Iranian Revolution project
Iranian Revolution project
After the 1953 Iranian coup d'état, Pahlavi aligned Iran with the Western Bloc
and cultivated a close relationship with the United States to consolidate his power
as an authoritarian ruler. Relying heavily on American support amidst the Cold
War, he remained the Shah of Iran for 26 years after the coup, effectively keeping
the country from swaying towards the influence of the Eastern Bloc and the
Soviet Union. Beginning in 1963, Pahlavi implemented a number of reforms
aimed at modernizing Iranian society, in what is known as the White Revolution.
In light of his continued vocal opposition to the modernization campaign after
being arrested twice, Khomeini was exiled from Iran in 1964. However, as major
ideological tensions persisted between Pahlavi and Khomeini, anti-government
demonstrations began in October 1977, eventually developing into a campaign of
civil resistance that included elements of secularism and Islamism. In August
1978, the deaths of between 377 and 470 people in the Cinema Rex fire claimed
by the opposition as having been orchestrated by Pahlavi's SAVAK came to serve
as a catalyst for a popular revolutionary movement across all of Iran, and large-
scale strikes and demonstrations paralyzed the entire country for the remainder
of that year.
On 16 January 1979, Pahlavi left the country and went into exile as the last Iranian
monarch, leaving behind his duties to Iran's Regency Council and Shapour
Bakhtiar, the opposition-based Iranian prime minister. On 1 February 1979,
Khomeini returned to Iran, following an invitation by the government; several
thousand Iranians gathered to greet him as he landed in the capital city of Tehran.
By 11 February 1979, the monarchy was officially brought down and Khomeini
assumed leadership over Iran while guerrillas and rebel troops overwhelmed
Pahlavi loyalists in armed combat. Following the March 1979 Islamic Republic
referendum, in which 98% of Iranian voters approved the country's shift to an
Islamic republic, the new government began efforts to draft the present-day
Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran; Khomeini emerged as the Supreme
Leader of Iran in December 1979. The success of the Iranian Revolution was met
with surprise around the world, and was considered by many to be unusual in
nature: it lacked many of the customary causes of revolutionary sentiment
(e.g.,defeat in war, a financial crisis, peasant rebellion, or disgruntled military);
occurred in a country that was experiencing relative prosperity; produced
profound change at great speed; was massively popular; resulted in the massive
exile that characterizes a large portion of today's Iranian diaspora; and replaced a
pro-Western secular and authoritarian monarchy with an anti-Western Islamist
theocracy that was based on the concept of Velâyat-e Faqih (or Guardianship of
the Islamic Jurist), straddling between authoritarianism and totalitarianism. In
addition to these, the Iranian Revolution sought the spread of Shia Islam across
the Middle East through the ideological tenets of Khomeinism particularly as a
means of uprooting the region's status quo, which favoured Sunni Islam. After
the consolidation of Khomeinist factions, Iran began to back Shia militancy
1
Iranian Revolution
across the region in an attempt to combat Sunni influence and establish Iranian
dominance within the Arab world, ultimately aiming to achieve an Iranian-led
Shia political order.
The Shah's regime was seen as an oppressive, brutal, corrupt, and lavish regime
by some of the society's classes at that time. It also suffered from some basic
functional failures that brought economic bottlenecks, shortages, and inflation.
The Shah was perceived by many as beholden to if not a puppet of a non-Muslim
Western power (i.e., the United States) whose culture was affecting that of Iran.
At the same time, support for the Shah may have waned among Western
politicians and media especially under the administration of U.S. President
Jimmy Carter as a result of the Shah's support for OPEC petroleum price increases
earlier in the decade. When President Carter enacted a human-rights policy which
said that countries guilty of human-rights violations would be deprived of
American arms or aid, this helped give some Iranians the courage to post open
letters and petitions in the hope that the repression by the government might
subside. The Revolution that substituted the monarchy of Mohammad Reza Shah
Pahlavi with Islam and Khomeini is credited in part to the spread of the Shi'a
version of the Islamic revival. It resisted
westernization and saw Ayatollah Khomeini as following in the footsteps of the
Shi'a Imam Husayn ibn Ali, with the Shah playing the role of Husayn's foe, the
hated tyrant Yazid I. Other factors include the underestimation of Khomeini's
Islamist movement by both the Shah's reign who considered them a minor threat
compared to the Marxists and Islamic socialists and by the secularist opponents
of the government who thought the Khomeinists could be sidelined.
Tobacco Protest (1891)
At the end of the 19th century, the Shi'a clergy (ulama) had a significant influence
on Iranian society. The clergy first showed itself to be a powerful political force
in opposition to the monarchy with the 1891 Tobacco Protest. On 20 March 1890,
the long-standing Iranian monarch Nasir al-Din Shah granted a concession to
British Major G. F. Talbot for a full monopoly over the production, sale, and
export of tobacco for 50 years. At the time, the Persian tobacco industry employed
over 200,000 people, so the concession represented a major blow to Persian
farmers and bazaaris whose livelihoods were largely dependent on the lucrative
tobacco business. The boycotts and protests against it were widespread and
extensive as result of Mirza Hasan Shirazi's fatwa (judicial decree). Within 2
years, Nasir al-Din Shah found himself powerless to stop the popular movement
and cancelled the concession.
The Tobacco Protest was the first significant Iranian resistance against the Shah
and foreign interests, revealing the power of the people and the ulama influence
among them.
Persian Constitutional Revolution (1905–1911)
The growing dissatisfaction continued until the Constitutional Revolution of
1905–1911. The revolution led to the establishment of a parliament, the National
2
Iranian Revolution
Consultative Assembly (also known as the Majlis), and approval of the first
constitution. Although the constitutional revolution was successful in weakening
the autocracy of the Qajar regime, it failed to provide a powerful alternative
government. Therefore, in the decades following the establishment of the new
parliament, a number of critical events took place. Many of these events can be
viewed as a continuation of the struggle between the constitutionalists and the
Shahs of Persia, many of whom were backed by foreign powers against the
parliament.
Reza Shah (1921–1935)
Insecurity and chaos created after the Constitutional Revolution led to the rise of
General Reza Khan, the commander of the elite Persian Cossack Brigade who
seized power in a coup d'état in February 1921.
He established a constitutional monarchy, deposing the last Qajar Shah, Ahmed
Shah, in 1925 and being designated monarch by the National Assembly, to be
known thenceforth as Reza Shah, founder of the Pahlavi dynasty. There were
widespread social, economic, and political reforms introduced during his reign, a
number of which led to public discontent that would provide the circumstances
for the Iranian Revolution. Particularly controversial was the replacement of
Islamic laws with Western ones and the forbidding of traditional Islamic clothing,
separation of the sexes, and veiling of women's faces with the niqab. Police
forcibly removed and tore chadors off women who resisted his ban on the public
hijab.
In 1935, dozens were killed and hundreds injured in the Goharshad Mosque
rebellion. On the other hand, during the early rise of Reza Shah, Abdul- Karim
Ha'eri Yazdi founded the Qom Seminary and created important changes in
seminaries. However, he would avoid entering into political issues, as did other
religious leaders who followed him. Hence, no widespread anti-government
attempts were organized by clergy during the rule of Reza Shah. However, the
future Ayatollah Khomeini was a student of Sheikh Abdul Karim Ha'eri.
Mosaddegh and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (1951–1952)
From 1901 on, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (renamed the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company in 1931), a British oil company, enjoyed a monopoly on sale and
production of Iranian oil. It was the most profitable British business in the world.
Most Iranians lived in poverty while the wealth generated from Iranian oil played
a decisive role in maintaining Britain at the top of the world. In 1951, Iranian
Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh pledged to throw the company out of
Iran, reclaim the petroleum reserves and free Iran from foreign powers.
In 1952, Mosaddegh nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and became a
National hero. The British, however, were outraged and accused him of stealing.
The British unsuccessfully sought punishment from the World Court and the
United Nations, sent warships to the Persian Gulf, and finally imposed a crushing
embargo. Mosaddegh was unmoved by Britain's campaign against him. One
European newspaper, the Frankfurter Neue Presse, reported that Mosaddegh
"would rather be fried in Persian oil than make the slightest concession to the
3
Iranian Revolution
British." The British considered an armed invasion, but UK Prime Minister
Winston Churchill decided on a coup after being refused American military
support by U.S. President Harry S. Truman, who sympathized with nationalist
movements like Mosaddegh's and had nothing but contempt for old-style
imperialists like those who ran the Anglo- Iranian Oil Company. Mosaddegh,
however, learned of Churchill's plans and ordered the British embassy to be
closed in October 1952, forcing all British diplomats and agents to leave the
country.
Although the British were initially turned down in their request for American
support by President Truman, the election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as U.S.
president in November 1952 changed the American stance toward the conflict.
On 20 January 1953, U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother,
C.I.A. Director Allen Dulles, told their British counterparts that they were ready
to move against Mosaddegh. In their eyes, any country not decisively allied with
the United States was a potential enemy. Iran had immense oil wealth, a long
border with the Soviet Union, and a nationalist prime minister. The prospect of a
fall into communism and a "second China" (after Mao Zedong won the Chinese
Civil War) terrified the Dulles brothers. Operation Ajax was born, in which the
only democratic government Iran ever had was deposed.
Iranian coup d'état (1953)
In 1941, an invasion of allied British and Soviet troops deposed Reza Shah, who
was considered friendly to Nazi Germany, and installed his son, Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi as Shah. In 1953, following the nationalization of the Iranian oil industry
by the democratically elected prime minister Mohammad Mossadegh, American
and British forces instituted a highly effective embargo of Iranian oil, and
covertly destabilized the legislature and helped return control to their ally,
Pahlavi.
The American "Operation Ajax", orchestrated by the CIA, was aided by the
British MI6 in organizing a military coup d'état to oust Mossadegh. The Shah fled
to Italy when the initial coup attempt on August 15 failed, but returned after a
successful second attempt on August 19.
Pahlavi maintained a close relationship with the U.S. government, as both
regimes shared opposition to the expansion of the Soviet Union, Iran's powerful
northern neighbor. Like his father, the Shah's government was known for its
autocracy, its focus on modernization and Westernization, and for its disregard
for religious and democratic measures in Iran's constitution. Leftist and Islamist
groups attacked his government (often from outside Iran as they were suppressed
within) for violating the Iranian constitution, political corruption, and the political
oppression, torture, and killings, by the SAVAK secret police.
White Revolution (1963–1978)
4
Iranian Revolution
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
7
Iranian Revolution
The developments initiated by seminaries closing on 7 January 1978 were
followed by the bazaar and seminary closing, and students rallied towards the
homes of the religious leaders on the next day. On 9 January 1978, seminary
students and other people demonstrated in the city, which was cracked down by
the Shah's security forces who shot live ammunition to disperse the crowd when
the peaceful demonstration turned violent. Between 5–300 of the demonstrators
were reportedly killed in the protest. 9 January 1978 (19 Dey) is regarded as a
bloody day in Qom.
Consolidation of the opposition (February–March)
According to Shia customs, memorial services (chehelom) are held 40 days after
a person's death. Encouraged by Khomeini (who declared that the blood of
martyrs must water the "tree of Islam"), radicals pressured the mosques and
Moderate clergy to commemorate the deaths of the students, and used the
occasion to generate protests. The informal network of mosques and bazaars,
which for years had been used to carry out religious events, increasingly became
where protests were larger, and Tehran, where they were smaller protesting every
40 days. This amounted to a small minority of the more than 15 million adults in
Iran.
Against the wishes of Khomeini, Shariatmadari called for 17 June mourning
protests to be carried out as a one-day stay. Although tensions remained in the
milieu, the Shah's policy appeared to have worked, leading Amuzegar to declare
that "the crisis is over." A CIA analysis in August concluded that Iran "is not in a
revolutionary or even a pre-revolutionary situation."
Renewed protests (August–September)
Appointment of Jafar Sharif-Emami as prime minister (11 August)
By August, the protests had "kick[ed]…into high gear," and the number of
demonstrators mushroomed to hundreds of thousands. In an attempt to dampen
inflation, the Amuzegar administration cut spending and reduced business.
However, the cutbacks led to a sharp rise in layoffs—particularly among young,
unskilled, male workers living in the working-class districts.
The protesters demanded that Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi step down from
power and that Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini be returned from exile. The
protests grew incredibly fast, reaching between six million and nine million in
strength in the first week. About 5% of the population had taken to the streets in
the Muharram protests. Both beginning and ending in the month of Muharram,
the protests succeeded, and the Shah stepped down from power later that month.
After the success of what would become known as a revolution, Ayatollah
Khomeini returned to Iran as its religious and political leader for life. Khomeini
had been an opposition leader to Shah for many years, rising to prominence after
the death of his mentor, renowned scholar Yazdi Ha'iri, in the 1930s. Even in his
years in exile, Khomeini remained relevant in Iran. Supporting the protests from
beyond Iran's borders, he proclaimed that "freedom and liberation from the bonds
of imperialism" was imminent.
Tasu'a and Ashura marches (10–11 December)
8
Iranian Revolution
As the days of Tasu'a and Ashura (10 and 11 December) approached, in order to
prevent a deadly showdown the Shah began to draw back. In negotiations with
Ayatollah Shariatmadari, the Shah ordered the release of 120 political prisoners
and Karim Sanjabi, and on 8 December revoked the ban on street demonstrations.
Permits were issued for the marchers, and troops were removed from the
procession's path. In turn, Shariatmadari pledged that to make sure that there
would be no violence during the demonstrations.
On 10 and 11 December 1978, the days of Tasu'a and Ashura, between 6 and 9
million anti-Shah demonstrators marched throughout Iran. According to one
historian, "even discounting for exaggeration, these figures may represent the
largest protest event in history."The marches were led by Ayatollah Taleghani
and National Front leader Karim Sanjabi, thus symbolizing the "unity" of the
secular and religious opposition. The mullahs and bazaaris effectively policed the
gathering, and protesters who attempted to initiate violence were restrained.
More than 10% of the country marched in anti-Shah demonstrations on the two
days, possibly a higher percentage than any previous revolution. It is rare for a
revolution to involve as much as 1 percent of a country's population; the French,
Russian, and Romanian revolutions may have passed the 1 percent mark.
Much of Iranian society was in euphoria about the coming revolution. Secular
and leftist politicians piled onto the movement hoping to gain power in the
aftermath, ignoring the fact that Khomeini was the very antithesis to all of the
positions they supported. While it was increasingly Revolution (late 1978–1979)
clear to more secular Iranians that Khomeini was not a liberal, he was widely
perceived as a figurehead, and that power would eventually be handed to the
secular groups.
Demoralization of the army (December, 1978)
9
Iranian Revolution
A protester giving flowers to an army
officer
The military leadership was increasingly paralyzed by indecision, and rank-and-
file soldiers were demoralized, having been forced to confront demonstrators
while prohibited from using their own weapons (and being condemned by the
Shah if they did). Increasingly, Khomeini called on the soldiers of the armed
forces to defect to the opposition. Revolutionaries gave flowers and civilian
clothes to deserters, while threatening retribution to those who stayed.
On 11 December, a dozen officers were shot dead by their own troops at Tehran's
Lavizan barracks. Fearing further mutinies, many soldiers were returned to their
barracks. Mashhad (the second largest city in Iran) was abandoned to
the protesters, and in many provincial towns demonstrators were effectively in
control.
10
Iranian Revolution