Early career in 1961 In 1962, he was appointed Kuwait's
minister of finance when the ministry was established. In this position, Jaber was tasked with putting the new
Kuwaiti dinar into circulation and establishing the Kuwaiti Currency Board, of which he was the chair. As minister, Jaber adopted, and was the first chairman of, the
Kuwaiti Fund for Arab Economic Development from 1962 to 1964. The Fund provides financial and technical assistance to developing countries. The country's oil revenues transformed it from a largely rural seafaring society to a modern state. During this time, the Fund expanded to aid five countries and gave loans to another eight. The money going into the fund came from oil earnings. Al-Sabah led a delegation to the
Arab League to resolve the issue. The United Kingdom informed Iraqi Prime Minister
Abd al-Karim Qasim that it would militarily assist Kuwait in the event of military action, leading to
Operation Vantage. Iraq recognised Kuwait's independence in 1963, though it disputed the borders.
Iran–Iraq War Kuwait found itself geographically in the middle of the
Iran–Iraq War that took place from 1980 to 1988. Throughout the war, the country suffered from many security threats, including a
series of bombings. In 1986, one year after an attack on Jaber's motorcade, there was an attack on an oil installation, which almost caused the shutdown of Kuwait's oil industry.
Gulf War with Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah on the South Lawn of the White House, 1990. Some sources claim that the task of the invading Iraqi forces was to capture or kill Jaber. However, such a claimed plan was not possible with the exile of Jaber and his government to
Saudi Arabia within hours of the invasion where they ran the Kuwaiti
exiled government from a hotel in
Ta'if, Saudi Arabia. From Ta'if, Jaber set up his government so that its ministers were in communication with the people still in Kuwait. The government was able to direct an underground armed resistance made up of both military and civilian forces and was able to provide public services to the Kuwaiti people who remained, such as emergency care through the funds that it had saved from oil revenues. He returned to Kuwait in March 1991, efforts to restore his rule and remove the Iraqi army. On 15 March 1991, Jaber returned to Kuwait, staying at the private home of a wealthy Kuwaiti as his own palace had been destroyed. He was met with a symbolic arrival with several dozens cars filled with people honking their car horns and waving Kuwaiti flags who tried to follow the Emir's convoy. He was involved in a high profile case involving Sulaiman Al-Adsani, and the lawyer
Hazel Fox, in 1996. The case failed because of a defense of diplomatic immunity.
2003 US invasion of Iraq During the
2003 US invasion of Iraq, and unlike the ruling family of Saudi Arabia, Jaber openly allowed the
United States to use
Kuwait as a base. == Personal life and death ==