Iran is one of the world's most mountainous countries. Its mountains have helped to shape both
the political and the economic history of the country for several centuries. The mountains enclose several broad basins, or
plateaus, on which major agricultural and urban settlements are located. Until the twentieth century, when major highways
and railroads were constructed through the mountains to connect the population centers, these basins tended to be relatively
isolated from one another. Typically, one major town dominated each basin, and there were complex economic relationships between
the town and the hundreds of villages that surrounded it. In the higher elevations of the mountains rimming the basins, tribally
organized groups practiced transhumance, moving with their herds of sheep and goats between traditionally established summer
and winter pastures. There are no major river systems in the country, and historically transportation was by means of caravans
that followed routes traversing gaps and passes in the mountains. The mountains also impeded easy access to the Persian Gulf
and the Caspian Sea.
With an area of 1,648,000 square kilometers, Iran ranks sixteenth in size among the countries
of the world. Iran is about one-fifth the size of the continental United States, or slightly larger than the combined area
of the contiguous states of California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.
Located in southwestern Asia, Iran shares its entire northern border with the Soviet Union.
This border extends for more then 2,000 kilometers, including nearly 650 kilometers of water along the southern shore of the
Caspian Sea. Iran's western borders are with Turkey in the north and Iraq in the south, terminating at the Shatt al Arab (which
Iranians call the Arvand Rud). The Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman littorals form the entire 1,770-kilometer southern border.
To the east lie Afghanistan on the north and Pakistan on the south. Iran's diagonal distance from Azarbaijan in the northwest
to Baluchestan va Sistan in the southeast is approximately 2,333 kilometers. From 1949 on, sentiment for nationalization of Iran's oil industry grew. In 1949 the Majlis approved
the First Development Plan (1948-55), which called for comprehensive agricultural and industrial development of the country.
The Plan Organization was established to administer the program, which was to be financed in large part from oil revenues.
Politically conscious Iranians were aware, however, that the British government derived more revenue from taxing the concessionaire,
the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC--formerly the Anglo-Persian Oil Company), than the Iranian government derived from royalties.
The oil issue figured prominently in elections for the Majlis in 1949, and nationalists in the new Majlis were determined
to renegotiate the AIOC agreement. In November 1950, the Majlis committee concerned with oil matters, headed by Mossadeq,
rejected a draft agreement in which the AIOC had offered the government slightly improved terms. These terms did not include
the fifty-fifty profit-sharing provision that was part of other new Persian Gulf oil concessions.
Subsequent negotiations with the AIOC were unsuccessful, partly because General Ali Razmara, who became
prime minister in June 1950, failed to persuade the oil company of the strength of nationalist feeling in the country and
in the Majlis. When the AIOC finally offered fifty-fifty profit-sharing in February 1951, sentiment for nationalization of
the oil industry had become widespread. Razmara advised against nationalization on technical grounds and was assassinated
in March 1951 by Khalil Tahmasebi, a member of the militant Fadayan-e Islam. On March 15, the Majlis voted to nationalize
the oil industry. In April the shah yielded to Majlis pressure and demonstrations in the streets by naming Mossadeq prime
minister.
Oil production came to a virtual standstill as British technicians left the country, and Britain imposed
a worldwide embargo on the purchase of Iranian oil. In September 1951, Britain froze Iran's sterling assets and banned export
of goods to Iran. It challenged the legality of the oil nationalization and took its case against Iran to the International
Court of Justice at The Hague. The court found in Iran's favor, but the dispute between Iran and the AIOC remained unsettled.
Under United States pressure, the AIOC improved its offer to Iran. The excitement generated by the nationalization issue,
anti-British feeling, agitation by radical elements, and the conviction among Mossadeq's advisers that Iran's maximum demands
would, in the end, be met, however, led the government to reject all offers. The economy began to suffer from the loss of
foreign exchange and oil revenues.
Meanwhile, Mossadeq's growing popularity and power led to political chaos and eventual United States
intervention. Mossadeq had come to office on the strength of support from the National Front and other parties in the Majlis
and as a result of his great popularity. His popularity, growing power, and intransigence on the oil issue were creating friction
between the prime minister and the shah. In the summer of 1952, the shah refused the prime minister's demand for the power
to appoint the minister of war (and, by implication, to control the armed forces). Mossadeq resigned, three days of pro-Mossadeq
rioting followed, and the shah was forced to reappoint Mossadeq to head the government.
As domestic conditions deteriorated, however, Mossadeq's populist style grew more autocratic. In August
1952, the Majlis acceded to his demand for full powers in all affairs of government for a six-month period. These special
powers were subsequently extended for a further six-month term. He also obtained approval for a law to reduce, from six years
to two years, the term of the Senate (established in 1950 as the upper house of the Majlis), and thus brought about the dissolution
of that body. Mossadeq's support in the lower house of the Majlis (also called the Majlis) was dwindling, however, so on August
3, 1953, the prime minister organized a plebiscite for the dissolution of the Majlis, claimed a massive vote in favor of the
proposal, and dissolved the legislative body.
The administration of President Harry S Truman initially had been sympathetic to Iran's nationalist
aspirations. Under the administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, however, the United States came to accept the view
of the British government that no reasonable compromise with Mossadeq was possible and that, by working with the Tudeh, Mossadeq
was making probable a communist-inspired takeover. Mossadeq's intransigence and inclination to accept Tudeh support, the Cold
War atmosphere, and the fear of Soviet influence in Iran also shaped United States thinking. In June 1953, the Eisenhower
administration approved a British proposal for a joint Anglo-American operation, code-named Operation Ajax, to overthrow Mossadeq.
Kermit Roosevelt of the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) traveled secretly to Iran to coordinate plans with
the shah and the Iranian military, which was led by General Fazlollah Zahedi.
In accord with the plan, on August 13 the shah appointed Zahedi prime minister to replace Mossadeq.
Mossadeq refused to step down and arrested the shah's emissary. This triggered the second stage of Operation Ajax, which called
for a military coup. The plan initially seemed to have failed, the shah fled the country, and Zahedi went into hiding. After
four days of rioting, however, the tide turned. On August 19, pro-shah army units and street crowds defeated Mossadeq's forces.
The shah returned to the country. Mossadeq was sentenced to three years' imprisonment for trying to overthrow the monarchy,
but he was subsequently allowed to remain under house arrest in his village outside Tehran until his death in 1967. His minister
of foreign affairs, Hosain Fatemi, was sentenced to death and executed. Hundreds of National Front leaders, Tudeh Party officers,
and political activists were arrested; several Tudeh army officers were also sentenced to death. By 546 B.C., Cyrus had defeated Croesus, the Lydian king of fabled wealth, and had secured control
of the Aegean coast of Asia Minor, Armenia, and the Greek colonies along the Levant (see fig. 2). Moving east, he took Parthia (land of the Arsacids, not to be confused with Parsa, which was to the
southwest), Chorasmis, and Bactria. He besieged and captured Babylon in 539 and released the Jews who had been held captive
there, thus earning his immortalization in the Book of Isaiah. When he died in 529, Cyrus's kingdom extended as far east as
the Hindu Kush in present-day Afghanistan.
His successors were less successful. Cyrus's unstable son, Cambyses II, conquered Egypt but later committed
suicide during a revolt led by a priest, Gaumata, who usurped the throne until overthrown in 522 by a member of a lateral
branch of the Achaemenid family, Darius I (also known as Darayarahush or Darius the Great). Darius attacked the Greek mainland,
which had supported rebellious Greek colonies under his aegis, but as a result of his defeat at the Battle of Marathon in
490 was forced to retract the limits of the empire to Asia Minor.
The Achaemenids thereafter consolidated areas firmly under their control. It was Cyrus and Darius who,
by sound and farsighted administrative planning, brilliant military maneuvering, and a humanistic worldview, established the
greatness of the Achaemenids and in less than thirty years raised them from an obscure tribe to a world power.
The quality of the Achaemenids as rulers began to disintegrate, however, after the death of Darius
in 486. His son and successor, Xerxes, was chiefly occupied with suppressing revolts in Egypt and Babylonia. He also attempted
to conquer the Greek Peloponnesus, but encouraged by a victory at Thermopylae, he overextended his forces and suffered overwhelming
defeats at Salamis and Plataea. By the time his successor, Artaxerxes I, died in 424, the imperial court was beset by factionalism
among the lateral family branches, a condition that persisted until the death in 330 of the last of the Achaemenids, Darius
III, at the hands of his own subjects.
The Achaemenids were enlightened despots who allowed a certain amount of regional autonomy in the form
of the satrapy system. A satrapy was an administrative unit, usually organized on a geographical basis. A satrap (governor)
administered the region, a general supervised military recruitment and ensured order, and a state secretary kept official
records. The general and the state secretary reported directly to the central government. The twenty satrapies were linked
by a 2,500-kilometer highway, the most impressive stretch being the royal road from Susa to Sardis, built by command of Darius.
Relays of mounted couriers could reach the most remote areas in fifteen days. Despite the relative local independence afforded
by the satrapy system however, royal inspectors, the "eyes and ears of the king," toured the empire and reported on local
conditions, and the king maintained a personal bodyguard of 10,000 men, called the Immortals.
The language in greatest use in the empire was Aramaic. Old Persian was the "official language" of
the empire but was used only for inscriptions and royal proclamations.
Darius revolutionized the economy by placing it on a silver and gold coinage system. Trade was extensive,
and under the Achaemenids there was an efficient infrastructure that facilitated the exchange of commodities among the far
reaches of the empire. As a result of this commercial activity, Persian words for typical items of trade became prevalent
throughout the Middle East and eventually entered the English language; examples are, bazaar, shawl, sash, turquoise,
tiara, orange, lemon, melon, peach, spinach, and asparagus. Trade was one of the empire's main sources of revenue,
along with agriculture and tribute. Other accomplishments of Darius's reign included codification of the data, a
universal legal system upon which much of later Iranian law would be based, and construction of a new capital at Persepolis,
where vassal states would offer their yearly tribute at the festival celebrating the spring equinox. In its art and architecture,
Persepolis reflected Darius's perception of himself as the leader of conglomerates of people to whom he had given a new and
single identity. The Achaemenid art and architecture found there is at once distinctive and also highly eclectic. The Achaemenids
took the art forms and the cultural and religious traditions of many of the ancient Middle Eastern peoples and combined them
into a single form. This Achaemenid artistic style is evident in the iconography of Persepolis, which celebrates the king
and the office of the monarch. Envisioning a new world empire based on a fusion of Greek and Iranian culture and ideals, Alexander
the Great of Macedon accelerated the disintegration of the Achaemenid Empire. He was first accepted as leader by the fractious
Greeks in 336 B.C. and by 334 had advanced to Asia Minor, an Iranian satrapy. In quick succession he took Egypt, Babylonia,
and then, over the course of two years, the heart of the Achaemenid Empire--Susa, Ecbatana, and Persepolis--the last of which
he burned. Alexander married Roxana (Roshanak), the daughter of the most powerful of the Bactrian chiefs (Oxyartes, who revolted
in present-day Tadzhikistan), and in 324 commanded his officers and 10,000 of his soldiers to marry Iranian women. The mass
wedding, held at Susa, was a model of Alexander's desire to consummate the union of the Greek and Iranian peoples. These plans
ended in 323 B.C., however, when Alexander was struck with fever and died in Babylon, leaving no heir. His empire was divided
among four of his generals. Seleucus, one of these generals, who became ruler of Babylon in 312, gradually reconquered most
of Iran. Under Seleucus's son, Antiochus I, many Greeks entered Iran, and Hellenistic motifs in art, architecture, and urban
planning became prevalent.
Although the Seleucids faced challenges from the Ptolemies of Egypt and from the growing power of Rome,
the main threat came from the province of Fars (Partha to the Greeks). Arsaces (of the seminomadic Parni tribe), whose name
was used by all subsequent Parthian kings, revolted against the Seleucid governor in 247 B.C. and established a dynasty, the
Arsacids, or Parthians. During the second century, the Parthians were able to extend their rule to Bactria, Babylonia, Susiana,
and Media, and, under Mithradates II (123-87 B.C.), Parthian conquests stretched from India to Armenia. After the victories
of Mithradates II, the Parthians began to claim descent from both the Greeks and the Achaemenids. They spoke a language similar
to that of the Achaemenids, used the Pahlavi script, and established an administrative system based on Achaemenid precedents.
Meanwhile, Ardeshir, son of the priest Papak, who claimed descent from the legendary hero Sasan, had
become the Parthian governor in the Achaemenid home province of Persis (Fars). In A.D. 224 he overthrew the last Parthian
king and established the Sassanid dynasty, which was to last 400 years. The Sassanids established an empire roughly within the frontiers achieved by the Achaemenids, with
the capital at Ctesiphon.The Sassanids consciously sought to resuscitate Iranian traditions and to obliterate Greek cultural
influence. Their rule was characterized by considerable centralization, ambitious urban planning, agricultural development,
and technological improvements. Sassanid rulers adopted the title of shahanshah (king of kings), as sovereigns over
numerous petty rulers, known as shahrdars. Historians believe that society was divided into four classes: the priests,
warriors, secretaries, and commoners. The royal princes, petty rulers, great landlords, and priests together constituted a
privileged stratum, and the social system appears to have been fairly rigid. Sassanid rule and the system of social stratification
were reinforced by Zoroastrianism, which became the state religion. The Zoroastrian priesthood became immensely powerful.
The head of the priestly class, the mobadan mobad, along with the military commander, the eran spahbod,
and the head of the bureaucracy, were among the great men of the state. Rome, with its capital at Constantinople, had replaced
Greece as Iran's principal Western enemy, and hostilities between the two empires were frequent. Shahpur I (241-72), son and
successor of Ardeshir, waged successful campaigns against the Romans and in 260 even took the emperor Valerian prisoner.
Chosroes I (531-79), also known as Anushirvan the Just, is the most celebrated of the Sassanid rulers.
He reformed the tax system and reorganized the army and the bureaucracy, tying the army more closely to the central government
than to local lords. His reign witnessed the rise of the dihqans (literally, village lords), the petty landholding
nobility who were the backbone of later Sassanid provincial administration and the tax collection system. Chosroes was a great
builder, embellishing his capital, founding new towns, and constructing new buildings. Under his auspices, too, many books
were brought from India and translated into Pahlavi. Some of these later found their way into the literature of the Islamic
world. The reign of Chosroes II (591-628) was characterized by the wasteful splendor and lavishness of the court.
Toward the end of his reign Chosroes II's power declined. In renewed fighting with the Byzantines,
he enjoyed initial successes, captured Damascus, and seized the Holy Cross in Jerusalem. But counterattacks by the Byzantine
emperor Heraclius brought enemy forces deep into Sassanid territory.
Years of warfare exhausted both the Byzantines and the Iranians. The later Sassanids were further weakened
by economic decline, heavy taxation, religious unrest, rigid social stratification, the increasing power of the provincial
landholders, and a rapid turnover of rulers. These factors facilitated the Arab invasion in the seventh century. The beduin Arabs who toppled the Sassanid Empire were propelled not only by a desire for conquest but
also by a new religion, Islam. The Prophet Muhammad, a member of the Hashimite clan of the powerful tribe of Quraysh, proclaimed
his prophetic mission in Arabia in 612 and eventually won over the city of his birth, Mecca, to the new faith.Within one year
of Muhammad's death in 632, Arabia itself was secure enough to allow his secular successor, Abu Bakr, the first caliph, to
begin the campaign against the Byzantine and Sassanid empires.
Abu Bakr defeated the Byzantine army at Damascus in 635 and then began his conquest of Iran. In 637
the Arab forces occupied the Sassanid capital of Ctesiphon (which they renamed Madain), and in 641-42 they defeated the Sassanid
army at Nahavand. After that, Iran lay open to the invaders. The Islamic conquest was aided by the material and social bankruptcy
of the Sassanids; the native populations had little to lose by cooperating with the conquering power. Moreover, the Muslims
offered relative religious tolerance and fair treatment to populations that accepted Islamic rule without resistance. It was
not until around 650, however, that resistance in Iran was quelled. Conversion to Islam, which offered certain advantages,
was fairly rapid among the urban population but slower among the peasantry and the dihqans. The majority of Iranians
did not become Muslim until the ninth century.
Although the conquerors, especially the Umayyads (the Muslim rulers who succeeded Muhammad from 661-750),
tended to stress the primacy of Arabs among Muslims, the Iranians were gradually integrated into the new community. The Muslim
conquerors adopted the Sassanid coinage system and many Sassanid administrative practices, including the office of vizier,
or minister, and the divan, a bureau or register for controlling state revenue and expenditure that became a characteristic
of administration throughout Muslim lands. Later caliphs adopted Iranian court ceremonial practices and the trappings of Sassanid
monarchy. Men of Iranian origin served as administrators after the conquest, and Iranians contributed significantly to all
branches of Islamic learning, including philology, literature, history, geography, jurisprudence, philosophy, medicine, and
the sciences.
The Arabs were in control, however. The new state religion, Islam, imposed its own system of beliefs,
laws, and social mores. In regions that submitted peacefully to Muslim rule, landowners kept their land. But crown land, land
abandoned by fleeing owners, and land taken by conquest passed into the hands of the new state. This included the rich lands
of the Sawad, a rich, alluvial plain in central and southern Iraq. Arabic became the official language of the court in 696,
although Persian continued to be widely used as the spoken language. The shuubiyya literary controversy of the ninth
through the eleventh centuries, in which Arabs and Iranians each lauded their own and denigrated the other's cultural traits,
suggests the survival of a certain sense of distinct Iranian identity. In the ninth century, the emergence of more purely
Iranian ruling dynasties witnessed the revival of the Persian language, enriched by Arabic loanwords and using the Arabic
script, and of Persian literature.
Another legacy of the Arab conquest was Shia Islam, which, although it has come to be identified closely
with Iran, was not initially an Iranian religious movement. It originated with the Arab Muslims. In the great schism of Islam,
one group among the community of believers maintained that leadership of the community following the death of Muhammad rightfully
belonged to Muhammad's son-in-law, Ali, and to his descendants. This group came to be known as the Shiat Ali, the partisans
of Ali, or the Shias. Another group, supporters of Muawiya (a rival contender for the caliphate following the murder of Uthman),
challenged Ali's election to the caliphate in 656. After Ali was assassinated while praying in a mosque at Kufa in 661, Muawiya
was declared caliph by the majority of the Islamic community. He became the first caliph of the Umayyad dynasty, which had
its capital at Damascus.
Ali's youngest son, Husayn, refused to pay the homage commanded by Muawiya's son and successor Yazid
I and fled to Mecca, where he was asked to lead the Shias--mostly those living in present-day Iraq--in a revolt. At Karbala,
in Iraq, Husayn's band of 200 men and women followers, unwilling to surrender, were finally cut down by about 4,000 Umayyad
troops. The Umayyad leader received Husayn's head, and Husayn's death in 680 on the tenth of Moharram continues to be observed
as a day of mourning for all Shias.
The largest concentration of Shias in the first century of Islam was in southern Iraq. It was not until
the sixteenth century, under the Safavids, that a majority of Iranians became Shias. Shia Islam became then, as it is now,
the state religion.
The Abbasids, who overthrew the Umayyads in 750, while sympathetic to the Iranian Shias, were clearly
an Arab dynasty. They revolted in the name of descendants of Muhammad's uncle, Abbas, and the House of Hashim. Hashim was
an ancestor of both the Shia and the Abbas, or Sunni line, and the Abbasid movement enjoyed the support of both Sunni
and Shia Muslims. The Abbasid army consisted primarily of Khorasanians and was led by an Iranian general, Abu Muslim. It contained
both Iranian and Arab elements, and the Abbasids enjoyed both Iranian and Arab support.
Nevertheless, the Abbasids, although sympathetic to the Shias, whose support they wished to retain,
did not encourage the more extremist Shia aspirations. The Abbasids established their capital at Baghdad. Al Mamun, who seized
power from his brother, Amin, and proclaimed himself caliph in 811, had an Iranian mother and thus had a base of support in
Khorasan. The Abbasids continued the centralizing policies of their predecessors. Under their rule, the Islamic world experienced
a cultural efflorescence and the expansion of trade and economic prosperity. These were developments in which Iran shared.
Iran's next ruling dynasties descended from nomadic, Turkic-speaking warriors who had been moving out
of Central Asia into Transoxiana for more than a millennium. The Abbasid caliphs began enlisting these people as slave warriors
as early as the ninth century. Shortly thereafter the real power of the Abbasid caliphs began to wane; eventually they became
religious figureheads while the warrior slaves ruled. As the power of the Abbasid caliphs diminished, a series of independent
and indigenous dynasties rose in various parts of Iran, some with considerable influence and power. Among the most important
of these overlapping dynasties were the Tahirids in Khorasan (820-72); the Saffarids in Sistan (867-903); and the Samanids
(875-1005), originally at Bukhara (also cited as Bokhara). The Samanids eventually ruled an area from central Iran to India.
In 962 a Turkish slave governor of the Samanids, Alptigin, conquered Ghazna (in present-day Afghanistan) and established a
dynasty, the Ghaznavids, that lasted to 1186.
Several Samanid cities had been lost to another Turkish group, the Seljuks, a clan of the Oghuz (or
Ghuzz) Turks, who lived north of the Oxus River (present-day Amu Darya). Their leader, Tughril Beg, turned his warriors against
the Ghaznavids in Khorasan. He moved south and then west, conquering but not wasting the cities in his path. In 1055 the caliph
in Baghdad gave Tughril Beg robes, gifts, and the title King of the East. Under Tughril Beg's successor, Malik Shah (1072-92),
Iran enjoyed a cultural and scientific renaissance, largely attributed to his brilliant Iranian vizier, Nizam al Mulk. These
leaders established the observatory where Umar (Omar) Khayyam did much of his experimentation for a new calendar, and they
built religious schools in all the major towns. They brought Abu Hamid Ghazali, one of the greatest Islamic theologians, and
other eminent scholars to the Seljuk capital at Baghdad and encouraged and supported their work.
A serious internal threat to the Seljuks, however, came from the Ismailis, a secret sect with headquarters
at Alumut between Rasht and Tehran. They controlled the immediate area for more than 150 years and sporadically sent out adherents
to strengthen their rule by murdering important officials. The word assassins, which was applied to these murderers,
developed from a European corruption of the name applied to them in Syria, hashishiyya, because folklore had it that
they smoked hashish before their missions. After the death of Malik Shah in 1092, Iran once again reverted to petty dynasties. During this time,
Genghis (Chinggis) Khan brought together a number of Mongol tribes and led them on a devastating sweep through China. Then,
in 1219, he turned his 700,000 forces west and quickly devastated Bukhara, Samarkand, Balkh, Merv, and Neyshabur. Before his
death in 1227, he had reached western Azarbaijan, pillaging and burning cities along the way.
The Mongol invasion was disastrous to the Iranians. Destruction of qanat irrigation systems
destroyed the pattern of relatively continuous settlement, producing numerous isolated oasis cities in a land where they had
previously been rare. A large number of people, particularly males, were killed; between 1220 and 1258, the population of
Iran dropped drastically.
Mongol rulers who followed Genghis Khan did little to improve Iran's situation. Genghis's grandson,
Hulagu Khan, turned to foreign conquest, seizing Baghdad in 1258 and killing the last Abbasid caliph. He was stopped by the
Mamluk forces of Egypt at Ain Jalut in Palestine. Afterward he returned to Iran and spent the rest of his life in Azarbaijan.
A later Mongol ruler, Ghazan Khan (1295-1304), and his famous Iranian vizier, Rashid ad Din, brought
Iran a partial and brief economic revival. The Mongols lowered taxes for artisans, encouraged agriculture, rebuilt and extended
irrigation works, and improved the safety of the trade routes. As a result, commerce increased dramatically. Items from India,
China, and Iran passed easily across the Asian steppes, and these contacts culturally enriched Iran. For example, Iranians
developed a new style of painting based on a unique fusion of solid, two-dimensional Mesopotamian painting with the feathery,
light brush strokes and other motifs characteristic of China. After Ghazan's nephew, Abu Said, died in 1335, however, Iran
again lapsed into petty dynasties--the Salghurid, Muzaffarid, Inju, and Jalayirid--under Mongol commanders, old Seljuk retainers,
and regional chiefs.
Tamerlane, variously described as of Mongol or Turkic origin, was the next ruler to achieve emperor
status. He conquered Transoxiana proper and by 1381 established himself as sovereign. He did not have the huge forces of earlier
Mongol leaders, so his conquests were slower and less savage than those of Genghis Khan or Hulagu Khan. Nevertheless, Shiraz
and Esfahan were virtually leveled. Tamerlane's regime was characterized by its inclusion of Iranians in administrative roles
and its promotion of architecture and poetry. His empire disintegrated rapidly after his death in 1405, however, and Mongol
tribes, Uzbeks, and Bayundur Turkomans ruled roughly the area of present-day Iran until the rise of the Safavid dynasty, the
first native Iranian dynasty in almost 1,000 years.
One of the earliest focuses of Iran's interest in exporting revolution was the Persian Gulf area. The
revolutionary leaders viewed the Arab countries of the Gulf, along with Iraq, as having tyrannical regimes subservient to
one or the other of the superpowers. Throughout the first half of 1980, Radio Iran's increasingly strident verbal attacks
on the ruling Baath (Arab Socialist Resurrection) Party of Iraq irritated that government, which feared the impact of Iranian
rhetoric upon its own Shias, who constituted a majority of the population. Thus, one of the reasons that prompted Iraqi President
Saddam Husayn to launch the invasion of Iran in the early autumn of 1980 was to silence propaganda about Islamic revolution.
Baghdad believed that the postrevolutionary turmoil in Iran would permit a relatively quick victory and lead to a new regime
in Tehran more willing to accommodate the interests of Iran's Arab neighbors. This hope proved to be a false one for Iraq.
From the point of view of foreign relations, Iran's war with Iraq had evolved through four phases by
1987. During the first phase, from the fall of 1980 until the summer of 1982, Iran was on the defensive, both on the battlefield
and internationally. The country was preoccupied with the hostage crisis at the outbreak of the war, and most diplomats perceived
its new government as generally ineffective. During the second phase, from 1982 to the end of 1984, the success of Iran's
offensives alarmed the Arab states, which were concerned about containing the spread of Iran's Revolution. The third phase,
1985 to 1987, was characterized by Iranian efforts to win diplomatic support for its war aims. The fourth phase began in the
spring of 1987 with the involvement of the United States in the Persian Gulf.
The Iraqi invasion and advance into Khuzestan during phase one surprised Iran. The Iraqis captured
several villages and small towns in the provinces of Khuzestan and Ilam and, after brutal hand-to-hand combat, captured the
strategic port city of Khorramshahr. The nearby city of Abadan, with its huge oil-refining complex, was besieged; Iraqi forces
moved their offensive lines close to the large cities of Ahvaz and Dezful. Although the Iranians stemmed the Iraqi advance
by the end of 1980, they failed to launch any successful counteroffensives. Consequently, Iraq occupied approximately one-third
of Khuzestan Province, from which an estimated 1.5 million civilians had fled. Property damage to factories, homes, and infrastructure
in the war zone was estimated in the billions of dollars.
Although the war had settled into a stalemate by the end of 1980, during the following eighteen months
Iranian forces made gradual advances and eventually forced most of the Iraqi army to withdraw across the border. During this
period, Iran's objectives were to end the war by having both sides withdraw to the common border as it had existed prior to
the invasion. Baghdad wanted Tehran's consent to the revision of a 1975 treaty that had defined their common riparian border
as the middle channel of the Shatt al Arab (which Iranians call the Arvand Rud). Baghdad's proclaimed reason for invading
Iran, in fact, had been to rectify the border; Iraq claimed that the international border should be along the low water of
the Iranian shore, as it had been prior to 1975. In international forums, Iran generally failed to win many supporters to
its position.
The second phase of the war began in July 1982, when Iran made the fateful decision, following two
months of military victories, to invade Iraqi territory. The change in Iran's strategic position also brought about a modification
in stated war aims. Khomeini and other leaders began to say that a simple withdrawal of all forces to the pre-September 1980
borders was no longer sufficient. They now demanded, as a precondition for negotiations, that the aggressor be punished. Iran's
leaders defined the new terms explicitly: the removal from office of Iraqi president Saddam Husayn and the payment of reparations
to Iran for war damages in Khuzestan. The Iranian victories and intransigence on terms for peace coincided with the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon; consequently, Iran decided to dispatch a contingent of its own Pasdaran to Lebanon to aid the Shia community
there. These developments revived fears of Iranian-induced political instability, especially among the Arab rulers in the
Persian Gulf. In 1984 Iraq acquired French-made Exocet missiles, which were used to launch attacks on Iranian oil facilities
in the Persian Gulf. Iran retaliated by attacking tankers loaded with Arab oil, claiming that the profits of such oil helped
to finance loans and grants to Iraq. Iraq responded by attacking ships loaded with Iranian oil, thus launching what became
known as the tanker war.
By the beginning of 1985, the third phase of the war had begun. During this phase, Iran consciously
sought to break out of its diplomatic isolation by making overtures to various countries in an effort to win international
support for its war objectives. The dramatic decline of international oil prices, beginning in the autumn of 1985, spurred
the Iranian initiatives and led to significantly improved relations with such countries as Oman and Saudi Arabia.
Iraq responded to Iran's diplomatic initiatives by intensifying its attacks on Iran-related shipping
in the Persian Gulf. Iranian retaliation increasingly focused on Kuwaiti shipping by early 1987. Iran's actions prompted Kuwait
to request protection for its shipping from both the Soviet Union and the United States. By the summer of 1987, most European
and Arab governments were blaming Iran for the tensions in the Gulf, and Iran again found itself diplomatically isolated.
In March 1982, Tehran launched its Operation Undeniable Victory, which marked a major turning
point, as Iran penetrated Iraq's "impenetrable" lines, split Iraq's forces, and forced the Iraqis to retreat. In late June
1982, Baghdad stated its willingness to negotiate a settlement of the war and to withdraw its forces from Iran. Iran refused,
and in July 1982 Iran launched Operation Ramadan on Iraqi territory, near Basra. Tehran used Pasdaran forces and Basij volunteers
in one of the biggest land battles since 1945. Ranging in age from only nine to more than fifty, these eager but relatively
untrained soldiers swept over minefields and fortifications to clear safe paths for the tanks. In doing so, the Iranians sustained
an immmense number of casualties, but they enabled Iran to recover some territory before the Iraqis could repulse the bulk
of the invading forces.
By the end of 1982, Iraq had been resupplied with new Soviet materiel, and the ground war entered
a new phase. Iraq used newly acquired T-55 tanks and T-62 tanks, BM-21 Stalin Organ rocket launchers, and Mi-24 helicopter
gunships to prepare a Soviet-type three-line defense, replete with obstacles, minefields, and fortified positions. The Combat
Engineer Corps proved efficient in constructing bridges across water obstacles, in laying minefields, and in preparing new
defense lines and fortifications.
In 1983 Iran launched three major, but unsuccessful, humanwave offensives, with huge losses,
along the frontier. On February 6, Tehran, using 200,000 "last reserve" Pasdaran troops, attacked along a 40-kilometer stretch
near Al Amarah, about 200 kilometers southeast of Baghdad. Backed by air, armor, and artillery support, Iran's six-division
thrust was strong enough to break through. In response, Baghdad used massive air attacks, with more than 200 sorties, many
flown by attack helicopters. More than 6,000 Iranians were killed that day, while achieving only minute gains. In April 1983,
the Mandali-Baghdad northcentral sector witnessed fierce fighting, as repeated Iranian attacks were stopped by Iraqi mechanized
and infantry divisions. Casualties were very high, and by the end of 1983, an estimated 120,000 Iranians and 60,000 Iraqis
had been killed. Despite these losses, in 1983 Iran held a distinct advantage in the attempt to wage and eventually to win
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