الوضع السياسي الداخلي: الكويت p.11

FO 371/148912 1960
10

the Kuwait Government wanted it that way.

He added, however, that it was also partly
because the non-Kuwaiti staff (as opposed to
labour) had proved in practice not to be very
reliable. Experience of Palestinians, both in

the Training School and the Public Relations
Department was very discouraging - not on

account of their abilility, which surpassed

that of the Kuwaitis, but on account of their
unreliability. This affected in turn the
policy of dispensing with British staff as the
Company was holding on to British staff who
were really past their prime in order to avoid
having to put in their places Lebanese or
Palestinians who were loyal neither to the
Government nor to the Company.

NOTHING TO BE WRITTEN IN THIS MARGIN

5.

Fraser admitted that the basic difficulty

was that which you had indicated: there

were simply not enough qualified Kuwaitis coming

forward to fill senior staff posts. There
were certain fields, viz. accountancy and
nursing, for which there was no prospect of
Kuwaitis being available at all at any fore seeable time in the future, and here the Company
was pursuing a policy of displacing non-Arabs
with Arabs. In general, however, they felt
that on a long term view the only policy they
could profitably pursue was for the higher jobs
to be filled by British, Americans and Kuwaitis,
with the proportion of the last steadily
increasing as they became available.
6. This clearly does not hold out any very
great hopes as far as the K.0.c. is concerned

/for