terms, the sultan recognized the autonomy but not the sovereignty of the Omani interior.
The interior remained autonomous until 1954, when Muḥammad al-Khalīlī, who had ruled as imam since 1920, died. His weak successor, Ghālib, was influenced by his brother Ṭālib and by a prominent tribal leader, Sulaymān ibn Ḥimyār; the three set out to create an independent state, enlisting Saudi Arabia’s support against Sultan Saʿīd ibn Taymūr. Clashes between the sultan’s forces and those of the imam continued throughout the 1950s. The authority of the sultan was subsequently restored after a regiment led by British officers moved into the Omani interior and suppressed an imamate rebellion. Remnants of the imamate’s supporters, however, held strongholds in the Mount al-Akhḍar massif of the Western Ḥajar until they were forced to surrender in early 1959.
In the early 1960s another threat to the sultanate emerged in the Dhofar region. Sultan Saʿīd ibn Taymūr had moved to Ṣalālah permanently in 1958. The mountain jibālīs began to rebel openly against Sultan Saʿīd’s oppressive practices. The Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arab Gulf (later called the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman; PFLO) gained control of the growing rebellion by the late 1960s with the aid of the People’s Republic of China, the Soviet Union, Marxist South Yemen (which had achieved independence from the British in late 1967), and Iraq.
Consolidation of the state under Qaboos bin Said
Modernization and opening up foreign relations
The Dhofar rebellion led to a palace coup on July 23, 1970, when Sultan Saʿīd was overthrown by his son, Qaboos bin Said (Qābūs ibn Saʿīd). Qaboos, who had been trained in Britain at the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst, England, quickly reversed his father’s policy of isolation and began to develop and modernize Oman. Sultan Qaboos appointed the country’s first official cabinet and took steps toward building a modern government structure. Qaboos served as prime minister after his uncle, Ṭāriq ibn Taymūr, resigned the position, and he also held the post of minister of defense and foreign affairs. At the same time, the rebellion in Dhofar continued. With British personnel and equipment, Jordanian and Iranian troops, and financial assistance from the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, the rebellion was finally crushed in December 1975.
Oman joined the Arab League and the United Nations in 1971, but it did not become a member of OPEC or the smaller Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries. Oman was one of six founding members of the Gulf Cooperation Council, established in 1981 to promote economic, political, and security cooperation among its members. It has been closely linked to Britain since the early 19th century, and relations with the United States, established in 1833 by a treaty of friendship, have grown closer since the 1970s. After Oman joined the World Trade Organization in 2000, it made greater efforts to liberalize its markets and improve its standing in the global economy.
Oman’s location has made the country pivotal in maintaining the security of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. Oman attempted to maintain neutrality in the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88), although the sultanate permitted Western military units to use its facilities after Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and an Omani regiment participated in the Persian Gulf War (1990–91). Border agreements were signed with Saudi Arabia in 1990 and with Yemen in 1992; in addition, an agreement was reached on unsettled parts of the boundary with the United Arab Emirates in 1999. Oman established diplomatic relations with Israel in 1993 and became the first Gulf Arab country to receive an Israeli prime minister upon the 1994 visit of Yitzhak Rabin.
J.E. PetersonJill Ann CrystalTransforming Oman in the 21st century
Domestically, the government continued its program of Omanization, which was meant to reduce the country’s reliance on expatriate labour, throughout the first decade of the 21st century. Qaboos called for Omanis to focus on having smaller families, in part to help curtail the size of the country’s labour force overall and ultimately minimize unemployment.
While the right to vote had previously been vested in a select number of individuals, particularly intellectuals and leaders, in 2003 universal voting rights were extended for the first time to all Omanis over the age of 21. Political stability in Oman remained tied to the ability of the country to diversify economically beyond its ongoing dependence on oil, though. Oman’s dwindling oil reserves were not expected to last into the mid-21st century. Governmental plans to reduce oil dependency to less than 10 percent of the country’s GDP in the next decade included the development of tourism, real estate, investment, and renewable energy initiatives.
In February 2011, as a wave of pro-democracy protests known as the Arab Spring swept the Middle East and North Africa, demonstrators in Oman held rallies calling for economic improvements and greater political freedom. Protesters gathered in the port city of Ṣuḥār and in Muscat called for more jobs, higher pay, less corruption, and reduced taxes. Unlike many similar protests in the Middle East and North Africa that also sought the removal of political leaders, protesters in Oman did not challenge the rule of Qaboos. After clashes between protesters left at least one protester dead and several injured, Qaboos announced measures meant to quell the unrest, including the creation of 50,000 new jobs, increased public spending, and an expansion of the powers of the elected Consultative Council. These actions were effective; there was no recurrence of protests in 2012. A decline in global oil prices years later was not met with significant cuts in spending, however, causing the government to run a sizeable deficit in the mid-2010s.
In foreign affairs, Oman maintained friendly relations with both of the Gulf region’s rival powers, Iran and Saudi Arabia, and with the United States. This position of relative neutrality enabled Oman to serve as a peacemaker in regional disputes and to carry out sensitive diplomacy. In 2013 Oman played a key role in resolving the confrontation between the United States and Iran over Iran’s nuclear program, serving as a secret mediator for preliminary talks that ultimately led to a final agreement between Iran and the global powers known collectively as the P5+1 (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States plus Germany). As Qatar came under scrutiny in 2017 from its neighbours, who imposed a land blockade on the small peninsula, Oman allowed Qatar to bypass the blockade using its ports, and the two countries enhanced their trade ties. Oman also positioned itself as a mediator in the civil war in Yemen, serving as a neutral location for negotiations and for treatment of the wounded. Closer to home, tensions brewed in the Gulf of Oman in 2019 after the United States reimposed its sanctions against Iran. Oman was one of many countries seeking to pacify the escalation between Iran and several other countries.
Sultanate of Haitham bin Tariq
The almost 50-year reign of Qaboos came to an end on January 10, 2020, when he died without issue. The next day, his cousin Haitham bin Tariq (Haytham ibn Ṭāriq) was named his successor. Haitham had served in a prominent role in Qaboos’s cabinet, especially in a diplomatic capacity and in national development planning. As such, his appointment represented the continuity of Qaboos’s policies, and he affirmed in his inaugural speech that he intended to follow his predecessor’s foreign policy. Still, he brought about some measure of change in the operation of the state: he quickly appointed ministers to manage the portfolios of finance, defense, and foreign affairs, which had previously been held by the sultan, and later promulgated an amendment to the Basic Law that established a line of succession by primogeniture.
Only months into his reign, Haitham faced the twin crises of the global COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting slump in global demand for oil. In response to the economic fallout, he cut government expenditure, restructured public assets, and sought ways to diversify state revenue, including a plan to become the first Arab Gulf state to tax high-income earners as early as 2022.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica