By Ben Hubbard
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Sultan Qaboos bin Said of Oman, who over nearly five decades in power transformed his Persian Gulf kingdom from an isolated enclave into a developed nation known for brokering quiet talks between global foes, has died, the Omani government announced on Saturday. He was 79.
His death was announced by the official Oman News Agency. The announcement did not mention the cause, but Qaboos had been receiving treatment in Europe for cancer since at least 2014.
Qaboos’s decades as an absolute monarch who used oil wealth to pull his country from poverty made him a towering figure at home, with roads, a port, a university, a sports stadium and other facilities bearing his name. Internationally, as the longest-serving leader in the Arab world, he used Oman’s place in a turbulent region, next to one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, to become a discreet but essential diplomatic player.
In a region rife with sectarianism, political divides and foreign interference, the soft-spoken, diminutive Qaboos championed a foreign policy of independence and nonalignment. He became a rare leader who maintained ties with a wide range of powers that hated one another, including Iran, Israel, the United States, Saudi Arabia and the Houthi rebels in Yemen.
That gave Oman a role akin to a Middle Eastern Switzerland, where foes battling each other elsewhere could meet for quiet talks. In 2011, Qaboos intervened to free three American hikers who had been jailed in Iran on espionage charges, paying a ransom of $500,000 per person.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with Sultan Qaboos after arriving at the sultan’s palace for lunch in Muscat on Oct. 19, 2011. Mrs. Clinton traveled to Oman to thank the sultan for his help in securing the release of three American hikers detained in Iran.Credit...Kevin Lamarque/Pool photo, via Associated Press
A few years later, he brought the two foes together again by hosting covert talks between Iran and the Obama administration that paved the way for an international agreement over Iran’s nuclear program.
Qaboos, unmarried for most of his life, had no children and did not publicly name or groom a successor.
According to the country’s Basic Law, upon the sultan’s death a family council convenes to choose his successor. If it cannot agree within a few days, it opens an envelope containing the name of the sultan’s chosen successor, handwritten by the sultan before his death.
On Saturday, the family council opened the envelope to find the name of Haitham bin Tariq Al Said, 65, a cousin of the sultan who most recently served as Oman’s culture minister. He was elevated to sultan the same day.
In a televised speech, he vowed to honor Qaboos’s legacy.
“We will continue to assist in resolving disputes peacefully, Sultan Haitham said.
Qaboos came to power at age 29 in 1970 in a bloodless coup aided by the British against his father, putting himself at the helm of a poor, isolated nation locked in a civil war with rebels in the south.
Tapping the kingdom’s newfound oil wealth, Qaboos subdued the rebels with a combination of military force and development projects while building roads, hospitals, schools and other modern infrastructure across the country to improve life for his people. The effort was so successful that in 2010, the United Nations ranked Oman first in the world in advancement up the Human Development Index over the previous 40 years, ahead of China.
That made Qaboos a titanic figure in his country of 4.6 million, located on the southeastern tip of the Arabian Peninsula and across the Strait of Hormuz from Iran. While sultan, he also held other offices at times, including prime minister, governor of the central bank and minister of finance, defense and foreign affairs.
The first day of his reign, July 23, is a holiday called Renaissance Day. His birthday, Nov. 18, is Oman’s National Day.
Although economic stagnation fueled by low oil prices marred his later years and his people’s political rights remained limited, Western diplomats marveled at the consistency of his foreign policy. In 2007, he spelled it out in a public statement.
“We work for construction and development at home, and for friendship and peace, justice and harmony, coexistence and understanding, and positive constructive dialogue abroad,” he wrote. “That is how we began, that is how we are today, and that, with God’s permission, is how we shall continue to be.”
Sultan Qaboos was greeted by Prime Minister Edward Heath of Britain as he arrived at 10 Downing Street for talks in London in 1973.Credit...Robert Dear/Associated Press
House Arrest to Absolute Power
Qaboos was born on Nov. 18, 1940, the scion of the Al Said dynasty, which had ruled from the southeastern tip of the Arabian Peninsula since 1744. During his youth, Oman was crushingly poor, with only a few paved roads, and insulated from the outside world by the strict rule of his father, Said bin Taimur. During his reign, Omanis could not buy cement or wear eyeglasses without the sultan’s permission.
Qaboos was sent to Britain for an elite education, studying at Bury Saint Edmunds in Suffolk and at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst. In 1965, his father summoned him home and put him under virtual house arrest for six years while maintaining Oman’s international isolation despite the kingdom’s newfound oil.
In 1970, with help from the British, Qaboos overthrew his father in a bloodless coup, emerging as sultan at age 29 and putting Oman on a new path to development and international relations. But first he tackled a leftist rebellion in the country’s south and began dealing with his people’s poverty.
To subdue the rebels, he solicited military aid from Iran, starting an enduring relationship with his Persian neighbors across the Gulf. To develop his country, he routed its oil wealth into infrastructure, building roads, schools, ports and hospitals that improved the standard of living.
And to end Oman’s isolation, he established diplomatic relations with its neighbors, joined the Arab League and the United Nations, and became a founding member of the Gulf Cooperation Council, a grouping of Gulf Arab monarchies.
“The sultan’s biggest achievement was putting his country on a path to development,” said J.E. Peterson, a former historian of the Royal Armed Forces in Muscat, the Omani capital, and an expert on Gulf affairs. “Sultan Qaboos set in progress a plan for development, created a government where none had existed before and created a foreign policy.”
All along, Qaboos maintained Oman’s independence and ability to build ties with a range of global and regional powers. Bucking the Arab consensus, he supported talks between Egypt and Israel that led to a peace treaty in 1979, the first between Israel and an Arab state.
After the Islamic Revolution in Iran that same year, he tasked the Omani ambassador to Tehran with getting to know the country’s new rulers. That led to a sit-down with Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who received assurances that Oman would maintain relations with the Islamic Republic, regardless of the sultanate’s alliances with Western powers.
Qaboos opened lines with China and the Soviet Union, and in 1994 Oman welcomed Yitzhak Rabin, making it the first Gulf state to receive an Israeli prime minister. Two years later, it received another one, Shimon Peres.
“Sultan Qaboos has kept these ties to almost everyone open, and that is no mean feat in this region,” said Calvin Allen, a retired history professor at Shenandoah University in Virginia who has written extensively about Oman.
Oman’s broad network of international relationships often made Qaboos a useful friend for the United States.
President Hassan Rouhani of Iran, left, and Sultan Qaboos reviewing an honor guard after the sultan arrived in Tehran on Aug. 25, 2013. It was the first visit to Iran by a foreign leader since President Rouhani took office. Iranian news media said the trip might be an effort to mediate between Tehran and Washington.Credit...IRNA/Reuters
In 2013, he hosted American and Iranian representatives at his private villas on the Omani coast for talks that paved the way for official negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program.
Those talks resulted in a landmark agreement between Iran, the United States and other international powers in 2015, although President Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement three years later.
Qaboos’s independence often rankled his more powerful neighbors in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, who hoped — in vain — that Oman would fall in line with their regional policies.
In 2011, when Saudi Arabia sent tanks to put down an Arab Spring uprising by the Shiite majority in the island kingdom of Bahrain against its Sunni rulers, Oman declined to participate. It stayed out of the Saudi-led military intervention against the Houthi rebels in Yemen in 2015, but later hosted the warring parties for peace talks.
And in 2016, it remained on the sidelines when Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and other Arab nations imposed a blockade on Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism and interfering in their domestic affairs.
Qaboos’s engagements often went further afield, and far outside those of other Arab leaders. After suicide bombers blew themselves up outside courthouses in Damascus, the capital of Syria, in 2017, Qaboos sent a condolence message to President Bashar al-Assad, whom the West and parts of the Arab world consider a war criminal.
And in 2018, Qaboos welcomed Benjamin Netanyahu on the first visit by an Israeli prime minister to a Gulf Arab state in more than two decades. Omani state television aired footage of Qaboos, dressed in a white robe, a traditional Omani head wrap and white sandals, receiving Mr. Netanyahu and his wife, Sara.
Sultan Qaboos met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel during an unannounced visit to Oman by Mr. Netanyahu in 2018.Credit...Omani Royal Palace/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Economic Boom, Then Stagnation
In Oman, Qaboos was beloved for his focus on economic development during the early decades of his rule — while foreigners noted that he oversaw an absolute, if not particularly brutal, police state.
On paper, he broadened the opportunities for citizens to participate in government. He issued Oman’s first constitution in 1996, which institutionalized a consultative assembly and granted universal suffrage to all citizens over 21. But he remained the sovereign center of the state. Political parties and unauthorized public gatherings were banned and critical news outlets shut down.
For many decades, he took an annual “meet the people tour” of his country. A visiting American military commander who met him in 2008 noted that Qaboos seemed to be “in good health and cheerful.” But the sultan said running the country kept him from his favorite activities, such as reading books. A music lover, he was said to play the lute and the pipe organ and to compose his own music. He founded a royal symphony orchestra.
In 2011, as the Arab Spring uprisings swept across the Middle East, thousands of Omanis joined in, taking to the streets to rally against the lack of jobs — but not against the sultan or Oman’s system of rule.
Sultan Qaboos attending a military parade in the capital, Muscat, marking the sultanate’s 43th National Day, on Nov. 18, 2013.Credit...Mohammed Mahjoub/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Security forces killed two protesters, and Qaboos quelled the demonstrations with promises to create jobs and boost salaries and pensions. Government spending skyrocketed in the next few years, leaving Oman vulnerable when the global oil price crashed in 2014. It has run budget deficits every year since, creating economic pressures that the new sultan will have to address.
As Qaboos aged and his public appearances grew scarce, speculation among Omanis and foreign experts mounted about his health. In November 2014, on his 74th birthday, he appeared on television to tell his people of an unnamed illness that would “require us to proceed with the medical program in the forthcoming period.”
Afterward, he took frequent trips to Europe for treatment.
Unlike his royal counterparts elsewhere in the Gulf, Qaboos was married only once, to a first cousin, Nawwal bint Tariq Al Said, in 1976. The marriage lasted only three years and produced no children.
During Qaboos’s life, Omanis avoided public discussion of who might succeed him. In 2007, an American diplomat noted that Omanis often stopped attempts to broach the subject with the invocation, “May he live forever.”
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