Oman: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
August 10, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS21534
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Oman: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy

Summary
The Sultanate of Oman is a long-time U.S. ally in the Persian Gulf. It has allowed U.S. access to
its military facilities for virtually every U.S. military operation in and around the Gulf since 1980,
despite the sensitivities in Oman and throughout the Middle East about a U.S. military presence
there. Oman also has fully and consistently supported U.S. efforts to achieve a Middle East peace
by publicly endorsing the peace treaties that have been achieved between Israel and some of its
Arab neighbors, and by occasionally hosting Israeli political leaders or meeting with them outside
Oman. It was partly in appreciation for this alliance that the United States entered into a free trade
agreement (FTA) with Oman. The FTA was considered pivotal to helping Oman diversify its
economy to compensate for its relatively small reserves of crude oil.
Perhaps because of the extensive benefits the alliance with Oman provides to U.S. Persian Gulf
policy, successive U.S. Administrations have tended not to criticize Oman’s relatively close
relations with Iran. Oman has a tradition of cooperation with Iran dating back to the Shah of
Iran’s regime and Oman has always been less alarmed by the perceived threat from Iran than have
the other Gulf states. Oman’s leaders view possible U.S. military action against Iran’s nuclear
facilities as potentially more destabilizing to the region than is Iran’s nuclear program or Iran’s
foreign policy that supports Shiite and some other hardline Islamist movements. Still, there is a
longstanding assumption among U.S. policymakers that, in the event of U.S.-Iran confrontation,
Oman would at least tacitly back the United States.
Another major U.S. priority in the Gulf region has been the promotion of human rights and
democracy and the empowerment of civil society. The United States has praised Sultan Qaboos
bin Sa’id Al Said for opening up the political process in Oman, beginning this initiative in the
early 1980s, long before the issue was highlighted by the United States. The political
liberalization has given citizens the opportunity to express their views on issues but has not
significantly limited Qaboos’ role as major decision maker. Some Omani human rights activists
and civil society leaders, along with many younger Omanis, who have always been unsatisfied
with the implicit and explicit limits to political rights in Oman, believe the democratization
process has stagnated over the past five years.
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Oman: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy

Contents
Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1
Democratization and Human Rights ............................................................................................ 3
Election History .................................................................................................................... 3
Broader Human Rights Issues ............................................................................................... 4
Religious Freedom .......................................................................................................... 4
Advancement of Women ................................................................................................. 4
Trafficking in Persons ..................................................................................................... 5
Defense and Security Ties ........................................................................................................... 5
Oman’s Capabilities and U.S. Security Assistance ................................................................. 6
Cooperation Against Islamic Militancy.................................................................................. 7
Cooperation on Regional Stability......................................................................................... 8
Iran................................................................................................................................. 8
Iraq................................................................................................................................. 9
Arab-Israeli Issues .......................................................................................................... 9
Yemen .......................................................................................................................... 10
Economic and Trade Issues ....................................................................................................... 10

Figures
Figure 1. Map of Oman ............................................................................................................... 2

Tables
Table 1.Some Key Facts on Oman............................................................................................... 1
Table 2. Recent U.S. Aid to Oman............................................................................................... 7

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 11

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Oman: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy

Introduction
Oman is located along the Arabian Sea, on the southern approaches to the Strait of Hormuz,
across from Iran. Except for a brief period of Persian rule, Omanis have remained independent
since expelling the Portuguese in 1650. The Al Said monarchy began in 1744, extending Omani
influence into Zanzibar and other parts of east Africa until 1861. A long-term rebellion led by the
Imam of Oman, leader of the Ibadhi sect (neither Sunni or Shiite and widely considered
“moderate conservative”) ended in 1959; Oman’s population is 75% Ibadhi. Sultan Qaboos bin
Sa’id Al Said, born in November 1940, is the eighth in the line of the monarchy; he became
Sultan in July 1970 when, with British support, he forced his father to abdicate.
He is considered popular in Oman, but his brief marriage in the 1970s produced no children and
therefore no clear successor. Succession would be decided by a “Ruling Family Council” of his
relatively small Al Said family (about 50 male members) or, if they fail to reach an agreement, by
a succession letter written by Qaboos prior to his death. The United States signed a treaty of
friendship with Oman in 1833, one of the first of its kind with an Arab state. (This treaty was
replaced by the Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights signed at Salalah on
December 20, 1958.) Oman sent an official envoy to the United States in 1840. A U.S. consulate
was maintained in Muscat during 1880-1915, a U.S. embassy was opened in 1972, and the first
resident U.S. Ambassador arrived in July 1974. Oman opened its embassy in Washington in 1973.
Sultan Qaboos was accorded a formal state visit in April 1983 by President Reagan. He had
previously had a U.S. state visit in 1974. President Clinton visited briefly in March 2000.

Table 1.Some Key Facts on Oman
Population
2.97 million, which includes 577,000 expatriates (July 2010 estimate)
Religions
Ibadhi Muslim, 75%; other 25% (Sunni Muslim, Shi te Muslim, Hindu)
GDP (purchasing power
$69.5 billion (2009)
parity, PPP)
GDP per capita (PPP) $23,900 (2009)
GDP Growth Rate
2.7% (2009)
Unemployment Rate
15%
Inflation Rate
3.5% (2009), down from 12.5% in 2008
Exports $27.65
billion (2008). Main export markets: (in decreasing order of dollar value):
China, South Korea, UAE, Japan, Thailand
Imports
$18.5 billion (2009). Main import sources (in decreasing order of dollar value):
UAE, Japan, United States, China, India, South Korea, Germany
Oil Production
813,000 barrels per day (2009)
Oil Reserves
5 – 5.5 billion barrels
Oil Exports
593,700 barrels per day (bpd)
Natural Gas Production
24 billion cubic meters/year
Natural Gas Reserves
849.5 billion cubic meters
Natural Gas Exports
10.89 billion cubic meters/yr
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Foreign Exchange and
$12.2 billion (as of the end of 2009)
Gold Reserves
Sources: CIA World Factbook, June 28, 2010; Oman National budget press statement provided by Embassy of
Oman in Washington, DC, January 2010.
Figure 1. Map of Oman

Source: CRS
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Democratization and Human Rights1
Oman remains a monarchy in which decision-making still is largely concentrated with Sultan
Qaboos. Some Omanis, particularly younger, well-educated professionals, consider the pace of
liberalization too slow, but many older Omanis compare the current degree of “political space”
favorably with that during the reign of the Sultan’s father. Under the Sultan’s father, Omanis
needed the Sultan’s approval to wear spectacles, for example. Some Omanis, even some within
the government and official establishment, note that some top positions are now filled by former
security officials, replacing academics or other professionals. Others saw progress in the holding
in April 2009 of a two-day workshop in Muscat to discuss freedom of speech.2
Election History
The electoral process in Oman has advanced incrementally, but,even so the process applies to a
legislative body with limited powers. Sultan Qaboos has constrained the authority of the elected
84-seat Consultative Council (Majlis As Shura) to mostly economic and social issues. It does not
draft legislation, lacks binding legislative powers, and some Omanis say the Council’s influence
over policy has diminished over time—to the point where many experts now say Oman lags the
other Gulf states on political liberalization. In a 1996 “Basic Law,” Qaboos made the legislature
bicameral by appointing a State Council to serve, in part, as a check and balance on the elected
Consultative Council. Together, the two bodies constitute the Oman Council. As in the other Gulf
states, formal political parties are not allowed. Unlike Bahrain or Kuwait, there are no clear
currents or factions within either of the two chambers that make up the Oman Council.
The slow pace of political liberalization concerns some observers because Qaboos was one of the
first Gulf monarchs to embark on political liberalization. He did so in the 1980s, under no evident
public pressure to do so, in the belief that Omanis would ultimately demand political reform. In
November 1991, he appointed a 59-seat Consultative Council (expanded to its current size of 84
seats in 1993), replacing a 10-year-old advisory council. In a move toward a popular selection
process, in 1994 and 1997 “notables” in each of Oman’s districts chose up to three nominees,
with Qaboos making a final selection for the Council. The first direct elections to the Consultative
Council were held in September 2000 (then a three-year term), but the electorate was limited
(25% of all citizens over 21 years old). In November 2002, Qaboos extended voting rights to all
citizens, male and female, over 21 years of age and the October 4, 2003, Consultative Council
elections—in which 195,000 Omanis voted (74% turnout)—resulted in a Council similar to that
elected in 2000, including the election of the same two women as in the previous election (out of
15 women candidates).
In the October 27, 2007, election (after changing to a four year term), Qaboos allowed, for the
first time, public campaigning. Turnout among 388,000 registered voters was 63%, including
enthusiastic participation by women, but none of the 21 female candidates (out of 631 candidates)
won. Qaboos appoints the Consultative Council president (he appointed a new president in

1 Information in this section is from several State Department reports: The Human Rights report for 2009 (March 11,
2010); the International Religious Freedom Report for 2009 (October 26, 2009); and the Trafficking in Persons Report
for 2010 (June 14, 2010). See also: Carpenter, J. Scott and Simon Henderson. Democracy in Slow Motion: Oman Goes
to the Polls. Washington Institute for Near East Policy, PolicyWatch 1298. October 26, 2007.
2 Slackman, Michael. “With Murmurs of Change, Sultan Tightens His Grip.” New York Times, May 15, 2009.
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September 2007, replacing a 16-year incumbent), although the Consultative Council chooses two
vice presidents.
The State Council, still entirely appointed, now has 70 seats, up from the original 53 seats. The
State Council appointed following the 2007 election has 14 women, up from nine previously. The
next elections and State Council appointments are to take place in October 2011.
Broader Human Rights Issues
On related human rights issues, the State Department human rights report for 2009 says that “the
government generally respect[s] the human rights of its citizens.” Press criticism of the
government is tolerated, but criticism of the Sultan is not. Private ownership of radio and
television stations is prohibited, but the availability of satellite dishes has made foreign broadcasts
accessible to the public. There are no legal or practical restrictions to Internet usage, but only
about 5% of the population has subscriptions to Internet service. The State Department notes
improving workers’ rights, in conjunction with the U.S.-Oman FTA, and the labor laws permit
collective bargaining and prohibits employers from firing or penalizing workers for union
activity. U.S. funds from the Middle East Partnership Initiative have been used to fund civil
society and political process strengthening, judicial reform, election management, media
independence, and women’s empowerment.
Religious Freedom
The 1996 Basic Law affirmed Islam as the state religion, and the State Department’s religious
freedom report for 2009 noted “no change in the status of respect for religious freedom” during
the reporting period, but “the Government did lift previously imposed limitations on the number
of religious workers in the country and shortened the process for granting permission to religious
leaders to enter the country from two months to one week.” Non-Muslims are free to worship at
temples and churches built on land donated by the Sultan, but there are some limitations on non-
Muslims’ proselytizing and on religious gatherings in other than government-approved houses of
worship. Members of all religions and sects are free to maintain links with coreligionists abroad
and travel outside Oman for religious purposes.
Advancement of Women
Sultan Qaboos has given major speeches on the equality of women and their importance in
national development, and they now constitute about 30% of the work force. Since 2004, there
have been four women of ministerial rank, of which three are in the cabinet. The three are
ministers of: higher education, of tourism, and of social development. The first woman ever of
ministerial rank in Oman was appointed in March 2003; she heads the national authority for
industrial craftsmanship. In April 2004, Qaboos made five women among the 29 appointees to the
public prosecutors office. The ambassador to the United States is a female. However, allegations
of spousal abuse and domestic violence are fairly common, with women finding protection
primarily through their families. Omani women also continue to face social discrimination often
as a result of the interpretation of Islamic law.
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Trafficking in Persons
On November 17, 2008, Oman set up its first human rights commission as an “autonomous body”
attached to the State Council (upper body of the legislature). The move came one month after—
and was viewed as a response to—a determination by President Bush (P.D. 2009-5) that Oman be
moved from “Tier 3” on trafficking in persons (worst level, assessed in the June 4, 2008, State
Department report on that issue), to “Tier 2/Watch List.” In the latest such report, issued June 14,
2010, Oman’s “grade” remained at Tier 2—the level it was assigned in the 2009 report. This
ranking is based on an assessment that Oman is making significant efforts to comply with
minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and its prosecutions for those trafficking in
persons. Still, Oman is considered a destination and transit country for men and women primarily
from South and East Asia, in conditions indicative of forced labor.
Defense and Security Ties
Sultan Qaboos, who is Sandhurst-educated and is respected by his fellow Gulf rulers as a defense
strategist, has long seen the United States as the key security guarantor of the region. He also has
consistently advocated expanded defense cooperation among the Gulf states. Oman was the first
Gulf state to formalize defense relations with the United States after the Persian Gulf region was
shaken by Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution, which was at first feared would spread throughout the
Middle East and lead to the downfall of monarchy states there. Oman signed an agreement to
allow U.S. forces access to Omani military facilities on April 21, 1980. Three days later, the
United States used Oman’s Masirah Island air base to launch the failed attempt to rescue the U.S.
embassy hostages in Iran. During the September 1980 – August 1988 Iran-Iraq war, the United
States built up naval forces in the Gulf to prevent Iranian attacks on international shipping. Oman
played the role of quiet intermediary between the United States and Iran for the return of Iranians
captured in clashes with U.S. naval forces in the Gulf during that war.
Under the U.S.-Oman access agreement, which was renewed in 1985, 1990, and 2000 (for ten
years), the United States reportedly can use—with advance notice and for specified purposes—
Oman’s military airfields in Muscat (the capital), Thumrait, and Masirah Island, and some U.S.
Air Force equipment, including lethal munitions, are stored at these bases.3 During the renewal
negotiations in 2000, the United States acceded to Oman’s request that the United States fund a
$120 million upgrade of a fourth air base (Khasab) at Musnanah (50 miles from Muscat).4 The
U.S. military has sought to respond to an Omani request to move some U.S. equipment to
expanded facilities at Musnanah, from the international airport at Seeb, to accommodate
commercial development at Seeb. However, conferees on the National Defense Authorization Act
for FY2010 (P.L. 111-84) did not incorporate into that law a DoD request for $116 million to
carry out that move, on the grounds that U.S. Central Command has not formulated a master
plan—or obtained an Omani contribution—for the needed further construction at Musnanah.
However, the congressional refusal to authorize the funds does not appear to have thus far
jeopardized renewal of the access agreements later in 2010.

3 Hajjar, Sami. U.S. Military Presence in the Gulf: Challenges and Prospects. U.S. Army War College, Strategic
Studies Institute. P. 27.
4 Finnegan, Philip. “Oman Seeks U.S. Base Upgrades.” Defense News, April 12, 1999.
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Oman’s facilities contributed to U.S. major combat operations in Afghanistan (Operation
Enduring Freedom, OEF) and, to a lesser extent, Iraq (Operation Iraqi Freedom, OIF), even
though Omani leaders said that invading Iraq could “incite revenge” against the United States in
the Arab world. According to the Defense Department, during OEF there were about 4,300 U.S.
personnel in Oman, mostly Air Force, and U.S. B-1 bombers, indicating that the Omani facilities
were used extensively for strikes during OEF. The U.S. presence fell slightly to 3,750 during OIF;
other facilities closer to Iraq, such as in Kuwait, were used more extensively for OIF. There are
now approximately 35 U.S. military personnel in Oman, well below the pre-September 11, 2001,
figure of 200 U.S. personnel. Since 2004, Omani facilities reportedly have not been used for air
support operations in either Afghanistan or Iraq.
Oman’s Capabilities and U.S. Security Assistance5
Oman’s 43,000 person armed force is the third largest of the Gulf Cooperation Council states
(GCC, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Oman, Bahrain, and Qatar). Its force is widely
considered one of the best trained but not the best equipped. However, Oman is trying to expand
and modernize its arsenal with purchases from the United States. Because of his historic ties to
the British military, Qaboos early on relied on seconded British officers to command Omani
military services, and much of its arsenal still is British-made. British officers are now mostly
advisory.
In an effort to modernize its Air Force, in October 2001, after years of consideration, Oman
purchased (with its own funds) 12 U.S.-made F-16 C/D aircraft from new production. Along with
associated weapons (Harpoon and AIM missiles), a podded reconnaissance system, and training,
the sale was valued at about $825 million; deliveries were completed in 2006. Oman made the
purchase in part to keep pace with its Gulf neighbors, including UAE and Bahrain, that had
bought F-16s. In July 2006, according to the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA),
Oman bought the JAVELIN anti-tank system, at a cost of about $48 million.
Some major U.S. sales to Oman were expected as part of an estimated $20 billion sales package
to the Gulf states under the U.S. “Gulf Security Dialogue” intended to contain Iran, although most
of the sales notified thus far are to the much wealthier Saudi Arabia and UAE. As part of that
effort, the Department of Defense notified Congress on August 4, 2010, of a potential sale to
Oman of up to 18 additional F-16s and associated equipment and support. The sale could be
worth up to $3.5 billion to the main manufacturer, Lockheed Martin. Earlier, in June 2009,
Lockheed Martin said it had received a contract from Oman to buy the C-130J “Super Hercules”
military transport aircraft. The terms were not disclosed. In the past two years, Oman has
continued to buy some British equipment, including Typhoon fighter aircraft and patrol boats, and
it has also bought some Chinese-made armored personnel carriers and other gear.
U.S. Foreign Military Financing (FMF)—recent amounts of which are shown below—has been
used to help Oman buy U.S.-made coastal patrol boats for anti-narcotics and anti-smuggling
missions, as well as aircraft munitions, night-vision goggles, upgrades to coastal surveillance
systems, communications equipment, and de-mining equipment. The proposed increase in FMF
for Oman for FY2010 (although still at low levels compared to many other recipients of U.S.

5 Section 564 of Title V, Part C of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act for FY1994 and FY1995 (P.L. 103-236)
banned U.S. arms transfers to countries that maintain the Arab boycott of Israel during those fiscal years. As applied to
the GCC states, this provision was waived on the grounds that doing so was in the national interest.
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security aid) reflects additional planned sales to Oman of such gear. The International Military
Education and Training program (IMET) program is used to promote U.S. standards of human
rights and civilian control of military and security forces, as well as to fund English language
instruction, and promote inter-operability with U.S. forces. (The United States phased out
development assistance to Oman in 1996. At the height of that development assistance program in
the 1980s, the United States was giving Oman about $15 million per year in Economic Support
Funds (ESF) in loans and grants, mostly for conservation and management of Omani fisheries
and water resources.)
Oman is eligible for grant U.S. excess defense articles (EDA) under Section 516 of the Foreign
Assistance Act. It received 30 U.S.-made M-60A3 tanks in September 1996 on a “no rent” lease
basis (later receiving title outright). There have been minor EDA grants since 2000, particularly
gear to help Oman monitor its borders and waters and to improve inter-operability with U.S.
forces. In 2004, it turned down a U.S. offer of EDA U.S.-made M1A1 tanks. Some Omani
officers say they need new armor to supplement the 38 British-made Challenger 2 tanks and 80
British-made Piranha armored personnel carriers Oman bought in the mid-1990s.
Table 2. Recent U.S. Aid to Oman
(In millions of dollars)

FY2003 FY2004
FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009
FY2010 FY2011
(est.)
(request)
IMET 0.75
0.83 1.14 1.14 1.11 1.43 1.45 1.525 1.65
FMF
80.0
24.85 19.84 13.86 13.49 4.712 7.0 11.85
13.0
NADR


.40 0.554 0.4 1.28 1.593 0.95 1.655
1.5
Note: IMET is International Military Education and Training; FMF is Foreign Military Financing; NADR is
Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, De-Mining and Related Programs, and includes ATA (Anti-Terrorism Assistance);
EXBS (Export Control and Related Border Security); and TIP (Terrorism Interdiction Program).

Cooperation Against Islamic Militancy

Since September 11, 2001, Oman has cooperated with U.S. legal, intelligence, and financial
efforts against terrorism. According to the State Department report on global terrorism for 2009,
released August 5, 2010, Oman “continued to be proactive in implementing counterterrorism
strategies and cooperating with neighboring countries to prevent terrorists from entering or
moving freely throughout the Arabian Peninsula.” This language was nearly identical to that used
in the same report the prior year. The latest State Department report credits Oman with convicting
and sentencing to life in prison an Omani businessman, Ali Abdul Aziz al-Hooti, for helping to
plan terrorist attacks in Oman and for helping to fund a Pakistan-based terrorist group Lashkar-e-
Tayyiba. Other relatively recent steps include Oman’s enactment of a January 2007 law
establishing a National Committee for Combating Terrorism, a December 2006 agreement with
Saudi Arabia to control cross-border transit, and the establishment of a financial intelligence unit
of the Directorate of Financial Crimes of the Royal Omani Police. In September 2008, it
strengthened its anti-money laundering program by requiring non-banking establishments to
verify the identify of their clients and document financial transactions. In December 2004, the
government arrested 31 Ibadhi Muslims (Omani citizens) on suspicion of conspiring to establish a
religious state, but Qaboos pardoned them in June 2005.
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On November 22, 2005, Oman joined the U.S. “Container Security Initiative,” agreeing to pre-
screening of U.S.-bound cargo from its port of Salalah for illicit trafficking of nuclear and other
materials, and for terrorists. Table 2 includes U.S. aid to Oman ( Non-Proliferation, Anti-
Terrorism and Related Programs funds, NADR) to help it establish effective export controls, to
sustain its counter-terrorism training capabilities, and to help control movements of illegal
immigrants across its borders.
Cooperation on Regional Stability
Sultan Qaboos has often pursued foreign policies outside an Arab or Gulf consensus. Some of its
stances, such as that toward Iran, have appeared at odds with U.S. policy. Other of its positions,
such as on the Arab-Israeli dispute, have been highly supportive of U.S. policy, sometimes to the
extent of alienating other Arab leaders.
Iran
Of the Gulf states, Oman is perceived as politically closest to and the least critical of Iran. Qaboos
sees no inconsistency between Oman’s alliance with the United States and its friendship with
Iran. This relationship has proved useful to the United States in the past; Oman was an
intermediary through which the United States returned Iranian prisoners captured during U.S.-
Iran skirmishes in the Persian Gulf in 1987-1988. Oman’s attempts to steer a middle ground
caused problems for Oman in April 1980 when, within days of signing the agreement allowing
the United States military to use several Omani air bases, the United States used these facilities—
reportedly without prior notification to Oman—to launch the abortive mission to rescue the U.S.
Embassy hostages seized by Iran in November 1979.6
Some accounts say that Oman is in the process of drawing closer to Iran than it has previously.
Sultan Qaboos last visited Tehran in August 2009, his first visit there since the 1979 Islamic
revolution. He went forward with the visit even though the June 2009 reelection of President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was widely challenged in Iran as fraudulent by large numbers of
demonstrators in Tehran and in other cities. To this extent, the Qaboos visit was viewed as a sign
that Oman was endorsing—or at least deciding to set aside the issue of—Ahmadinejad’s
reelection.
Oman, as have the other GCC states, has long publicly opposed any U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear
facilities. Not only has Oman rebuffed efforts by the other Gulf states to persuade Oman to
distance itself from Iran politically, but on August 4, 2010, it signed a security pact with Iran.7
The pact reportedly commits the two to hold joint military exercises at some point. The United
States did not criticize Oman’s entry into this pact with Iran, possibly believing that the
agreement will not result in much significant new cooperation between the two. The 2010 pact
follows an earlier pact, signed in August 2009, that focused on cooperating against smuggling
across the Gulf of Oman, which separates the two countries.8

6 CRS conversations with U.S. Embassy officials in Oman. 1995-2003.
7 Slackman, Michael. “Oman Navigates Risky Strait Between Iran and Arab Nations.” New York Times, May 16, 2009.
8 Iran, Oman Ink Agreement of Defensive Cooperation. Tehran Fars News Agency, August 4, 2010.
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Economically, the two conduct formal trade, supplemented by the informal trading relations that
have long characterized the Gulf region. Oman’s government is said to turn a blind eye to the
smuggling of a wide variety of goods to Iran from Oman’s Musandam Peninsula territory. The
trade is illegal in Iran because the smugglers avoid paying taxes in Iran, but Oman’s local
government collects taxes on the goods shipped.9 Iran and Oman are in discussions about
potential investments to develop Iranian offshore natural gas fields that adjoin Oman’s West
Bukha oil and gas field in the Strait of Hormuz. The Omani field began producing oil and gas in
February 2009.
The question many observers ask is why is Oman not as wary of Iran as are the other GCC states.
Oman has no sizable Shiite community with which Iran could meddle in Oman, so the fear of
Iranian interference is less pronounced. There are also residual positive sentiments pre-dating
Iran’s Islamic revolution. Oman still appreciates the military help the Shah of Iran provided in
helping end a leftist revolt in Oman’s Dhofar Province during 1964-1975. Others attribute
Oman’s position on Iran to its larger concerns that Saudi Arabia has sought to spread its Wahhabi
form of Islam into Oman, and Oman sees Iran as a rival to and potential counterweight to Saudi
Arabia.
Iraq
On Iraq, and generally in line with other GCC states, Omani officials say that the Omani
government and population are dismayed at the Shiite Islamist domination of post-Saddam Iraq
and its pro-Iranian tilt. Yet, despite moves by most of the other GCC states to normalize relations
with Iraq, Oman has not appointed an ambassador in Baghdad. (Saudi Arabia also has not done
so.) This possibly could be attributed to security concerns; a shooting outside Oman’s embassy in
Baghdad in November 2005 wounded four, including an embassy employee. Oman provided
about $3 million to Iraq’s post-Saddam reconstruction, a relatively small amount compared to
some of the other Gulf states.
Arab-Israeli Issues
On the Arab-Israeli dispute, in a stand considered highly supportive of U.S. policy, Oman was the
one of the few Arab countries not to break relations with Egypt after the signing of the Egyptian-
Israeli peace treaty in 1979. All the GCC states participated in the multilateral peace talks
established by the 1991 U.S.-sponsored Madrid peace process, but only Oman, Bahrain, and
Qatar hosted working group sessions of the multilaterals. Oman hosted an April 1994 session of
the working group on water and, as a result of those talks, a Middle East Desalination Research
Center was established in Oman. Participants in the Desalination Center include Israel, the
Palestinian Authority, the United States, Japan, Jordan, the Netherlands, South Korea, and Qatar.
In September 1994, Oman and the other GCC states renounced the secondary and tertiary Arab
boycott of Israel. In December 1994, it became the first Gulf state to officially host a visit by an
Israeli Prime Minister (Yitzhak Rabin), and it hosted then Prime Minister Shimon Peres in April
1996. In October 1995, Oman exchanged trade offices with Israel, essentially renouncing the
primary boycott of Israel. However, there was no move to establish diplomatic relations. The
trade offices closed following the September 2000 Palestinian uprising.

9 Ibid.
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Oman has expressed an openness to renewing trade ties with Israel if there is progress on Israeli-
Palestinian issues. In an April 2008 meeting in Qatar, Omani Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf bin
Alawi bin Abdullah informed then Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni that the Israeli trade office
in Oman would remain closed until agreement was reached on a Palestinian state, although the
meeting itself represented a level of diplomatic outreach by Oman to Israel. There was little
follow-up thereafter and Oman, like many other Arab states, considers Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, who took office in February 2009, opposed to a settlement that would be
acceptable to the Palestinians. Still, indicating that the issue remains open, several Israeli officials
reportedly visited Oman in November 2009 to attend the annual conference of the Desalination
Center, and the Israeli delegation held talks with Omani officials on the margins of the
conference.10
Oman did attend a January 2009 meeting in Qatar called to support Hamas, then at war with
Israel in the Gaza strip, which Hamas controls. Oman’s attendance, to certain extent, defied a
boycott of the meeting by Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which considered the meeting a political boost
to Iran, which is among Hamas’ staunchest regional supporters. Oman’s attendance could be
explained by Oman’s friendly relations with Iran, discussed above, although this position is likely
to reduce Oman’s leverage, if any, with Israel. Israel views Iran as an existential threat and tends
to view any country that is on friendly terms with Iran with suspicion.
Yemen
Oman’s relations with neighboring Yemen have traditionally been troubled, but there are signs of
stability over the past decade. The former People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY),
considered Marxist and pro-Soviet, supported Oman’s Dhofar rebellion in the 1960s and early
1970s. Oman-PDRY relations were normalized in 1983, but there were occasional border clashes
between the two later in that decade. Relations improved after 1990, when PDRY merged with
North Yemen to form the combined modern day Republic of Yemen. In September 2008, the two
countries began discussions to form a regional center to combat piracy. In May 2009, Oman
signaled support for Yemen’s integrity and the government of President Ali Abdullah Saleh by
withdrawing the Omani citizenship of southern Yemeni politician Ali Salim Al Bidh, who is
believed to be stoking separatist sentiment in south Yemen.
Economic and Trade Issues11
Despite Omani efforts to diversify its economy, oil exports generate about 60% of government
revenues. Oman has a relatively small 5.5 billion barrels (maximum estimate) of proven oil
reserves, enough for about 15 years, and some energy development firms say that production at
some Omani fields is declining.12 Oman exports about 222 million barrels per year of oil (less
than 3% of internationally traded oil), of which about 11.5 million barrels per year are imported
by the United States. The United States is Oman’s fourth largest trading partner, and there was

10 Ravid, Barak. “Top Israeli Diplomat Holds Secret Talks in Oman.” Haaretz, November 25, 2009.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1130242.html
11 For more information on Oman’s economy and U.S.-Oman trade, see CRS Report RL33328, U.S.-Oman Free Trade
Agreement
, by Mary Jane Bolle.
12 Gerth, Jeff and Stephen Labaton. “Oman’s Oil Yield Long in Decline, Shell Data Show. New York Times, April 8,
2004.
Congressional Research Service
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Oman: Reform, Security, and U.S. Policy

about $2 billion in bilateral trade in 2009, slightly less than the $2.2 billion in trade for 2008. Of
the approximately $1.125 billion in U.S. exports to Oman in 2009, about 20% consisted of
aircraft and related parts, and another 10% consisted of drilling and oilfield equipment. Of the
approximately $907 million worth of goods imported into the United States from Oman in 2009,
$765 million consisted of crude oil—nearly 85%.
Oman is not a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
Recognizing that its crude oil fields are aging, Oman is trying to privatize its economy, diversify
its sources of revenue, and develop its liquid natural gas (LNG) sector, for which Oman has
identified large markets in Asia and elsewhere. Gas ventures with Iran that are under discussion
were addressed above, in the “Iran” section. Oman has about 850 billion cubic meters of proven
gas reserves, and in November 2008 it signed a 20-year agreement with Occidental Petroleum to
develop existing gas fields and explore for new ones. Oman is part of the “Dolphin project,”
under which Qatar is exporting natural gas to UAE (by replacing Omani gas supplies, at 135
million cubic feet per day, to the UAE). Oman was admitted to the WTO in September 2000. The
U.S.-Oman Free Trade Agreement was signed on January 19, 2006, and ratified by Congress (P.L.
109-283, signed September 26, 2006). Oman has balked at a Gulf state plan to form a monetary
union by the end of 2010.

Author Contact Information

Kenneth Katzman

Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
kkatzman@crs.loc.gov, 7-7612


Congressional Research Service
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