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Muhammad Reza Pahlavi
(1919- 80) Shah-en-shah (emperor) of Iran (1941- 79).
Mohammad Reza Shah was a much weaker ruler than his father, Reza
Shah Pahlavi, and where Reza Shah worked effectively towards
independence from foreign powers, Muhammad Reza Shah used
foreign aid to stay in power. In 1953 he got assistance from the
USA to return from a 3-day exile.
In the 1960's and 1970's Muhammad Reza tried to tie closer
relations with the Soviet Union and the communist states in
eastern Europe. But this never replaced the close connections
with the USA.
Mohammad Reza Shah was removed by the Islamic revolution of
1979, and was to a large degree responsible for it coming. His
5-year plans of the mid-1970's had failed.
At the same time his autocratic rule and secret police, Savak,
was both deeply unpopular, yet not proficient enough to control
the country. An apparently effective political alternative came
to be defined by Muslim leaders, who had lived in the shadow of
the secular society since the effective actions of his father in
the 1930's.
BIOGRAPHY
1919 October 26: Born in Teheran, Iran as son of the commander
of the Cossack Brigade.
1925: His father becomes shah-en-shah of Iran.
1941 September: Succeeds his father as shah-en-shah, with the
aim of keeping Soviet troops out of the country.
— Pahlavi lets British and American troops use Iran for
transporting supplies to the Soviet Union fighting the German
invasion.
1946: Soviet troops that had been stationed in Iran during World
War 2, withdraws.
1947 February: The Kurdish Republic of Mahabad which had been
established in December 1945, falls. Mohammad Reza is now in
full control over all of Iran.
1949 February: Assassination attempt on Pahlavi. He imposes
martial law, and bans the Tudeh Party.
1951 March: Mohammad Mosaddeq manages to pass a bill in the
Majles (the parliament) to nationalize the British petroleum
interests in Iran.
— April: As Mosaddeq's popularity grows quickly, Mohammad Reza
is forced to appoint him prime minister. 2 years of tension and
conflict follows.
1953 August 16: After Mohammad Reza tries to remove Mosaddeq
from power, he himself is forced to flee the country, following
a power struggle with the prime minister.
— August 19: With the help of US' Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) and royalist military officers, Mohammad Reza can return
to the country. From this time on, USA became the most important
Western ally of his. Mosaddeq is removed from power.
1955: Mohammad Reza takes Iran into the Western alliance Baghdad
Pact.
1957: Mohammad Reza subscribes to the Eisenhower Doctrine, which
aimed at damming up communism in the Middle East.
— Establishes a security police, with the assistance of Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) of the USA and Mossad of Israel.
1960 October: Muhammad Reza becomes a father for the first time,
with his third wife.
1961: A land reform programme is started.
— Dissolves the parliament and rules by decree.
1963: A 5-year plan aims at economic development in agriculture
and the industrial sector.
— January: Launches the White Revolution which involved an
expansion of the road, rail and air network, many new of dams
and irrigation projects, aid to industrial growth and land
reform. There were also educational and health projects.
Campaigns against diseases such as malaria was started, and
literacy corps and a health corps were sent out to the many
remove villages around the country.
— June A conflict with the religious leader Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini reaches a climax, resulting in nationwide protests
against Mohammad Reza. Mohammad Reza crushed this, leaving
thousands of dead. Emam Khomeini is imprisoned.
1964 November:Emam Khomeini is expelled from Iran, as he
resumed opposition after being freed from prison 7 months
earlier.
1971: 2,500 years of unbroken monarchy is celebrated in
Persepolis.
1972: Following the success of the 5-year plan of 1963, a new
5-year plan is defined and put into action — with further
development as the aim. This plan would however overheat the
economy, leading to depopulation of the countryside, heavy
corruption and difficult times for the average Iranian.
Late 1970's: The opposition lead by Emam Khomeini
continues and gains momentum. When the liberal president Jimmy
Carter takes office in USA in 1977, he forces Mohammad Reza to
moderate the control and oppression of the opposition.
1979 January 16: Mohammad Reza leaves officially for holidays in
Aswan, Egypt, but it is clear that he can never return.
Ayatullah Khomeini would return from his exile the following
month, and introduce a strict Islamic regime in Iran.
— November: Iranian militants take 50 US citizens as hostages,
demanding for the extradition of the shah in return for their
release. The USA, which was the host of shah at this point,
refused.
1980 July 27: Dies in Cairo from lymphatic cancer.
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