Everything about Fazlollah Zahedi totally explained
Mohammad Fazlollah Zahedi (1897-1963) was an Iranian
general,
Prime Minister, and
politician.
Biography
Early Years
Born in
Hamedan in 1896, Fazlollah
Zahedi was the son of Abol Hassan "Bassir Diwan"
Zahedi, a wealthy land owner at the city of
Hamedan. During his service at the
Imperial Russian-trained Iranian
Cossack Brigade, one of his comrades in arms (his superior in fact) was
Reza Khan, the later
Reza Shah Pahlavi. He was among the officers dispatched to
Gilan who put an end to the
Jangal movement of Gilan of
Mirza Kuchak Khan. At the age of 23, as a company commander, Zahedi had led troops into battle against rebel tribesmen in the northern provinces. Two year later Reza Shah promoted him to the rank of brigadier general. The alliance, forged between the two men, was to endure a lifetime and continued to bind their sons, personally as well as politically.
He was also involved in the overthrow of
Seyyed Zia'eddin Tabatabaee's government in 1920. It was Colonel Zahedi who arrested Sheikh
Khaz'al Khan and brought him to
Tehran.
During
Reza Shah's reign, General Zahedi was named (1926) military governor of
Khuzestan province, holding the hub of Iran's oil industry, and in 1932 chief of national police, one of the nation's top internal posts. During
World War II he was appointed (1941) commanding general of the
Isfahan Division. Following the forced abdication of Reza Shah (1941), Zahedi was arrested by British forces in 1942 allegedly for his sympathy for
Nazi Germany, and hoarding of grain with which he was "making huge sums" on the black market. He was flown out of the country and interned in
Palestine until the end of the war.
Return from Internment
Returned from internment in Palestine in 1945, during the reign of
Mohammad Reza Shah (Reza Shah's son and successor), General Zahedi became Inspector of military forces in southern Iran. He became once more chief of national police (
Shahrbani) in 1949, when
Mohammad Reza Shah appointed him as chief of the
Shahrbani Police Forces, in order to counter the growing threat of Sepahbod
Haj Ali Razmara.
1950s
After retiring from the army, he was named Senator in 1950. Zahedi was appointed Minister of the Interior (1951) in
Hossein Ala''s administration, a post he'd retain when Dr. Mohammad
Mossadegh became
Prime Minister. Zahedi actively supported the new government's nationalisation of the oil industry, which had previously been owned by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, now BP. However, he was at odds with Mossadegh over his increasing tolerance for the outlawed communist party
Tudeh, which had boldly demonstrated in favour of nationalisation. Both of these moves naturally antagonised the Western Powers, especially the
United Kingdom and the United States. Zahedi was dismissed by Prime Minister Mossadegh after a bloody crackdown on anti-American protesters in mid 1951 in which 20 people killed and 2000 wounded.
Zahedi finally broke with Mossadegh, with the latter accusing him of fostering plans for a coup. Meanwhile,
sanctions levied by the Western Powers significantly curtailed Iranian oil exports, leading to an economic crisis.
Disorder among several
ethnic groups in southern Iran and labour unrest among oil-field workers put further pressures on the government. The
United States under President Eisenhower, citing Mossadegh's allegedly
pro-Moscow inclination, came to view constitutional government as a strategic threat.
1953 Coup
At the behest of the British and American government, and assured of their support, the Shah demanded Mossadegh's resignation in February of 1953. Mossadegh refused, bringing to head a crisis that would end the era of constitutional monarchy and would replace it by direct rule of the Shah. The newly-formed
CIA, along with the British spy agency
MI6, took an active role in the developments, terming their involvement
Operation Ajax. Fazlollah himself is reported to have "received more than $100,000 from the CIA," to be "Iran's new prime minister." Zahedi and his followers, financed and armed by the foreign intelligence services, organised supporters of the Shah onto the streets, calling for the Prime Minister's ousting. There were such riots in Tehran and other cities. Fearing his arrest, Zahedi went into hiding.
In August of 1953, Mossadegh attempted to convince the Shah to leave the country. The Shah refused, and formally dismissed the Prime Minister, in accordance with the foreign intelligence plan. Mossadegh refused to resign, however, and when it became apparent that he was going to fight, the Shah, as a precautionary measure foreseen by the British/American plan, on 15th August fled first to
Baghdad and then to
Rome,
Italy, after signing two decrees, one dismissing Mossadegh and the other naming Zahedi to replace him as Prime Minister. Mossadegh again refused to step down.
Supported by the United Kingdom and the
United States, and encouraged by the intelligence agents Kermit Roosevelt and Donald N. Wilber, Zahedi staged a counter
coup on the
19 August 1953, drawing supporters from the
military as well as the public. Relying for his legitimacy on the Shah's decrees, Zahedi sent out thousands of copies, along with the proclamation of himself as
Prime Minister. The Shah returned triumphantly from
exile on 22 August 1953.
Many contemporary sources attribute the coup, or counter
coup, entirely to the
U.S. American
CIA (
CIA Coup) and agents of the British
MI6 who are reported to have organized and paid for it. These sources point to many other coups in which the CIA was instrumental, such as those in Congo (1964), Chile (1973), and Algeria (1991). Supporters of the Shah, however, argue that the counter-coup was in fact a popular uprising, and that the foreign intelligence agencies' undeniable involvement was peripheral. At least some historians argue the coup couldn't have taken place without both CIA organizing and Iranian support.
Final Exile
Having acquired an unprecedented power-base and, as a consequence, evoking increasing unease at home, the Premiership of General Zahedi ended in 1955. His final exile was sweetened by his last post, as
Ambassador to the
United Nations, in
Geneva.
Ancestry
Zahedi's family descends from the
Sufi mystics
Sheikh Zahed Gilani (1216 - 1301) and
Sheikh Safi Al-Din Ardebili, the
eponym of the
Safavid Dynasty. Through his mother, Djavaher Khanom, he traced his descent to the dynastic ruler
Karim Khan Zand. Married to Khadijeh
Pirnia, daughter of Mirza Hussein Khan Pirnia (titled
Motamen-ol-Molk), and granddaughter to
Mozzafar-al-Din Shah Qajar (1853 - 1907), Fazlollah Zahedi had a son,
Ardeshir, and a daughter,
Homa.
Children
His son
Ardeshir Zahedi, a later politician and
diplomat, was to marry
Princess Shahnaz Pahlavi, daughter of
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi from his first marriage to Princess
Fawzia of Egypt, daughter to King
Fuad I. His daughter Homa Zahedi was a member of the Parliament.
Further Information
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