The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Debunking revisionis­m about the shah

Unpacking the shah’s modernizat­ion, his despotism and US-Iran relations

- • BENJAMIN WEINTHAL The writer is a fellow for the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s.

The latest book by Ray Takeyh, The Last Shah: America, Iran, and the Fall of the Pahlavi Dynasty, provides an extraordin­ary account of one of the last century’s most complex Middle East monarchs, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (1919-1980).

Takeyh, a senior fellow for Middle East studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former US State Department official, delivers a deeply nuanced and eloquent history of the shah – with all of Pahlavi’s remarkable modernizat­ion and internatio­nal relations accomplish­ments, and his repression as a full-blown despot.

In his chapter “The Shah’s Emerging Autocracy,” Takeyh describes a conversati­on of the “melancholy dictator” who tells a friend, “You know there is no more lonely and unhappy life for a man than when he decides to rule instead of reign.”

As Takeyh makes clear, the shah, at this stage in the 1950s, was animated by a desire to rule at the expense of messy democratic processes.

The author places the desire of Iranians for freedom at the center of this profound work: “The theme of Iranian history is a populace seeking to emancipate itself from tyranny – first monarchica­l, now Islamist,” he notes.

The interplay between the United States and Persia from 1941, when Pahlavi succeeded his father on the throne, until 1979 and the collapse of 2,500 years of monarchy in Iran, plays a central role in Takeyh’s history of the shah.

Two great Allied powers of World War II, the USSR and the United Kingdom, believed Pahlavi’s father, Reza Shah, shared pro-Nazi sentiments and forced him to abdicate in 1941.

“The shah’s industrial­ization effort relied heavily on German goods and technician­s,” Takeyh writes, but he adds that the “vulgar and toxic antisemiti­sm at the heart of National Socialism found only a limited audience in Iran. It was Iran’s distrust of Russia and Britain that explains its disastrous flirtation with the Third Reich.”

One radical Islamist in particular was receptive to Hitler’s ideology during the Second World War, namely, the man who would put an end to the Pahlavi dynasty in 1979: Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

The young Khomeini frequently tuned in to the Berlin-based radio program of the pro-Hitler Palestinia­n leader Haj Amin al Husseini, who agitated for Muslims in the Middle East to “kill the Jews wherever you find them. This pleases God, history and religion.”

When the 21-year-old Mohammad assumed the throne in 1941, Iran was occupied by the Soviet Union and Britain. A huge test for the shah and his government concerned the restoratio­n of Iran’s territoria­l integrity in 1945, after the defeat of Nazi Germany.

In his chapter “A Crisis in Azerbaijan,” Takeyh writes about the successful effort of Iran’s crafty prime minister Ahmad Qavam in dislodging the Soviets from Persian territory.

The experience of ejecting the Soviets would shape the shah’s self-belief by inspiring his self-confidence, says Takeyh.

This nascent phase of the shah’s reign would also see a recurring theme: the dismissal of prudent counsel not to dominate Iranian power politics because it would come back to haunt him, as the exiled Qavam warned in what Takeyh terms a “prescient” public letter to the monarch.

TAKEYH NEATLY debunks the fevered anti-American pitch associated with the so-called “anti-Imperialis­t” internatio­nal Left about the US role in Iran.

“The United States twice upheld Iran’s independen­ce at the risk of estranging its allies. America would make its share of mistakes in Persia, but its championin­g of Iran’s self-determinat­ion should never be forgotten,” Takeyh argues.

The era of Iran’s efforts to wrest control of its petroleum industry from Britain and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company was pivotal in Iran’s history. Takeyh provides a terrifical­ly granular account of the players involved and the collapse of negotiatio­ns that would lead to prime minister Mohammad Mossadeq’s controvers­ial government (1951-1953).

While Mossadeq and his allies introduced the concept of the “oil-less economy,” the shah realized that the populist slogan was not grounded in reality.

Takeyh’s two chapters on the economics of Iran’s oil industry and the coup d’état against Mossadeq are stuffed full of material that helps to clarify the ongoing, heated dispute about who was responsibl­e for the prime minister’s ouster.

His chapter “The Coup” should be sine qua non reading prior to discussion­s about the role of the US in the eviction of Mossadeq from the halls of power.

“An anti-Mossadeq coalition had formed between the clergy and the military,” writes Takeyh, adding that Western intelligen­ce agencies “did not foster the pro-monarchy attitudes nor incite the army officers and mullahs to join in opposition to the prime minister.”

Takeyh’s investigat­ion concludes the “balance of evidence suggests it was more an Iranian plot than an American one” to bring a new premier into office in 1953.

For the reader interested in Iran-Israel relations, Takeyh’s book contains many golden nuggets, including when Pahlavi refused to join the 1973 Arab embargo in response to the Yom Kippur War and “bragged about selling oil to Israel.”

The shah reached the zenith of his internatio­nal stature in the mid-1970s. He “was the most consequent­ial ruler in the Middle East,” notes Takeyh, adding that he maintained good relations with both Egypt and Israel, which had yet to sign their peace treaty.

“By the mid-1970s, alarm bells were ringing in the CIA” about the rising dissent among Iranian civil servants. There were reams of solid US intelligen­ce about the volatility in Iran and the storm before the deceptive calm.

The intelligen­ce was largely ignored by successive US administra­tions. Takeyh makes a compelling case that the Nixon administra­tion could have saved Pahlavi but that by the time of Jimmy Carter in 1977, the shah could not be rescued. In 1979, Pahlavi and his family fled Iran.

While Pahlavi advanced the rights of women in Iran, Khomeini would reverse the progress, imposing gender apartheid. And the Islamic Republic has been classified by both Democratic and Republican administra­tions as the leading internatio­nal state sponsor of terrorism.

The current supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, who declared, “Do whatever it takes to end it” to his security forces to stop the 2019 protests against regime corruption, has implemente­d levels of violence not seen since the purges shortly after the revolution and the mass murder of political prisoners in 1988.

According to a Reuters investigat­ion, Khamenei’s 2019 crackdown resulted in roughly 1,500 deaths. In the effort to understand the dialectics of modern Iranian history, Takeyh’s book is, without question, a go-to source on the country’s complex and rich history.

 ?? Gripas/Reuters) ?? REZA PAHLAVI, the son of Iran’s deposed shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, speaks at a conference in Washington.(Yuri
Gripas/Reuters) REZA PAHLAVI, the son of Iran’s deposed shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, speaks at a conference in Washington.(Yuri

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel