Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran,
country in southwestern Asia, located on the northeastern shore of the Persian
Gulf. One of the world's most mountainous countries, Iran contains Mount
Damāvand, the highest peak in Asia west of the Himalayas. The country’s
population, while ethnically and linguistically diverse, is almost entirely
Muslim. For centuries, the region has been the center of the Shia branch of
Islam (see Shia Islam). Iran ranks among the world’s leaders in its
reserves of oil and natural gas. As is the case in other countries in the
petroleum-rich Persian Gulf region, the export of oil has dominated Iran’s
economy since the early 20th century.
In the 6th century bc the territory of present-day Iran was the center of the
Persian Empire, the world’s preeminent power at that time. For more than 2,000
years, the region’s inhabitants have referred to it by the name Iran, derived
from the Aryan tribes who settled the area long ago. However, until 1935, when
the Iranian ruler demanded that the name Iran be used, the English-speaking
world knew the country as Persia, a legacy of the Greeks who named the region
after its most important province, Pars (present-day Fārs). Iran was a monarchy
ruled by a shah, or king, almost without interruption from 1501 until
1979, when a yearlong popular revolution led by the Shia clergy culminated in
the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of an Islamic republic. See
Islamic Revolution of Iran.
Iran lies at the easternmost edge of the
geographic and cultural region known as the Middle East. The country is
bordered on the north by Armenia, Azerbaijan, the Caspian Sea, and
Turkmenistan; on the east by Afghanistan and Pakistan; on the south by the Gulf
of Oman, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Persian Gulf; and on the west by Iraq
and Turkey. Iran’s capital and largest city is Tehrān, located in the northern
part of the country.
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LAND AND RESOURCES
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Iran is the second largest country in the Middle
East, after Saudi Arabia. It extends over a total area of 1,648,000 sq km
(636,300 sq mi). The country is roughly triangular in shape, with its longest
side extending in a slightly outward arc for 2,500 km (1,600 mi) from the
border with Turkey in the northwest to the border with Pakistan in the
southeast. The third point of the triangle lies in the northeast, about halfway
along Iran’s border with Turkmenistan. Iran’s greatest extent from north to
south is 1,600 km (1,000 mi) and from east to west is 1,700 km (1,100 mi).
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Natural Regions
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Iran’s interior plateaus are almost completely
surrounded by mountains. The main mountain system, the Zagros Mountains, cuts
across the country for more than 1,600 km (1,000 mi) from northwest to
southeast. With the exception of the Khūzestān coastal plain, which extends
from the northern reaches of the Persian Gulf, the Zagros Mountains occupy all
of western Iran. The central part of the range averages more than 340 km (210
mi) in width. Many peaks of the Zagros exceed 4,000 m (12,000 ft) in elevation;
the highest is Zard Kūh (4,547 m/14,918 ft). Peaks rising above 2,300 m (7,500
ft) capture considerable moisture, which percolates down to the lower-lying
basins as groundwater. These basins, ranging from about 1,200 to 1,500 m (about
4,000 to 5,000 ft) in elevation, contain fertile soil that traditionally has
sustained diverse and intensive crop cultivation.
In Iran’s northern reaches, a steep, narrow
mountain range, the Elburz Mountains, rims the entire southern coast of the
Caspian Sea. This range extends more than 600 km (400 mi) in length and
averages about 100 km (about 60 mi) in width. The country's highest peak, Mount
Damāvand (5,610 m/18,406 ft), lies in the central part of the range. Several
other peaks of the Elburz Mountains exceed 3,600 m (12,000 ft). The northern
slopes of the range receive considerable rainfall throughout the year and
support forests. A fertile coastal plain averaging 24 km (15 mi) in width lies
between the Caspian Sea and the mountains. East of the Elburz Mountains is a
series of parallel mountain ranges with elevations of 2,400 to 2,700 m (8,000
to 9,000 ft). These ranges are interspersed with many narrow, arable valleys.
Several low mountain ridges, generally referred to as the eastern highlands,
run along Iran’s eastern border.
Within this mountainous rim lies a series of basins
known collectively as the central plateau. They include the Dasht-e Kavir, a
huge salt-encrusted desert in north central Iran; the Dasht-e Lūt, a
sand-and-pebble desert in the southeast; and several fertile oases.
The mountains of Iran constitute an active
earthquake zone, and numerous minor earthquakes occur each year. Major
earthquakes causing great loss of life and property damage also occur
periodically. During the 18th century earthquakes twice leveled Tabrīz, the
principal city in the northwest, killing at least 40,000 people on each
occasion. Several severe earthquakes resulting in thousands of deaths have
occurred since the mid-20th century. A devastating earthquake centered in the
fault zone where the Elburz and Zagros mountains intersect in northwestern Iran
killed an estimated 37,000 people in June 1990. A December 2003 earthquake in
southern Iran destroyed much of the ancient city of Bam and killed more than
30,000 people. Several of Iran's highest mountains are volcanic cones; only
Mount Damāvand and Kūh-e Taftān in southeastern Iran are active volcanoes, both
periodically emitting gases near their summits.
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Rivers and Lakes
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Nearly all of Iran’s numerous rivers are
relatively short, shallow streams unsuitable for navigation. The country’s only
navigable river, the Kārūn, flows through the city of Ahvāz in the southwest.
Most rivers rise in the mountainous regions and drain into the interior basins.
Since ancient times, the region’s inhabitants have used the rivers for
irrigation. Dams constructed in the 20th century on the Āb-e Dez, Karkheh,
Kārūn, Sefid Rud, and other rivers have expanded the area under irrigation and
also have provided a principal source of hydroelectricity. Three rivers form
portions of Iran's international boundaries. The Aras River lies along the
border with Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Atrek River borders Turkmenistan, and
the Shatt al Arab, also known as the Arvandrud River, is part of the border
with Iraq. Iran also shares the Caspian Sea, the world's largest inland body of
water, with four other countries. Several smaller saltwater lakes lie entirely
within Iran; the largest is Lake Urmia in the northwest. A few small freshwater
lakes exist in high mountain valleys.
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Coastline
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More than half of Iran's international border
of 4,430 km (2,750 mi) is coastline, including 740 km (460 mi) along the Caspian
Sea in the north and 1,700 km (1,100 mi) along the Persian Gulf and adjacent
Gulf of Oman in the south. Both the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf have
important ports and contain extensive underwater deposits of oil and natural
gas. Iran's largest harbor, Bandar-e ‘Abbās, is located on the Strait of
Hormuz, the narrow passage separating the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman.
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Plant and Animal Life
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Although more than 10,000 plant species have been identified
in Iran, the natural vegetation in most of the country has been uprooted and
replaced by cultivated crops or pastures. Natural forests consisting of beech,
oak, other deciduous trees, and conifers grow in parts of the Elburz Mountains.
Some regions of higher elevation in the Zagros Mountains contain wooded areas
consisting primarily of oak. Wild fruit trees, including almond, pear,
pomegranate, and walnut, grow in both the Elburz and Zagros mountains. In the
more arid central part of the country, wild pistachio and other
drought-resistant trees grow in areas that have not been disturbed by human
activity. Tamarisk and other salt-tolerant bushes grow along the margins of the
Dasht-e Kavir.
A wide variety of native mammals, reptiles,
birds, and insects inhabit Iran. Many species of mammals—including wolves,
foxes, bears, mountain goats, red mountain sheep, rabbits, and gerbils—continue
to thrive. Others—including Caspian tigers, Caspian seals, desert onagers,
three species of deer, gazelles, and lynx—are endangered despite the
establishment of special wildlife refuge areas and other government programs
initiated to protect them. Some 323 species of birds inhabit Iran; more than
200 species are migratory birds that spend part of the year in other countries.
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Natural Resources
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Iran's extensive petroleum and natural gas deposits are
located primarily in the southwestern province of Khūzestān and in the Persian
Gulf. Iran also has one of the world's largest reserves of copper; deposits are
located throughout the country, but the major lode lies in the central region
between the cities of Yazd and Kermān. This region also serves as a center for
the mining of bauxite, coal, iron ore, lead, and zinc. Additional coal mines
operate throughout the Elburz Mountains; iron ore mines also exist near Zanjān
in the northwest, near Mashhad in the northeast, and on Hormuz Island in the
Strait of Hormuz. Iran also has valuable deposits of chromite, gold, manganese,
silver, tin, and tungsten, as well as various gemstones, such as amber, agate,
lapis lazuli, and turquoise.
Although about one-third of Iran’s total land area is
cultivable, only 9.8 percent is under cultivation. An additional 6 percent of
the total land is used for pasture. Forested areas, found primarily in the
Elburz Mountains and the higher elevations of the Zagros Mountains, have
declined slightly in recent decades and account for 6.7 percent of the total
land area.
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Climate
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Iran’s varied landscape produces several different
climates. On the northern edge of the country, the Caspian coastal plain, with
an average elevation at or below sea level, remains humid all year. Winter
temperatures rarely fall below freezing, and maximum summer temperatures rarely
exceed 29°C (85°F). Annual precipitation averages 650 mm (26 in) in the eastern
part of the plain (Māzandarān Province) and more than 1,900 mm (75 in) in the
western part (Gilān Province).
At higher elevations to the west, settlements in
the Zagros Mountain basins experience lower temperatures. These areas are
subject to severe winters, with average daily temperatures below freezing, and
warm summers, averaging 25°C (77°F) in the northwest and 33°C (91°F) in the
central and southern Zagros. Annual precipitation, including snowfall, averages
more than 280 mm (11 in) at higher elevations. Most precipitation falls between
October and April.
The central plateau region also experiences
regional variations. In Tehrān, located at an elevation of 1,200 m (3,900 ft)
on the northern edge of the plateau, the temperature averages 2°C (36°F) in
January and 29°C (85°F) in July. The city receives an average of 230 mm (9 in)
of precipitation annually. The arid basins of central and eastern Iran
generally receive less than 200 mm (8 in) of precipitation per year. Yazd, for
example, averages less than 70 mm (3 in) of precipitation. Its winters are
cool, but temperatures almost never fall below freezing; summers are very hot,
averaging 38°C (100°F) for most of July and August.
The coastal plains along the Persian Gulf and the
Gulf of Oman in southern Iran have mild winters, with average January
temperatures ranging from 7° to 18°C (45° to 64°F) in Khūzestān Province;
average temperatures are even higher in Bandar-e ‘Abbās on the Strait of Hormuz.
Summers are very humid and hot, with temperatures exceeding 48°C (119°F) during
July in the interior areas. Annual precipitation ranges from 145 mm to 355 mm
(6 to 14 in) in this region.
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Environmental Issues
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Iran's rapid urbanization and industrialization have
caused major environmental problems. Air pollution, primarily from automobile
and factory emissions, has become a serious problem in Tehrān and other large
cities. A rising incidence of respiratory illnesses prompted the city governments
of Tehrān and Arāk, southwest of the capital, to institute air pollution
control programs. These programs aim to reduce gradually the amount of harmful
chemicals released into the atmosphere. Pollution of the Caspian Sea has
increased substantially since the early 1990s, reaching levels that threaten
sturgeon and other fish that sustain the Iranian fishing industry. Although
Iran enforces stringent controls on the dumping of municipal and industrial
wastes into Caspian waters within its territorial limits, the other countries
that border the Caspian Sea do not control pollution in the northern two-thirds
of the lake. Iran has urged these countries to sign a binding international
agreement for cleaning up the Caspian Sea and preserving its water quality.
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PEOPLE AND SOCIETY
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The population of Iran was estimated at 65,875,223
in 2008. This figure is more than double the 1975 population of 33,379,000.
Between 1956 and 1986 Iran's population grew at a rate of more than 3 percent
per year. The growth rate began to decline in the mid-1980s after the
government initiated a major population control program. By 2008 the growth
rate had declined to 0.8 percent per year, with a birth rate of 17 per 1,000
persons and a death rate of 6 per 1,000. Nevertheless, Iran’s population
remains young: About 55 percent of Iranians were 24 years of age or younger in
2003.
Overall population density in 2008 was 40 persons per sq
km (104 per sq mi). Northern and western Iran are more densely populated than
the arid eastern half of the country, where population density in the extensive
desert regions is only 1 percent of the national average. In 2005, 68 percent
of the population lived in urban areas. About 99 percent of rural Iranians
resided in villages. Only 240,000 were nomads (people without permanent
residences who migrate seasonally), down from 2 million in 1966.
Tehrān, the country’s capital and largest city, serves
as the main administrative, commercial, educational, financial, industrial, and
publishing center. Iran's other major cities include Mashhad, a manufacturing
and commercial center in the northeast and the site of the country's most
important religious shrine; Eşfahān, a manufacturing center for central Iran
with several architecturally significant public buildings from the 17th and
18th centuries; Tabrīz, the main industrial and commercial center of the
northwest; Shīrāz, a manufacturing center in the south near the ruins of the
ancient Persian capital of Persepolis; and Ahvāz, the principal commercial and
manufacturing center in the southwestern oil region.
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Ethnic Groups
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Iran’s population is made up of numerous ethnic
groups. Persians migrated to the region from Central Asia beginning in the 7th
century bc and established the
first Persian empire in 550 bc.
They are the largest ethnic group, and include such groups as the Gilaki, who
live in Gilān Province, and the Mazandarani, who live in Māzandarān Province.
Accounting for about 60 percent of the total population, Persians live in
cities throughout the country, as well as in the villages of central and
eastern Iran. Two groups closely related to the Persians both ethnically and
linguistically are the Kurds and the Lurs. The Kurds, who make up about 7 percent
of the population, reside primarily in the Zagros Mountains near the borders
with Iraq and Turkey. The Lurs account for 2 percent of the population; they
inhabit the central Zagros region. Turkic tribes began migrating into
northwestern Iran in the 11th century, gradually changing the ethnic
composition of the region so that by the late 20th century East Azerbaijan
Province was more than 90 percent Turkish. Since the early 1900s, Azeris (a
Turkic group) have been migrating to most large cities in Iran, especially
Tehrān. Azeris and other Turkic peoples together account for about 25 percent
of Iran’s inhabitants. The remainder of the population comprises small
communities of Arabs, Armenians, Assyrians, Baluch, Georgians, Pashtuns, and
others.
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Language
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Modern Persian is the official language of Iran. An
ancient literary language, Persian was written in the Pahlavi script before the
Arab conquest in the 7th century. A new form written in the Arabic script
developed during the 9th and 10th centuries; this is the basis of the Modern
Persian language used today (see Persian Language; Arabic Language: Arabic
Script). As recently as 1950 there were several distinct dialects of spoken
Persian, but due to the spread of public education and broadcast media, a
standard spoken form, with minor regional accents, has evolved. Important
languages of minority groups that have their own publications and broadcast
programs include Azeri (a Turkic language of the Altaic family), Kurdish,
Arabic, and Armenian.
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Religion
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Jafari Shia Islam has been the official religion of
Iran since the 16th century. Followers of Shia Islam disagree with Sunni
Muslims (see Sunni Islam), who form the majority of Muslims in the Middle
East and the Islamic world, over the rightful succession to the Prophet
Muhammad, the founder of Islam. Iran’s 1979 constitution assigns to the Shia
clergy important political leadership roles in the government. An estimated 93
percent of all Iranians follow Shia Islam, and nearly all are members of the
Jafari group. Because Jafaris believe there are 12 legitimate successors, or
imams, to Muhammad, they are often called Twelvers. Most of the remaining
population belongs to other Islamic denominations, primarily Sunni Islam. In
towns where there are mixed Muslim communities, religious tensions have
surfaced frequently, especially during major religious observances. Sufism, or
Islamic mysticism, is popular among Shia and Sunni Muslims seeking spiritual interpretations
of religion. Iran also has small communities of Armenian and Assyrian
Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians. The Baha’i faith, which originated in Iran
during the 19th century, has several thousand secret followers, even though it
has been a target of official persecution since the Islamic republic came to
power in 1979.
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Education
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Public primary education was introduced in Iran after
the country’s first constitution was drafted in 1906. Predominantly an urban
system, it expanded only gradually and did not include secondary education
until 1925. At the time of the 1979 Islamic revolution, only 60 percent of
Iranian children of primary school age, and less than 50 percent of those of
secondary school age, were enrolled in public schools; overall adult literacy
was only 48 percent. Since 1979 the government has given a high priority to
education, with programs focusing on adult literacy, new school construction,
and expansion of public colleges and other institutes of higher education. By
2005 literacy for all Iranians aged 15 and older had reached 81.3 percent. The
literacy rate was higher for males (87.2 percent) than for females (75.2
percent); the rate was also higher in cities than in rural areas.
Both the public education system and an expanding
private school system consist of a five-year primary school cycle, a three-year
middle school cycle, and a four-year high school cycle. Education is compulsory
for children between the ages of 6 and 10. All villages now have at least a
primary school, and 92 percent of primary school-aged children were enrolled in
school in 2002–2003. Dropout rates begin during middle school and increase
significantly during high school. In 2002–2003 only 78 percent of secondary
school-aged children were enrolled in secondary school. Dropout rates are
significantly higher in rural areas, where there is a shortage of high schools
within easy commuting distance. Although educational opportunities for girls
improved after the revolution, the dropout rate is still higher for girls.
Although 90 percent of girls of eligible age attended primary school, only 75
percent attended secondary school.
Iran has more than 30 tuition-free public
universities and many other institutes of higher learning. These include
medical universities and specialized colleges providing instruction in teacher
training, agriculture, and other subjects. In all, only 21 percent of Iranians
of relevant age were enrolled in institutions of higher learning in 2002–2003.
Tehrān serves as a center for higher education, with more than 15 universities
and numerous colleges and institutes. Other important universities are located
in Hamedān, Eşfahān, Shīrāz, and Tabrīz. In addition to the public system, Iran
has a private system of higher education that consists of theological colleges
and the Islamic Free University, which has been developing campuses in cities
throughout the country since its establishment in the late 1980s.
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Social Structure
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Iranian society in the early 20th century consisted
of a narrow ruling elite (the Qajar dynasty monarch and his extended family,
court-appointed officials in Tehrān and provincial capitals, major landlords,
and chiefs of large nomadic tribes); a middle tier, including urban bazaar
merchants, the Shia clergy, and artisans; and a large, poor segment comprising
mostly share-cropping peasants and nomads but also some town dwellers engaged
in service-sector trades. Following the overthrow of the Qajar dynasty in 1925,
Reza Shah Pahlavi implemented wide-ranging economic development programs that
stimulated the industrialization and urbanization of the country. These changes
led to the emergence of two new, urban social groups: a middle class of
professionals and technocrats (technical experts) and a working class engaged
in manual and industrial labor. Reza Shah’s son and successor, Mohammad Reza
Shah Pahlavi, continued the development programs, and the two new social groups
gradually expanded.
By the late 1970s, however, the professional
and technocratic middle class had divided into secular and religious factions.
Both groups contributed to the overthrow of the shah in 1979; the secular group
objected to the autocratic rule and economic corruption of the monarchy, while
the religious group feared that the shah’s embrace of the West threatened
traditional Islamic morality. The religious middle class, in alliance with the
Shia clergy and under the leadership of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, gradually
split from the secular middle class and consolidated power after the
revolution. This group pursued an accelerated industrialization program,
causing further expansion of the middle class.
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Way of Life
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Codes of personal conduct and group behavior that
far predate the Islamic conquest of the 7th century continue to influence
Iranian culture. Enduring cultural values include obligations to extended
family, hospitality toward guests, and striving to act morally. However, social
changes during the 20th century affected these values. For example, the new
professional middle class began living in nuclear family (consisting only of
father, mother, and children), rather than extended family, residences. Busy
lifestyles in large cities and eight-hour workdays proved incompatible with the
custom of spontaneously inviting friends home for a meal. The increase in
educational opportunities for girls since 1979 raised expectations among women
for work opportunities outside the home. The rapid expansion of the middle
class since the revolution has stimulated the growth of a consumer society in
which various material goods are perceived as status symbols.
The 1979 revolution was heavily imbued with
religious rhetoric. Its leaders subsequently banned many forms of entertainment
that they considered sinful, including casinos, nightclubs and dance halls,
movies that featured nudity or sexual themes, and musical genres such as pop
and rock. For more wholesome entertainment, the government encouraged Iranian
traditional and Western classical music, new films emphasizing family values,
and recreational and sports facilities segregated by gender. Both men and women
were required to dress modestly in public. For women, modest dress, or hejab,
meant covering their hair with a scarf and having no exposed flesh other than
their hands and faces; for men it meant wearing long trousers and long-sleeve
shirts.
The population gradually adapted to the various
restrictions and continued to enjoy prerevolutionary leisure activities such as
attending sports events, especially soccer, the national pastime. The general
decline in public entertainment venues contributed to an increase in home
entertaining. Popular foods at such gatherings include fresh seasonal fruit,
greens, and nuts. Also popular are traditional Iranian dishes of steamed rice
served with minced lamb and chicken kebabs cooked over charcoal or with
traditional stews made with simmered meat, fruits, legumes, and spices. Tea is
always served to guests in the home and the workplace; fruit juices and
carbonated beverages also are popular. The sale and consumption of alcoholic
beverages has been prohibited since 1979, although there is a black market for
bootleg vodka and wine. Other general recreational and leisure activities
include hiking, picnicking, watching television and videos, and making seasonal
visits to Caspian Sea beaches and various historical sites and religious
shrines. In large cities, shopping and attending movies, concerts, theaters,
museums, and poetry readings also are popular.
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Social Issues
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Poverty is a major social problem in Iran, but
the government provides low-income families with various subsidies for food,
fuel, and utilities. Health-care services remain inadequate in rural areas.
Another serious social problem is the widespread recreational use of illegal
drugs, especially among young men, despite the government’s heavy use of the
print and broadcast media to educate the public about the harmful effects of
addiction and drug-related crime.
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Social Services
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Public social services in Iran include a national health
insurance program that provides free or low-cost health care in government-run
city hospitals and village clinics. A social security program, funded by a
special tax on wages and salaries, provides pensions for retired public sector
employees and some private sector employees. It also provides survivor benefits
to widows of deceased retirees and veterans killed in action, disability
payments to family heads incapacitated by work-related injuries or catastrophic
illnesses, and special payments for minor-aged children of deceased workers.
Numerous private organizations also provide various social services for
low-income people.
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ARTS
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Iranian art forms have a long tradition and
distinctive style, as exemplified in architecture, carpets, ceramics,
metalware, painting, and woodwork. Government patronage of artists dates
from more than 2,000 years ago. Aesthetic ideals predating the Islamic conquest
of the 7th century, such as stylized figural representation and geometric
shapes, influenced the evolution of art in Iran during the early Islamic period
(650-1220). Examples of elaborately decorated bronze, ceramic, gold, and silver
objects from this period are preserved in museums. Persian poetry also
developed during this time, and works by several poets of the period are
considered classic literature. During the Safavid dynasty (1501-1722),
considered a golden age for Iranian art, miniature painting and architecture
reached their highest point of development. In the 20th century Iranian artists
and writers began experimenting with new styles and techniques, incorporating
European and East Asian influences into their work.
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Literature
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From its beginnings in the 9th century, Modern
Persian literature was dominated by poetry. Important poets of the 9th through
the 12th century include Rudaki, noted for his qasidas (panegyrics, or
written works of praise); Firdawsi, who wrote the famous epic of pre-Islamic
Iran, the Shahnameh (completed in 1010); Omar Khayyam, author of the
famous Rubáiyát; and Nezami, who wrote the collection known as Khamseh
(Quintet). Persian poetry reached its height in the 13th and 14th centuries
with mystical poets Jalal al-Din Rumi, Sa’di, and Hafiz. Subsequently, Persian
literature declined, and for nearly five centuries both poetry and prose
remained uninspired imitation of past masters. A literary revival began in the
late 19th century and has continued to the present. Fiction, especially in the
form of the short story, has emerged as a new and important genre. Modern
Iranian writers include Mashid Amirshahi, Simin Daneshvar, Ismail Fassih,
Houshang Golshiri, and Moshen Makhmalbaf (who also directs films). Writers may
explore many themes that were prohibited prior to the 1979 revolution, such as
political freedom, rebellion against authority, satire of monarchy, and
fictional accounts of suffering under the Pahlavi dynasty. However, since the
revolution, works deemed to be antireligious have been banned. See also Persian
Literature.
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Art and Architecture
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Persian art and architecture first developed in the
time of Persian king Cyrus the Great (6th century bc) and experienced a renaissance during the Sassanid
dynasty (ad 224-651). After the
Islamic conquest, the mosque became the major building type, and several new
styles of painting developed and thrived during the Safavid era (1501-1722).
The 1979 revolution ushered in a period of renewed
creativity in fine and applied arts. The proliferation of exhibits sponsored by
the Ministry of Culture, by various museums, and by private galleries inspired
artistic creativity in mediums as diverse as calligraphy, graphic art,
painting, photography, pottery, and sculpture. The boom in public and private
construction following the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) provided new opportunities
for architects. Most new buildings have tended to be updated versions of the
structures they replaced. Some younger architects have been experimenting with
designs that incorporate traditional architectural motifs into contemporary
buildings. In textile arts, younger designers continue to experiment with new
patterns and color schemes for hand-knotted carpets and woven coverings. See
also Iranian Art and Architecture.
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Music and Dance
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Iranian musical tradition is marked by unique vocal
styles and rich solo instrumental performance. Since the 1979 revolution, there
has been a major revival of interest in Iranian traditional and folk music,
both of which are aired regularly on government-run radio and television
stations. Popular nationally known singers and performers of traditional music
include Hossein Alizadeh, Mohammad Reza Lofti, Shahram Nazari, and Mohammad
Shajarian. However, every town has locally famous singers. Traditional musical
instruments include the kamánche, or spiked fiddle; the santur, a
stringed instrument similar to the hammer dulcimer; the setar, which
resembles a lute; and the tar, an ancestor of the guitar. Many Iranian
musicians have acquired international reputations as virtuoso performers of
these instruments. The most popular folk troupes are those performing Azeri
Turkish, Kurdish, and Luri music, as well as Persian seafaring songs from the
Persian Gulf coast.
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Theater and Film
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A type of passion play called ta’zia,
depicting events of Shia religious history, developed during the Safavid era
(1501-1722) and enjoyed great popularity during Qajar rule (1794-1925).
Influenced by increased European contact, playwrights of the 19th and early
20th centuries wrote satires that often called for reform. During the Pahlavi
dynasty (1925-1979), plays were typically patriotic and pro-Western. Since the
1979 revolution, which sought to promote Islamic values, the government has
encouraged playwrights but has prohibited plays considered immoral or
antireligious.
Iranian filmmakers produced the first Iranian feature
films in the early 1930s and have made more than 1,000 movies since then.
Iranian directors often also write the screenplays for their movies. During the
1990s several Iranian films won awards at international film festivals.
Award-winning filmmakers include Bahram Bayzai, Abbas Kiarostami, Majid Majidi,
Mohsen Makhmalbaf, and Dariush Mehrjui. In 1997 Kiarostami's Taste of Cherry
won the prestigious Palme d’Or (Golden Palm) award for best film at the Cannes
Film Festival, and in 1999 Majidi’s Children of Heaven was nominated for
an Academy Award for best foreign film of 1998.
|
E
|
Libraries and Museums
|
Of Iranian cities, Tehrān has the largest number of
museums, including Iran Bastan Museum (Museum of Ancient Iran), which displays
archaeological objects unearthed at Iran's pre-Islamic sites. Tehrān’s museums
also include Abgineh va Sofalineh Museum, a museum of glass art and ceramics
with hundreds of chronologically displayed exhibits, and the Museum of
Contemporary Art, which specializes in Iranian and international painting and
sculpture. Other major museums are located in Eşfahān, Mashhad, Qom, and
Shīrāz. Since 1979 the government has constructed museums in more than 25
provincial capitals. The National Library of Iran, located in Tehrān, houses
many valuable manuscripts and historical documents. Public libraries exist in
hundreds of municipalities.
|
V
|
ECONOMY
|
Although agriculture historically was the most important
sector of Iran’s economy, its share of the gross domestic product (GDP) has
been declining since the 1930s due to the rise of manufacturing. Meanwhile, the
mining sector, which is dominated by the production of oil, has grown rapidly
since Iran nationalized its oil fields in the 1950s. Factory manufacturing has
experienced periods of both rapid growth and stagnation. Trade and commerce
activities have expanded with the country's increasing urbanization. During the
late 1970s the Iranian economy appeared ready to grow to a level on par with
the world’s developed countries, but the 1979 revolution and the subsequent
eight-year war with Iraq strained all economic sectors. However, the need to
produce for the war effort actually spurred industrialization, as did
government spending on infrastructure development.
In the early 21st century the service sector
contributed the largest percentage of the GDP, followed by industry (mining and
manufacturing) and agriculture. About 45 percent of the government's budget
came from oil and natural gas revenues, and 31 percent came from taxes and
fees. Government spending contributed to an average annual inflation rate of 12
percent in the period 2006-2006. In 2006 the GDP was estimated at $218 billion,
or $3,108.50 per capita. Because of these figures and the country’s diversified
but small industrial base, the United Nations classifies Iran's economy as
semideveloped.
|
A
|
Government Role in the Economy
|
Government planning plays an important role in Iran’s
economy. Since the late 1940s the government has designed and implemented
multiyear planning programs with the goal of industrial diversification. After
the 1979 revolution, the government continued the industrialization that the
shah had pursued but emphasized economic self-sufficiency, which required
greater investment in agriculture. However, the flight abroad in 1978 and 1979
of most of the social and political elite, along with their capital (estimated
at more than $28 billion), combined with the costly war with Iraq in the 1980s,
left Iran’s economy severely damaged.
After the war, the Iranian government declared
its intention to privatize most state industries in an effort to stimulate the
ailing economy. The sale of state-owned factories and companies proceeded
slowly, however, and most industries remained state-owned in the early 21st
century. The majority of heavy industry—including steel, petrochemicals,
copper, automobiles, and machine tools—was in the public sector, while most
light industry was privately owned.
|
B
|
Labor
|
In 2006 Iran’s labor force was estimated at
29.1 million, of which women accounted for 34 percent. Unemployment stood at
about 15 percent. The agriculture and service sectors employed the greatest
number of workers. Although there are numerous government-affiliated trade
associations, there are no independent labor unions in Iran.
|
C
|
Services
|
Urbanization has contributed to significant growth in
the service sector. In 2006 the sector ranked as the largest contributor to the
GDP (45 percent) and employed 45 percent of workers. Important service
industries include public services (including education), commerce, personal
services, professional services (including health care), and tourism. The
tourist industry declined dramatically during the war with Iraq in the 1980s
but has subsequently revived. About 1,659,000 foreign tourists visited Iran in
2004; most came from Asian countries, including the republics of Central Asia,
while a small share came from the countries of the European Union and North
America. The most popular tourist destinations are Eşfahān, Mashhad, and
Shīrāz.
|
D
|
Agriculture
|
Iran’s agricultural sector contributed 10 percent of the
GDP in 2006 and employed 25 percent (2005) of the labor force. Since 1979
commercial farming has replaced subsistence farming as the dominant mode of
agricultural production. Some northern and western areas support rain-fed
agriculture, while other areas require irrigation for successful crop
production. Wheat, rice, and barley are the country’s major crops. Total wheat
and rice production fails to meet domestic food requirements, however, making
substantial imports necessary. Other principal crops include potatoes, legumes
(beans and lentils), vegetables, fruits, sugar beets, sugarcane, fodder plants
(alfalfa and clover), nuts (pistachios, almonds, and walnuts), spices
(including cumin, sumac, and saffron), and tea. Honey is collected from beehives,
and silk is harvested from silkworm cocoons. Livestock products include lamb,
goat meat, beef, poultry, milk, eggs, butter, cheese, wool, and leather. Major
agricultural exports include fresh and dried fruits, nuts, animal hides,
processed foods, and spices.
|
E
|
Mining and Manufacturing
|
The industrial sector—including mining, manufacturing,
and construction—contributed 45 percent of the GDP and employed 30 percent of
the labor force in 2006. Mineral products, notably petroleum, dominate Iran’s
exports, but mining employs less than 1 percent of the country’s labor force.
Since 1913 Iran has been a major oil exporting country. In the late 1970s it
ranked as the fourth largest oil producer and the second largest oil exporter
in the world. Following the 1979 revolution, however, the government reduced
daily oil production in accordance with an oil conservation policy. Further
production declines occurred as result of damage to oil facilities during the
war with Iraq. Oil production began increasing in the late 1980s due to the
repair of damaged pipelines and the exploitation of newly discovered offshore
oil fields in the Persian Gulf. By 2004 Iran’s annual oil production was 1.4
billion barrels. Iran also has the world's second largest reserves of natural
gas; these are exploited primarily for domestic use.
Although the petroleum industry provides the majority of
economic revenues, about 75 percent of all mining sector employees work in
mines producing minerals other than oil and natural gas. These include coal,
iron ore, copper, lead, zinc, chromium, barite, salt, gypsum, molybdenum,
strontium, silica, uranium, and gold. The mines at Sar Cheshmeh in Kermān
Province contain the world's second largest lode of copper ore. Large iron ore deposits
lie in central Iran, near Bafq, Yazd, and Kermān.
Iran has a long tradition of producing artisan
goods, including carpets, ceramics, copperware and brassware, glass, leather
goods, textiles, and woodwork. Iran’s rich carpet-weaving tradition dates from
pre-Islamic times, and it remains an important industry. Large-scale
manufacturing in factories began in the 1920s and developed gradually. During
the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq bombed many of Iran’s petrochemical plants, and the
large oil refinery at Ābādān was badly damaged and forced to halt production.
Reconstruction of the refinery began in 1988 and production resumed in 1993.
However, the war also stimulated the growth of many small factories producing
import-substitution goods and materials needed by the military. The country’s
major manufactured products are petrochemicals, steel, and copper products.
Other important manufactures include automobiles, processed foods (including
refined sugar), carpets and textiles, pharmaceuticals, and cement.
|
F
|
Forestry and Fishing
|
Although they contribute very little to the GDP and
employ a small percentage of workers, fishing and logging are important
industries in specific regions. Logging takes place primarily in the forests of
the Elburz Mountains, where various deciduous and conifer trees are harvested
for construction, furniture, pulp, industrial uses, and fuel. Fishing fleets
operate out of several ports on the Caspian Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Gulf
of Oman. Caviar harvested from Caspian Sea sturgeon is an important export
item. Grouper, shrimp, and tuna caught in the Persian Gulf are important for
the domestic and export markets. Various species of rock lobsters are caught in
the Gulf of Oman.
|
G
|
Energy
|
In the 1980s and 1990s Iran built several new
natural gas, combined cycle (using both gas and steam), and hydroelectric power
stations, dramatically increasing electric power output. Thermal plants supply
93 percent of the country’s electricity, and hydroelectric facilities provide
most of the rest. In 1975 the government began building a nuclear power plant
at Būshehr, on the Persian Gulf coast. The partially completed plant was bombed
during the war with Iraq. In 1995 Russia signed an agreement to finish construction
of the plant.
|
H
|
Transportation
|
Iran has an extensive paved road system linking
most of its towns and all of its cities. In 2003 the country had 179,388 km
(111,000 mi) of roads, of which 67 percent were paved. There were 30 passenger
cars for every 1,000 inhabitants. Trains operated on 7,131 km (4,431 mi) of
railroad track. The country’s major port of entry is Bandar-e ‘Abbās on the
Strait of Hormuz. After arriving in Iran, imported goods are distributed
throughout the country by trucks and freight trains. The Tehrān-Bandar-e ‘Abbās
railroad, opened in 1995, connects Bandar-e ‘Abbās to the railroad system of
Central Asia via Tehrān and Mashhad. Other major ports include Bandar-e Anzalī
and Bandar-e Torkeman on the Caspian Sea and Korramshahr and Bandar-e Khomeynī
on the Persian Gulf. Dozens of cities have airports that serve passenger and
cargo planes. Iran Air, the national airline, was founded in 1962 and operates
domestic and international flights. All large cities have mass transit systems
using buses, and several private companies provide bus service between cities.
Tehrān and Eşfahān are in the process of constructing underground mass transit
rail lines.
|
I
|
Communications
|
The press in Iran is privately owned and reflects
a diversity of political and social views. A special court has authority to
monitor the print media and may suspend publication or revoke the licenses of
papers or journals that a jury finds guilty of publishing antireligious
material, slander, or information detrimental to the national interest. Since
the late 1990s the court has shut down many pro-reform newspapers and other
periodicals. Most Iranian newspapers are published in Persian, but newspapers
in English and other languages also exist. The most widely circulated
periodicals are based in Tehrān. Popular daily and weekly newspapers include Ettela’at,
Kayhan, Resalat, and the Tehran Times (an English-language paper).
The government runs the broadcast media, which
includes three national radio stations and two national television networks, as
well as dozens of local radio and television stations. In 2000 there were 252
radios and 158 television sets in use for every 1,000 residents. There were 278
telephone lines and 109 personal computers for every 1,000 residents. Computers
for home use became more affordable in the mid-1990s, and since then demand for
access to the Internet has increased. In 1998 the Ministry of Posts and
Telecommunications began selling Internet accounts to the general public.
|
J
|
Foreign Trade
|
Petroleum dominates Iran’s exports, making up 85 percent
of export earnings. In 2002 Iran exported 765 million barrels of crude oil per
day. Major nonoil exports include carpets, chemicals, steel, fresh and dried
fruits, nuts, and animal hides. The country’s leading purchasers are Japan,
South Korea, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Italy, and China. Since the value
of Iran's imports generally is less than the value of its exports, the country
maintained a favorable balance of trade for most years since the 1980s.
Principal imports include machinery, transport equipment, chemicals, iron and
steel, and food products. Primary suppliers of imports are Germany, South
Korea, UAE, Italy, and France.
Iran has had no direct trade with the United
States since 1995, when the U.S. government banned all commercial and financial
transactions between U.S. companies and Iranian public and private entities.
The United States took this action because it believed Iran was planning to
develop weapons of mass destruction and was supporting international terrorism.
Iran is a member of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the
Economic Cooperation Organization (an organization promoting economic and
cultural cooperation among Islamic states).
|
K
|
Currency and Banking
|
Iran’s unit of currency is the rial. The
official exchange rate averaged 9,171 rials to the U.S. dollar in 2006.
However, rials are exchanged on the unofficial market at a much higher rate. In
1979 the government nationalized all private banks and announced the
establishment of a banking system whereby, in accordance with Islamic law,
interest on loans was replaced with handling fees; the system went into effect
in the mid-1980s. The banking system consists of the central bank, which issues
currency; several commercial banks that are headquartered in Tehrān but have
branches throughout the country; two development banks; and a housing bank that
specializes in home mortgages. The government began to privatize the banking
sector in 2001, when it issued licenses to two new privately owned banks. The
Tehrān Stock Exchange trades the shares of more than 400 registered companies.
|
VI
|
GOVERNMENT
|
The Safavid dynasty established Iran as a monarchy
under a shah, or king, in 1501. Although the ruling dynasty changed in the 18th
century, the system of government did not change significantly until 1906, when
a popular revolution forced the shah to accept a constitution that limited his
powers. The 1906 constitution remained law until 1979, but after 1925 it was
ignored in practice by the Pahlavi dynasty shahs, who created a highly
centralized government over which they ruled as virtual dictators. Beginning in
the early 1950s, popular disaffection with arbitrary rule increased gradually,
culminating in the 1979 Islamic revolution. This revolution replaced the
monarchy with a republican form of government guided by the principles of Shia
Islam. Shia clergy who had played a key role in mobilizing opposition to the
shah obtained important positions in the postrevolutionary government. The
principal religious figure, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was accepted widely as
the country's leader even though he did not participate in the actual
governance of the country. He was succeeded by Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei.
Suspicious of central authority, the new rulers created a system under which
the executive, judicial, and legislative branches of government were separate
and could check one another's exercise of power.
Although the clergy continued to dominate the
highest ranks of the government into the 21st century, it was divided into
liberal and conservative factions. Liberal clergy wanted to relax some of the
religious restrictions on Iranian society. At the beginning of the 21st
century, liberals under President Mohammed Khatami controlled the executive and
legislative branches, and conservatives controlled the judiciary and the
powerful Council of Guardians. In the parliamentary elections of 2004, however,
liberal and moderate candidates were barred from running, and conservatives
took control of the legislature. In the 2005 presidential election Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, a conservative known for his loyalty to Khamenei, was elected by a
large margin.
|
A
|
Constitution
|
In the summer of 1979 a popularly elected
assembly drafted the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran; this
constitution was approved in a popular referendum in December. It named
Khomeini to serve as Iran’s supreme spiritual leader, an office called velayat-e
faqih (guardianship of the religious jurist; the holder of the office is
the faqih), and provided for an elected assembly of senior clergy to
select Khomeini’s successors. The constitution also stipulated as head of state
an elected president who would choose a prime minister to be head of
government, subject to legislative approval. It preserved the prerevolutionary
elected parliament, the Majlis, as the legislature. In 1989 voters approved 45
amendments to the constitution, the most important of which downgraded the
religious qualifications for the faqih, eliminated the office of prime
minister, and made the president both head of state and head of government. The
Majlis set 15 as the minimum age for voting.
|
B
|
Velayat-e Faqih
|
The faqih generally oversees the operation of the
government to ensure that its policies and actions conform to Islamic
principles. The faqih is a spiritual leader whose religious authority is above that
of the president and any other officials. However, in keeping with the practice
established by Khomeini, the faqih is expected to refrain from involvement in
the day-to-day affairs of governance. An 83-member Assembly of Experts,
popularly elected every eight years, is responsible for choosing the faqih (or
a council of three to five faqihs, if there is no consensus on a single faqih)
from among the most politically and religiously qualified Shia clergy.
|
C
|
Executive
|
The chief executive and head of state is the
president, who is elected to a four-year term and may be reelected to one
additional term. The president may appoint as many vice presidents as he deems
appropriate; he also appoints a cabinet of ministers. Vice presidents do not
need legislative approval, but all cabinet ministers chosen by the president
must receive a confirmation vote from the Majlis. The faqih is empowered to
dismiss a president who has been impeached by the Majlis.
|
D
|
Legislature
|
Legislative authority is vested in the Majlis, a
single-chamber parliament. Its 290 members, 5 of whom represent non-Muslim
religious minorities, are popularly elected for four-year terms. The Majlis can
force the dismissal of cabinet ministers by no-confidence votes and can impeach
the president for misconduct in office. Although the executive proposes most
laws, individual deputies of the Majlis also may introduce legislation.
Deputies also may propose amendments to bills being debated.
|
E
|
Council of Guardians
|
A 12-member Council of Guardians ensures that all
legislation enacted by the Majlis conforms to Islamic principles and the
constitution. The Council of Guardians also approves candidates for
presidential, legislative, and other elections. In 1997 the
conservative-controlled Council of Guardians used this power to disqualify many
liberal candidates from the election to the Assembly of Experts. Members of the
Council of Guardians serve six-year terms. Six of the members must be clergymen
appointed by the faqih, and six must be Muslim lawyers nominated by the
judiciary and approved by the Majlis. Conflicts between the Council of
Guardians and the more secular Majlis led Khomeini in 1988 to create the
Expediency Council, a body charged with resolving legislative disputes. The
Expediency Council has the power to override legislative acts and presidential
decisions.
|
F
|
Judiciary
|
Islamic law was introduced into Iran’s legal system
following the Islamic revolution of 1979. The country’s highest judicial body
is the Supreme Council of Justice, a five-member group of senior clergy that
supervises the appointment of all judges and codifies Islamic law. The council
also drafts all legislation pertaining to civil and criminal offenses; the
Majlis then debates the drafts and may amend any proposed bill before voting to
accept or reject it. The faqih appoints the head of the Supreme Council of
Justice; constitutional amendments passed in 1989 combined this office with
that of chief justice of the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court reviews decisions of the lower
courts and renders judgments regarding their conformity to Islamic legal
principles and the constitution. There are three types of lower courts in Iran:
revolutionary, civil, and criminal. Revolutionary courts try cases involving
antirevolutionary behavior, a broadly defined category that includes crimes
ranging from plots to overthrow the government by violent means to trafficking
in illegal drugs. Civil courts hear suits involving disputes between
individuals or corporate entities. Criminal courts deal with murder and theft.
In addition, there are special administrative courts, such as the Court of the
Clergy and the Press Court, that hear cases of professional misconduct.
Responsibility for the administration of courts is vested in the Ministry of
Justice. More than 100 crimes—including murder, drug trafficking, spying,
terrorism, treason, rape, adultery, and corruption—carry the possibility of a
death sentence.
|
G
|
Local Government
|
Iran is divided into 28 provinces, each headed
by a governor appointed by the Ministry of Interior. The provinces are further
divided into counties, each headed by an executive appointed by the Ministry of
Interior on the recommendation of the provincial governor. Each county includes
two or more districts, which are headed by district commissioners appointed by
the county executive. The districts are subdivided into urban municipalities
and rural areas. Each municipality has an elected council; the rural areas
encompass a number of villages, each run by elected village councils. The local
councils have the power to regulate zoning and issue building permits. They
also organize the provision of, and assess fees for, various public services.
|
H
|
Political Parties
|
Political parties developed in Iran during the 1940s.
Most parties were banned after forces loyal to the shah overthrew Prime
Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq and instituted martial law in 1953, although many
continued to operate secretly until the 1979 revolution, when they reemerged
openly. Immediately after the revolution, Iran’s leading clerics established
the Islamic Republican Party (IRP), which dominated politics until it was
dissolved in 1987 due to internal dissent. Following uprisings by several
opposition parties in 1981, new regulations made it increasingly difficult for
political groups to hold public meetings and recruit new members. An official
body was created to license political parties, but since 1987 it has recognized
the legal existence of only a few parties.
Nevertheless, the government tolerates political
activities by various associations that function as de facto parties by
endorsing candidates for legislative and presidential elections. One such
unofficial party, the Jamiyat-e Ruhaniyan Mobarez (Association of Militant Clergy),
generally supports legislation favorable to private business. The Majma-e
Ruhaniyat-e Mobarez (Society of Militant Clergy), which dominated the Majlis
from the late 1980s until 1992, advocates government regulation of the economy
and progressive income taxes to redistribute wealth equitably. The Kargozaran-e
Sazandegi (Servants of Construction), followers of former president Ali Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani, support a strong government role in development projects.
The Nezhat-e Azadi (Liberation Movement of Iran) stresses the need for
expanding and protecting civil liberties. The Hezb-e Mosha Karat-e Islami Iran
(Islamic Iran Participation Party), supporters of Khatami, stress the need to
create a civil society based on the rule of law.
|
I
|
Defense
|
Upon the recommendation of the president, the faqih
appoints a joint chief of staff to coordinate the five branches of the armed
forces. These consist of an army (totaling 350,000 forces in 2004), an internal
security force known as the Revolutionary Guard (125,000), an air force
(52,000), and a navy (18,000). In addition, more than 300,000 men and women
were enlisted in a volunteer reserve force, the Basij. A two-year period of
military service is required of all male citizens of Iran aged 18 and older. The
Ministry of Defense exercises general supervision over the armed forces. In
general, the military is under the tight control of the civilian government,
and armed forces personnel are encouraged to avoid involvement in partisan
politics.
|
J
|
International Organizations
|
Iran is a charter member of the United Nations
(UN) and belongs to all of its specialized agencies. The country is also a
founding member of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), which
promotes solidarity among nations where Islam is an important religion, and the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). Iran also belongs to the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
|
VII
|
HISTORY
|
For the history of Iran before the Muslim conquest
in the 7th century, see Persia.
Arab Muslim armies began their conquest of the
Persian Sassanian Empire in ad 636
and during the next five years conquered all of Iran, with the exception of the
Elburz Mountains and the Caspian coastal plain. They finally put an end to the
Sassanid dynasty in 651. For the next two centuries, most of Iran (which at
that time extended beyond Herāt in what now is western Afghanistan) remained
part of the Arab Islamic empire. The caliphs (successive Islamic
leaders) ruled initially from Medina in present-day Saudi Arabia, then from
Damascus, Syria, and finally from Baghdād, Iraq, as each city became the seat
of the caliphate. Beginning in the late 9th century, however, independent
kingdoms arose in eastern Iran; by the mid-11th century, the Arab caliph in
Baghdād had lost effective control of virtually all of Iran, although most of
the local dynasties continued to recognize his religious authority.
From the time of Islamic conquest, Iranians
gradually converted to Islam. Most had previously followed Zoroastrianism, the
official state religion under the Sassanid dynasty, but minority groups had
practiced Christianity or Judaism. By the 10th century the majority of Iranians
probably were Muslims. Most Iranian Muslims adhered to orthodox Sunni Islam,
although some followed various sects of Shia Islam. The Ismailis, a Shia sect,
maintained a small but effectively independent state in the Rūdbār region of
the Elburz Mountains from the 11th through the 13th century. Iran's unique
identity as a bastion of Jafari, or Twelver, Shia Islam (which constitutes the
main body of Shia Islam today) did not develop until the 16th century.
|
A
|
Turks and Mongols
|
In the 11th century Turkic tribes began migrating
to Iran, settling primarily in the northwest. The Seljuk Turks (see Seljuks),
who had converted to Sunni Islam in the 10th century, defeated local rulers and
established dynasties that ruled over most of the country until the Mongol
invasions in the 13th century. Mongol rule proved disastrous for Iran. The
Mongols destroyed major cities such as Ardabīl, Hamadān, Marāgheh, Neyshābūr,
and Qazvīn, and they killed almost all of the inhabitants as punishment for
resistance. Ray and Tus, the largest and most important cities in Iran, were
destroyed by the Mongols and never rebuilt. The Mongols devastated many
regions, especially Khorāsān and Māzandarān, by destroying irrigation networks
and cropland. The harsh rule of the Mongols contributed to a continuing
economic decline throughout the 13th century.
Prior to 1295 Iran's Mongol rulers, followers
of shamanism or Buddhism, did not accept the Islamic faith. Their official
indifference or open hostility toward Islam stimulated the transformation of
Sufi brotherhoods into religious paramilitary organizations. Although nominally
Sunni, many of these brotherhoods became increasingly tolerant of Shia ideas,
even incorporating these ideas into their own belief systems. In 1295 Mongol
ruler Ghazan Khan, himself a convert to Islam, restored Islam as the state
religion, further bolstering the growth of new Islamic ideas.
Ghazan and his immediate successors also adopted
policies that reversed Iran's economic decline. In the late 13th and early 14th
centuries, cities that had escaped the destruction of the Mongol invasions,
such as Eşfahān, Shīrāz, and Tabrīz, emerged as new centers of cultural
development. However, from 1335 to 1380 civil strife weakened central
authority. Between 1381 and 1405 invasions by Turkic conqueror Tamerlane
destroyed more of Iran’s cities and undid most of the progress Ghazan had
achieved.
|
B
|
Safavid Rule
|
During the 15th century several competing families
and tribes, mostly of Turkic origins, ruled over various parts of Iran. Notable
among them were the Safavids, who headed a militant Sufi order founded in the
northwest by Shaikh Safi of Ardabīl in the early 14th century. His descendant,
Ismail I, conquered first Tabrīz and then the rest of Iran. In 1501 he proclaimed
himself shah (king), a title commonly used by Iranian rulers in
pre-Islamic times. This marked the beginning of the Safavid dynasty and was the
first time since the 7th century that all of Iran was unified as an independent
state. Ismail embraced Jafari Shia Islam, established it as the state religion,
and began to convert the largely Sunni population to this Shia sect.
Ismail used the new religion to mobilize
armies against the Ottomans—Sunni Muslims who controlled a vast empire to the
west. Intermittent warfare between the Safavids and the Ottoman Empire
continued for more than 150 years as successive rulers of each accused one
another of heretical beliefs. Although this lengthy conflict helped shape
Iran's identity as a Shia country, the real conflict between the Safavids and
the Ottomans was over territory, especially the Zagros Mountains region and the
fertile plains of present-day Iraq. In 1509 Ismail gained control of the Iraqi
territory, but it fell into Ottoman hands when Ottoman ruler Süleyman I
conquered Baghdād in 1534.
After several unsuccessful campaigns, the Safavids
finally recaptured Baghdād in 1623 under Abbas I. (They held the city for 15
years before the Ottomans gained permanent control in 1638.) During his reign,
Abbas moved the Safavid capital from Tabrīz, which was dangerously close to the
Ottoman border and had been occupied briefly by the Ottomans, to the centrally
located city of Eşfahān. He embellished Eşfahān with many bridges, mosques,
palaces, and schools. Most of these structures still stand, and they are among
the best-preserved examples of Islamic architecture in the world. Abbas also
encouraged trade with Europe, especially England and The Netherlands, whose
merchants bought Iranian carpets, silk, and textiles.
The Safavid empire gradually declined after the
reign of Abbas II ended in 1666. To finance lavish personal lifestyles, later
shahs imposed heavy taxes that discouraged investment and encouraged corruption
among officials. Shah Sultan Hosain, who ruled from 1694 to 1722, tried to
convert forcibly his Afghan subjects in eastern Iran from Sunni to Shia Islam.
In response, an Afghan army under Mir Mahmud rebelled, marching across eastern
Iran and capturing the Safavid capital of Eşfahān. After a brief siege of the city,
the Afghan army executed the shah in 1722, thus ending Safavid rule of Iran.
The sudden dissolution of the empire plunged Iran into a 70-year period of
relative turmoil, marked by internal civil strife and efforts by Ottoman and
Russian forces to occupy border zones. Military leader Nadir Shah, based in
Mashhad, succeeded in freeing Iran from foreign occupation in the 1730s and
soon extended his rule eastward, but his empire collapsed upon his
assassination in 1747. Karim Khan Zand, based in Shīrāz, established a brief
period of tranquility in the mid-1700s but was not able to extend his control
over all of Iran.
|
C
|
The Qajar Dynasty
|
In 1794 Agha Mohammad Khan defeated numerous rivals
and brought all of Iran under his rule, establishing the Qajar dynasty. The
Qajars were a Turkic tribe that held ancestral lands in present-day Azerbaijan,
which then was part of Iran. Agha Mohammad established his capital at Tehrān, a
village near the ruins of the ancient city of Ray (now Shahr-e Rey). Agha
Mohammad’s nephew and successor, Fath Ali Shah, ruled from 1797 to 1834. Under
Fath Ali Shah, Iran went to war against Russia, which was expanding from the
north into the Caucasus Mountains, an area of historic Iranian interest and
influence. Iran suffered major military defeats during the war. Under the terms
of the Treaty of Gulistan in 1813, Iran recognized Russia's annexation of
Georgia and ceded to Russia most of the north Caucasus region. A second war
with Russia in the 1820s ended even more disastrously for Iran, which in 1828
was forced to sign the Treaty of Turkmanchai acknowledging Russian sovereignty
over the entire area north of the Aras River (territory comprising present-day
Armenia and Azerbaijan).
During the reign of Mohammad Shah, from 1834
to 1848, Russia began expanding its political influence into Iran. Another
world power, Britain, also took interest in the region in order to protect its
growing empire in India. Because of Iran’s strategic location between the
southern borders of Russia and the westernmost borders of British India, both
Britain and Russia regarded an independent Iran as a convenient buffer area
between the two empires. At the same time, both powers preferred Iran to have a
weak central government so that they could more easily influence the country's
internal affairs.
Foreign interference and territorial encroachment
increased under the rule of Nasir al-Din Shah (1848-1896) and his son, Muzaffar
al-Din Shah (1896-1906). Both men contracted huge foreign loans to finance
expensive personal trips to Europe. Neither ruler was able to prevent Britain
and Russia from encroaching into regions of traditional Iranian influence. In
1856 Britain prevented Iran from reasserting control over Herāt, which had been
part of Iran in Safavid times but had been under non-Iranian rule since the
mid-18th century. Britain supported the city's incorporation into Afghanistan,
a country Britain helped create in order to extend eastward the buffer between
its Indian territories and Russia's expanding empire. Britain also extended its
control to other areas of the Persian Gulf during the 19th century. Meanwhile,
by 1881 Russia had completed its conquest of present-day Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan, bringing Russia’s frontier to Iran's northeastern borders and severing
historic Iranian ties to the cities of Bukhara (Bukhoro) and Samarqand. Several
trade concessions by the Iranian government put economic affairs largely under
British control. By the late 19th century, many Iranians believed that their
rulers were beholden to foreign interests.
|
C1
|
The Constitutional Revolution
|
During the early 1900s the idea gradually spread
among Iranians that the only effective way to save the country from government
corruption and foreign manipulation was to make the shah accountable to a
written code of laws. By 1905 this sentiment had grown into a popular movement,
the Constitutional Revolution. Following a year of demonstrations and strikes,
Muzaffar al-Din Shah was forced to agree to the creation of an elected parliament
(the Majlis) and a constitution that limited royal power, established a
parliamentary system of government, and outlined the powers of the legislature.
Britain and Russia, apparently fearing that a
strong Iranian government might act too independently and threaten their
interests in the region, agreed in 1907 to divide Iran into spheres in which
each would exercise exclusive influence. Russia then encouraged Mohammad Ali
Shah, Muzaffar’s successor who resented the constitutional limits on his
authority, to dissolve the Majlis. In 1908 the shah attempted a coup against
the elected government, bombing the Majlis building and dissolving the
assembly. After a year of fighting between supporters of the constitution and
forces loyal to the shah, the constitutionalists prevailed and deposed Mohammad
Ali, who fled to Russia. His young son Ahmad Shah, vowing to respect the
constitution, was installed under a regent.
The restoration of the Majlis and constitutional
government failed to end foreign influence in Iran. In 1901 a British subject
had been granted an exclusive 60-year concession to explore Iran for oil.
Commercially valuable quantities of oil were discovered in southwestern Iran in
1908, and exports began in 1911. In 1914 the British government purchased 51
percent of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (formed in 1909; renamed the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, or AIOC, in 1935), and from then on behaved
increasingly like a sovereign power in southwestern Iran. Meanwhile, in 1910
Russia assisted Mohammad Ali Shah in an invasion of Iran and an unsuccessful
attempt to overthrow the government. The following year, Russia occupied Tabrīz
and forced the Majlis to dismiss American financial advisor William Morgan
Shuster, whom the Majlis had invited to Iran to reorganize the national
finances; Shuster’s reforms strengthened Iran but threatened Russian and
British interests.
|
C2
|
World War I and Its Aftermath
|
During World War I (1914-1918), Britain and
Russia, who were allies, launched attacks from Iran against the Ottoman Empire,
which was allied with Germany. Although Iran proclaimed neutrality in the war,
several battles were fought in western Iran between Russian and Ottoman forces.
These battles destroyed many villages, killed several hundred Iranian civilians,
and caused near-famine conditions that probably caused the death of several
thousand more. The inability of the Iranian government to protect the country
provoked rebellions and autonomy movements in northern Iran between 1915 and
1921. The Russian revolutions of 1917 led Russia to withdraw from Iran. The new
revolutionary government also forgave all debts that Iran owed to Russia.
Meanwhile, in 1919 Britain induced the Iranian
prime minister to sign a treaty giving Britain substantial political, economic,
and military control over Iran. This agreement would have made Iran a virtual
protectorate of Britain, and it aroused the anger of Iranian nationalists.
Opposition to the treaty in newspapers and popular demonstrations dissuaded
successive governments from submitting it to the Majlis for ratification. By
1921 both Britain and Iran had let the draft treaty quietly die.
|
D
|
Reza Shah Pahlavi
|
The continuing political strife in Iran alarmed many
nationalists, including Reza Khan (later Reza Shah Pahlavi), an officer in
Iran’s only military force, the Cossack Brigade. Joining a newspaper publisher
known for his admiration of British political institutions, Reza Khan used his
troops in 1921 to support a coup against the government. Within four years he
had established himself as the most powerful person in the country by
suppressing rebellions and establishing order. In 1925 a specially convened
assembly deposed Ahmad Shah, the last ruler of the Qajar dynasty, and named
Reza Khan, who earlier had adopted the surname Pahlavi, as the new shah.
Reza Shah had ambitious plans for what he called
the modernization of Iran. These included developing large-scale industries,
implementing major infrastructure projects, building a cross-country railroad
system, establishing a national public education system, reforming the
judiciary, and improving health care. He believed only a strong, centralized
government managed by educated personnel could carry out his plans. He sent
hundreds of Iranians, including his own son, to Europe for training. Between
1925 and 1941 Reza Shah’s numerous development projects transformed Iran.
Industrialization, urbanization, and public education progressed rapidly, and
new social classes—a professional middle class and an industrial working
class—emerged. However, by the mid-1930s Reza Shah's dictatorial style of rule,
including the harsh and arbitrary treatment of his opponents and restrictions
on the press, caused increasing dissatisfaction in Iran.
Throughout his reign, Reza Shah tried to avoid
involvement with Britain and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR;
formed from the Russian Empire in 1922). Although many of his development projects
required foreign technical expertise, he tried to avoid awarding contracts to
British and Soviet companies, believing—as did most Iranians—that this would
open the way for their governments to exercise influence in Iran. Although
Britain, through its ownership of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, controlled all
of Iran's oil resources, Reza Shah preferred to obtain technical assistance
from France, Germany, Italy, and other European countries. This created
problems for Iran after 1939, when Britain and Germany became enemies in World
War II. Although Reza Shah proclaimed Iran's neutrality, Britain insisted that
the German engineers and technicians in Iran were spies with missions to
sabotage British oil facilities in southwestern Iran. Britain demanded that
Iran expel all German citizens, but Reza Shah refused, claiming this would
adversely impact his development projects.
|
E
|
World War II and Its Aftermath
|
Following Germany's invasion of the USSR in June 1941,
Britain and the Soviet Union became allies. Both turned their attention to
Iran. In addition to their suspicions about the role of German technicians in
Iran, Britain and the USSR saw the newly opened Trans-Iranian Railroad as an
attractive route for transporting supplies from the Persian Gulf to the Soviet
Caucasus region. However, Iran's neutrality ruled out this option. In August
1941, after Reza Shah again refused to expel all German nationals, Britain and
the USSR invaded Iran. They swiftly defeated the Iranian army, arrested Reza
Shah and sent him into exile, and took control of Iran's communications and
coveted railroad. In 1942 the United States, an ally of Britain and the USSR
during the war, sent a military force to Iran to help maintain and operate
sections of the railroad.
The British and Soviet authorities allowed Reza
Shah's system of political and press repression to collapse and constitutional
government to evolve with minimal interference. They permitted Reza Shah's son,
Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, to succeed to the throne after he promised to reign
as a constitutional monarch. In January 1942 the two occupying powers signed an
agreement with Iran to respect Iran's independence and to withdraw their troops
from the country within six months of the war’s end. A U.S.-sponsored agreement
at the 1943 Tehrān Conference reaffirmed this commitment. In late 1945,
however, the USSR refused to announce a timetable for its withdrawal from
Iran's northwestern provinces of East Azerbaijan and West Azerbaijan, where
Soviet-supported autonomy movements had developed. Although the USSR withdrew
its troops in May 1946, tensions continued for several months. The dispute,
which became known as the Azerbaijan crisis, was the first case to be brought
before the Security Council of the United Nations. This episode is considered
one of the precipitating events of the emerging Cold War, the postwar rivalry
between the United States and its allies and the USSR and its allies.
Meanwhile, Iran's political system became increasingly
open. Political parties soon developed, and the 1944 Majlis elections were the
first genuinely competitive elections in more than 20 years. Reformist parties
were determined to prevent a return to authoritarian rule by the monarchy,
while parties opposed to economic and social reforms tended to ally themselves
with the shah. Foreign intervention remained a sensitive issue for all parties.
Reformists accused conservative politicians of collaborating with foreigners to
preserve their privileges. With foreign troops withdrawn and the Azerbaijan
crisis resolved, British control of Iran's oil fields became the central issue
regarding foreign intervention. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC), which was
owned by the British government, continued to produce and market all Iranian oil
under the terms of the 1901 concession. The AIOC provided a modest royalty
payment, which was only a fraction of its annual profits, to the government of
Iran. As early as the 1930s, some Iranians began advocating the nationalization
of the country's oil fields; after 1946, this effort developed into a major
popular movement.
|
F
|
Mosaddeq and Oil Nationalization
|
In the mid-1940s Mohammad Mosaddeq, an Iranian
statesman and a member of the Majlis, emerged as the leader of the oil nationalization
movement. This movement sought to transfer control over the oil industry from
foreign-run companies to the Iranian government. Throughout his political
career, Mosaddeq consistently advocated three goals: to free Iran of foreign
intervention, to ensure that the shah remained a democratic monarch and not a
dictator, and to implement social reforms. He believed ending foreign
interference was a prerequisite for success in other areas, and he was
convinced that as long as the AIOC controlled Iran's most important natural
resource, foreign influence was inevitable. Beginning in 1945 he led a
successful campaign to deny the Soviet Union an oil concession in northern
Iran. Although he resisted joining political parties, Mosaddeq agreed in 1949
to head the National Front, a coalition of several parties that supported oil
nationalization. Within a year the National Front had members in cities and
towns throughout the country and had become adept at organizing mass political
rallies.
Conservative political groups, backed by the shah, opposed
nationalizing the AIOC, partly because they believed such a course would cause
irreparable harm to relations with Britain and partly because they distrusted
Mosaddeq's populism. However, as the nationalization movement grew, fewer and
fewer politicians openly challenged Mosaddeq on the oil issue. In an effort to
forestall nationalization, the shah appointed military officer Ali Razmara as
prime minister in 1950. This move increased the scale of demonstrations in favor
of nationalization and against a government that increasingly was denounced as
a puppet of foreign interests. Razmara was assassinated in 1951 after only a
few months in office, and the more militant supporters of nationalization
applauded his death. Sensing the popular mood, the Majlis passed a bill
nationalizing the AIOC, then took the unprecedented step of appointing Mosaddeq
prime minister over the shah's objections.
In response to these events, Britain enforced
a blockade on oil exports from Iran, a move that deprived Iran of foreign
exchange. Although Iran had not relied on oil revenues prior to 1951,
Mosaddeq's development budget anticipated this income; its absence severely
hindered efforts to stimulate the economy and implement social reforms. Attempts
to secure foreign financial assistance proved unsuccessful because most
countries and international financial institutions feared offending Britain.
The escalating crisis also discouraged private investment inside Iran.
Mosaddeq, like many other Iranian political leaders, hoped the United States
would intervene to resolve the crisis. Initially, the United States tried to
mediate a compromise. By 1952 it had persuaded Britain to accept the principle
of oil nationalization. However, the various diplomatic efforts ultimately
failed to resolve the dispute.
In early 1953, when a new administration came
to power in the United States, U.S. policy toward Iran began to change. The
United States now became sympathetic to British arguments that Mosaddeq's
government was causing instability that could be exploited by the USSR to
expand its regional influence. As the Cold War escalated, world superpowers
began to interpret political developments around the globe as “wins” or
“losses” for the U.S.-led Western bloc and the Soviet-led Eastern bloc.
Although Mosaddeq advocated Iranian neutrality in the Cold War conflict,
neither side wanted to “lose” Iran. Consequently, the United States decided to
use its Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to help overthrow Mosaddeq. By this
time, many conservative politicians in Iran, some senior military officers, and
the shah were prepared to work with the CIA to bring down the Mosaddeq
government. The coup, carried out in August 1953, failed initially, and the
shah was forced to flee the country. After several days of street fighting in
Tehrān, which were instigated by the CIA, army officers loyal to the shah
gained the upper hand. Mosaddeq was arrested, and the shah returned in triumph.
The Iranian government restored relations with Britain
in 1953 and concluded a new oil agreement the following year. Under the new
agreement, the concession formerly held by the AIOC passed to a consortium of
British, Dutch, French, and U.S. oil companies; this consortium was to share
the profits of oil operations in Iran with the Iranian government. Although the
agreement increased Iran’s share of the oil profits, production levels and sale
price remained under foreign control.
|
G
|
Mohammad Reza Shah’s Consolidation of Power
|
Although he had succeeded his father as shah in
1941, prior to 1953 Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi had been overshadowed by
Mosaddeq and other politicians and seemed destined to remain a passive,
constitutional monarch. Following the coup, however, he moved to consolidate
power in his own hands. With the help of the military and later a secret
police, the Savak, the shah created a centralized, authoritarian regime. He
suppressed opposition by former National Front supporters and Communists,
tightly controlled legislative elections, and appointed a succession of prime
ministers loyal to him. In 1961 the shah dissolved the Majlis, instructing the
prime minister to rule by decree until new elections were held.
Initially, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi did not demonstrate
the same enthusiasm for development and reform programs that his father had
shown. His early reforms were undertaken only with prodding from the United
States, which believed that dissatisfied Iranian peasants were susceptible to
influence by local agents of the USSR. In the early 1960s more than 60 percent
of Iran’s inhabitants were sharecroppers who received a subsistence share
(usually 20 percent) of the harvest from their landlords. A land reform program
implemented between 1962 and 1971 required landlords to sell most of their land
to the government, which then resold it to the peasants. Although widely
promoted as a major rural reform effort, only half of the peasants obtained any
land under the program, and about three-quarters of those receiving land got
less than 6 hectares (15 acres).
Mohammad Reza Shah took more interest in industrial
and public works projects, and between 1963 and 1978 numerous development
schemes contributed to an increase in industrialization and urbanization. The
shah presented his program as an integral part of a wider reform effort known
as the White Revolution, initiated to prevent a Red, or Communist, revolution
from originating at the grass roots level. The middle class expanded, but much
of the urban growth resulted from the migration of poor villagers seeking city
jobs. Consequently, slums proliferated on the outskirts of cities. Government
policy focused on the creation of modern industrial facilities but neglected
the development of social services. The construction activity under the White
Revolution stimulated expectations of political and social change. Oil revenues
tripled after 1973 due to higher prices and increased sales, providing ready
funding for the shah’s programs. However, economic success only caused the shah’s
regime to become more repressive as his confidence in his rule grew.
|
H
|
Growing Opposition to the Shah
|
Because of his collaboration with the CIA to
overthrow Mosaddeq in 1953, the shah was never able to overcome a popular perception
that he was merely a tool for foreign interests. Mosaddeq’s ouster had shocked
the nation, and over the years his image as a national hero had grown stronger
despite the fact that the shah’s government had banned any publications that
mentioned his name. Furthermore, because of the CIA’s role in the overthrow,
most Iranians saw the United States, even more so than Britain or the USSR, as
a threat to Iran's national interests. Strong relations between the United
States and Iran at the official level, especially an alliance whereby the
United States assisted in the buildup of Iran's military, fed the public’s
fears. In the early 1960s the shah's government drafted legislation granting
diplomatic status to U.S. military personnel stationed in Iran. Nationalists
denounced the bill as a reversion to the detested extraterritorial legal
privileges accorded to British and Russian citizens in Iran before 1925.
One of the shah’s most vocal opponents was the
leading Shia scholar, or ayatollah, Ruhollah Khomeini. Khomeini was
arrested in 1962 after publicly speaking out against the bill, and his arrest
instantly elevated him to the status of national hero. Although released the
following year, he refused to keep silent. He instead broadened his criticisms
of the regime to include corruption, violations of the constitution, and
rigging of elections. Khomeini’s second arrest in June 1963 led to three days
of rioting in many Iranian cities; the military suppressed the riots only after
more than 600 people had been killed and more than 2,000 injured. Fearing that
Khomeini would assume martyr status if he were kept in prison or executed for
treason, the shah exiled him to Turkey in 1964. Khomeini eventually settled in
the Shia theological center of An Najaf in Iraq. From there he maintained
regular contact with his former students in the Iranian city of Qum. These
students formed the nucleus of a covert anti-shah movement that was growing
among the clergy. In 1971 Khomeini published a book, Velayat-e faqih,
that provided the religious justification for an Islamic government in Iran.
The shah also failed to win mass support among
the secular middle class of professionals, bureaucrats, teachers, and
intellectuals. This social group, created as a result of his father’s reforms
and expanded during the 1960s and 1970s due to the shah’s own development
plans, tended to be highly nationalistic and looked back nostalgically to the
Mosaddeq period as an era of genuine democracy. Like the clergy and the
religiously inclined traditional middle class of merchants and artisans, the
secular middle class resented the lack of meaningful political participation
and the close ties the shah had established with the United States. They
criticized the shah's promotion of Iran beginning in the late 1960s as
America’s security pillar in the Persian Gulf region. Despite their commonality
of views, the secular and religious groups had distrusted one another in the
1950s and 1960s. The growing severity of political repression during the 1970s
gradually brought them closer together, however, and by 1977 various secular
and religious opposition movements were prepared to cooperate against the
shah's regime.
|
I
|
The Islamic Revolution
|
The spark that ignited the revolution was a
pro-Khomeini demonstration in Qum in January 1978. Police intervened, the
demonstration turned into a riot, and about 70 people were killed before calm
was restored. From his exile in Iraq, Khomeini called upon his followers to
commemorate the victims on the 40th day after their deaths, in accordance with
Iranian mourning customs. In February they held services at mosques throughout
the country, and demonstrations in Tabrīz turned into riots during which more
people were killed. Thus began a cycle of nationwide mourning services every 40
days, some of which turned violent and resulted in more fatalities. By late
summer, when it became clear that the government was losing control of the
streets, the shah imposed martial law on Tehrān and 11 other cities. This move
only escalated tensions. Employees in different industries and offices began
striking to protest martial law, and within six weeks a general strike had
paralyzed the economy, including the vital oil sector.
By October the strikes and demonstrations were
becoming a unified revolutionary movement. From the security of his exile in
Iraq, Khomeini continued to denounce the corruption and injustices of the
shah's regime, as well as its dependence on the United States. His sermons were
recorded, duplicated on thousands of cassette tapes, and smuggled into Iran.
The tapes appealed equally to religious Iranians and members of the secular
middle class. Alarmed by Khomeini’s growing influence, the shah persuaded the
Iraqi government to expel him. Khomeini immediately found asylum in France,
where access to the international media made it even easier for him to
communicate with supporters in Iran. In November the shah realized that the
army could not indefinitely contain the mass movement, and he began making
plans for his departure from Iran. He left the country in mid-January 1979. Two
weeks later, Khomeini returned to Iran in triumph after more than 14 years in
exile. On February 11, 1979, the royalist government was overthrown, and in a
referendum on April 1 Iranians voted overwhelmingly to establish an Islamic
republic.
|
J
|
Islamic Republic
|
In February 1979 Khomeini asked Mehdi Bazargan to
form a provisional government. By spring the national solidarity that had been
so crucial to the ultimate success of the revolution had begun to erode as
various political groups competed for power and influence. The secular parties
had no leader of comparable stature to Khomeini and soon were marginalized. Of
the many religious groups, the most influential was the Islamic Republican
Party (IRP), formed by former students of Khomeini. Its principal opponents
were two nonclerical religious parties, the moderate Liberation Movement of
Iran, to which Bazargan belonged, and the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MK), which
espoused radical programs for the redistribution of wealth and tended to be
anticlerical.
Bazargan resigned in November 1979 in protest over
the hostage crisis (for more information, see the Hostage Crisis and the
Iran-Iraq War section of this article). In December voters approved a new
constitution. Khomeini, as faqih, or supreme spiritual leader, held the highest
authority in the country. In January 1980 voters elected Abolhassan Bani-Sadr
as the first president of the republic. Following parliamentary elections in
March, the Majlis and Bani-Sadr could not agree on a presidential nominee for
prime minister. In August Bani-Sadr reluctantly accepted the IRP candidate,
Mohammad Ali Rajai, as prime minister. The president and prime minister clashed
often, and in June 1981 the Majlis dismissed Bani-Sadr. Rajai subsequently was
elected president and chose IRP head Mohammad-Javad Bahonar as his prime
minister.
In June 1981 the MK, which had clashed
frequently with the IRP throughout 1980, launched an armed uprising against the
IRP-dominated government. The MK succeeded in killing more than 70 top IRP
leaders by bombing the party headquarters in late June. Two months later the MK
assassinated both Rajai and Bahonar. By mid-1982 the government had suppressed
the party through severe measures that included mass arrests and summary
executions of more than 7,000 suspected MK members. In 1983 the government
dissolved the communist Tudeh Party, leaving the Liberation Movement of Iran as
the only officially recognized party in opposition to the IRP. As internal
political stability returned, distinct ideological factions emerged within the
IRP. These internal rifts eventually would cause the IRP to dissolve itself in
1987. Meanwhile, elections in October 1981 brought Seyed Ali Khamenei, one of
the founders of the IRP and a member of the Majlis, to power as president.
|
J1
|
The Hostage Crisis and the Iran-Iraq War
|
Foreign relations played at least as large a role as
internal politics in shaping the new republic. The movement against the shah
had also been a movement against U.S. involvement in Iran. From the outset the
provisional government announced that Iran would no longer serve American
interests in the Persian Gulf and would discontinue all military agreements
with the United States. However, Khomeini and most government ministers feared
that the United States would intervene again, as it had in 1953, to restore the
shah to power. After the shah was allowed entry into the United States in
October 1979, a group of Iranian students stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehrān
and took 66 Americans hostage. The United States responded by freezing Iranian
assets held by U.S. banks and imposing trade sanctions against Iran. Thirteen
hostages were soon released, but the students announced that the remaining 53
would be released only when the United States apologized for its support of the
shah and sent him back to Iran to stand trial for his crimes. They also demanded
the return of billions of dollars they believed the shah had hoarded abroad.
When Khomeini endorsed the students' actions, the hostage crisis ensued. After
nearly 15 months, a settlement mediated by Algeria enabled the hostages to
return to the United States, which agreed to participate in a tribunal based in
The Hague, The Netherlands, to settle claims of U.S. citizens and companies
against Iran. The crisis resulted in a complete severing of the once close
relationship between the Iranian and U.S. governments and a deep mutual
suspicion of each other's international behavior.
In September 1980, in the midst of the hostage
crisis, Iraq launched a surprise invasion of Iran. Iraq wanted to prevent the
new Iranian republic from inciting Iraqi Shias to rise up against the secular
Iraqi regime (see Iran-Iraq War). The war, which continued until August
1988 when both states accepted the terms of a UN-mediated cease-fire agreement,
took a toll on Iran. More than 170,000 Iranians were killed, up to 700,000 were
injured, 18,000 men were still listed as missing in action eight years after
the cease-fire, and nearly 2.5 million civilians fled from the main battle
areas in the western part of the country. Industrial plants, businesses, homes,
public buildings, and infrastructure suffered cumulative damages in excess of
$30 billion. The cities of Ābādān and Khorramshahr, as well as several towns
and hundreds of villages, were virtually destroyed. Vital oil production and
export facilities sustained heavy and repeated damage. At the same time, the
war created a sense of national solidarity that helped the new government
consolidate power, and it stimulated the growth of numerous small industries
producing goods for the war effort. During the war, Iran gave refuge to more than
200,000 Iraqi nationals who fled from their own government and absorbed more
than a million Afghan refugees who fled following the 1979 Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan.
|
J2
|
Economic and Political Developments
|
After the end of hostilities with Iraq, the
government of Iran implemented a series of five-year plans to promote economic
reconstruction and growth. Under these plans, the government has rebuilt the
war-devastated regions in the west and improved or built infrastructure
projects such as dams, electric power plants, hospitals, highways, port
facilities, railroads, and schools. Since 1989 there has been intense political
controversy over the government's role in economic development. In general,
politicians who favor a strong government role in national economic planning
have controlled the executive branch. The Majlis often has opposed such
government policies, either out of a conviction that the plans ignored the
lower classes or out of a desire to promote the interests of private business.
The death of Khomeini in 1989 may have contributed
to the competition among the political elite. During the initial ten years of
the Islamic republic, Khomeini did not involve himself in routine governmental
affairs but rather served as an arbiter who suggested compromises when the
executive and legislative branches could not agree. Because of his charisma and
authority as leader of the revolution, politicians always deferred to his
suggestions. In the absence of a political figure of comparable stature, political
debates became more protracted, and compromises were more difficult to achieve.
The Assembly of Experts chose Khamenei, who would
complete his second term as president that year, to succeed Khomeini as faqih.
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who had been speaker of the Majlis from 1980 to
1989, won the 1989 presidential election and was reelected in 1993. As
president, Rafsanjani supported the “alternative thought” movement, which
advocated official tolerance of more diverse cultural and political views,
especially in the press. Mohammed Khatami, who served as minister of Islamic
guidance and culture under both Khamenei and Rafsanjani beginning in 1982,
crafted this policy. In 1992, after a more conservative Majlis was elected,
Khatami resigned, but he continued to serve as cultural adviser to President
Rafsanjani. Khatami's opposition to censorship and arbitrary government had
wide popular appeal that helped him win almost 70 percent of the vote in the
1997 presidential election. As president, Khatami continued to advocate
political reform and freedom of the press as essential for the creation of a
civil society. Khatami’s liberal policies met with opposition from
conservatives who distrusted popular government. The intense political
competition between liberals and conservatives was reflected in the press and
in street demonstrations. In 1998 two liberal politicians and three liberal
writers were killed in separate incidents that the Khatami government blamed on
conservatives in the Ministry of Information.
In February 2000 Iranian voters favored pro-reform
candidates in elections to the Majlis. The elections appeared to provide a
popular mandate for Khatami’s reform efforts. Accordingly, Khatami was
reelected president in June 2001 by an overwhelming margin. The conservative
elements of the government responded by blocking Khatami’s inauguration until
the Majlis approved two conservative nominees to the Council of Guardians.
A pro-Khatami reform coalition formed a majority in
the Majlis, but this coalition consisted of 18 separate political parties
that could not agree on a wide range of cultural and economic
policies. Thus, during its four-year tenure, the reform
coalition failed to enact legislation demanded by a majority of Iranians.
In addition, all the parties in the reform coalition shared a deep
distrust of the people and failed to broaden their essentially elitist
parties into genuine mass political organizations. Iranians demonstrated their
disillusionment with the reform coalition during local council elections held
in the winter of 2003. Less than 15 percent of those eligible
voted in Tehrān, and nationwide, only 30 percent of the electorate bothered to
vote. Candidates backed by the reform parties were defeated all over the country.
Subsequently, in January 2004 the Council of Guardians
disqualified 2,600 out of 8,150 candidates who had registered to run for the
290 seats in the Majlis in the February elections. The reform coalition in
the Majlis, including 87 incumbents who had been disqualified, attracted
international media attention by characterizing the disqualifications as a
setback for democracy.
Under pressure from Khatami and the reformers,
Khamenei tried to intervene by advising the Council of Guardians that its
procedures for reviewing candidates might be flawed if more than 40
percent of the candidates were being disqualified. The Council of
Guardians eventually reinstated about 1,150 candidates, but none of the
major reform politicians who had been disqualified were reinstated.
Despite the disqualifications and calls for a boycott by
several reform parties, at least one reform candidate, and in
many constituencies several, contested each of the 290 seats. Most
reformers obtained less than 10 percent of the vote, however. Consequently, a
majority of the newly elected Majlis deputies were affiliated with one of the
conservative parties or were independents. Ironically, this new Majlis was
expected to be more receptive to economic and educational legislation designed
to help low-income families.
Seven candidates—three conservatives, three reformers, and
one moderate—contested Iran’s presidential elections in June 2005, but none
received a majority of votes, requiring a runoff between the two leading
vote-getters, former president Rafsanjani and the mayor of Tehrān, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. A member of the Developers Party, which opposes the free market
economic policies advocated by Rafsanjani and the reformers, Ahmadinejad was
regarded as the conservative candidate. But he ran a populist campaign that
underscored Iran’s high unemployment and the growing gap between rich and poor
as a result of economic programs enacted between 1997 and 2004. Ahmadinejad
called for restoring the spirit of the 1979 revolution by returning to its
ideals of social justice. He also called for using Iran’s oil revenues to
alleviate the plight of the poor and to benefit middle and low income groups,
rather than the wealthy. Ahmadinejad claimed the wealthy consumed most of these
revenues in the form of government contracts given out with no accountability
or oversight. Known for his loyalty to Khamenei, Ahmadinejad won handily with
more than 60 percent of the vote.
In parliamentary elections in March 2008, however, a
potential challenge appeared to rise against forces allied with Ahmadinejad.
The challenge came from among conservatives, who reportedly criticized the
president’s handling of economic problems, particularly rising gasoline prices
and shortages. The Council of Guardians had effectively barred most reformers from
running in the elections, which resulted in protests from abroad. Ahmadinejad’s
allies won the most parliamentary seats but conservative critics of the
president won the second largest bloc of seats, followed by the reformers.
Political observers said the results of the parliamentary vote signaled that
Ahmadinejad might have a difficult time winning reelection in 2009.
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J3
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Foreign Relations
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Since the end of the Iran-Iraq War, Iran
has also sought to improve its foreign relations. The protracted hostage crisis
with the United States had brought international disfavor upon the Islamic
republic. As a result, it had received little international support when Iraq
invaded in 1980 or during the long years of war. Furthermore, in 1989 Khomeini
issued a fatwa that absolved of sin anyone who killed British novelist Salman
Rushdie, whose book The Satanic Verses (1988) many Muslims considered
offensive to Islam. The fatwa, which Rafsanjani said could not be revoked,
strained relations with Britain and other Western nations. Nevertheless, Iran
achieved normal relations with most countries under Rafsanjani and Khatami,
although there were intermittent periods of political tension with European
countries such as Britain, France, and Germany. In 1998 Iran’s foreign minister
signed an agreement promising that the Iranian government would not implement
the fatwa. This prompted Britain to restore full diplomatic relations with
Iran. However, many conservative Iranian politicians insisted the fatwa was
still valid, and many organizations within Iran continued to offer large
bounties on Rushdie’s life.
Iran's leaders continued to distrust the United States,
which they perceived as hostile to their revolution. Likewise, the United
States remained deeply suspicious of Iran's regional intentions, believing that
Iran was intent on developing nuclear weapons and supported international
terrorism. The two countries had unofficial contacts in the early 1990s but
failed to resolve their differences. In 1993 the United States, viewing Iran as
a threat to U.S. interests in the Middle East, adopted a policy to prevent Iran
from gaining too much regional power. In 1995 the United States banned all U.S.
trade with and investment in Iran, and in 1996 it drafted a law placing
sanctions on non-U.S. companies that invest in Iran. The 1996 legislation
became a source of friction between the United States and its own allies. Iran
exploited the discord to expand its economic ties with Canada, European Union
countries, and Japan.
Khatami’s election as president in 1997 seemed to offer
a chance for improved relations between the United States and Iran. In 1998 the
United States began to encourage nonofficial cultural exchange programs with
Iran and cooperation with the Islamic republic on international issues of
mutual interest, such as finding peaceful compromises for the civil war in
Afghanistan. United States-Iran relations seemed to improve temporarily after
the September 11 terrorist attacks of 2001, which killed nearly 3,000 people in
the eastern United States. Iran encouraged its main allies in Afghanistan to
cooperate with the United States in overthrowing the Taliban regime of
Afghanistan, which had supported the al-Qaeda terrorist network responsible for
the attacks. Iran also cooperated in setting up a new Afghan government.
However, Iran and the United States continued to have serious diplomatic
differences regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In January 2002 Israel
intercepted a ship carrying Iranian weapons to Palestinians fighting Israel in
the Gaza Strip. The U.S. administration of President George W. Bush
subsequently singled out Iran as part of an “axis of evil,” alleging that Iran
supported terrorist groups such as Hamas and also was pursuing nuclear weapons
aggressively.
Following the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003
and the election of a new parliamentary government there, Iran began to enjoy
improved relations with the Iraqi government. Several leaders of the new
government, in which Shia religious parties held a parliamentary majority, had
lived in exile in Iran during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988). The improved
relations became most visible when Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who
is also a Shia Muslim as are most Iranians, was warmly welcomed during a state
visit to Baghdād, the Iraqi capital, in March 2008, the first such visit since
the war between the two countries. The warm relations between the Iranian and
Iraqi governments alarmed many in U.S. ruling circles. U.S. military commanders
in Iraq accused Iran of providing sophisticated explosive devices to insurgents
battling U.S. forces in Iraq, a charge that Iran denied. See also U.S.-Iraq
War.
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J4
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Iran’s Nuclear Program
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In December 2003 Iran signed an additional protocol
to the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, giving the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) greater authority and broader access to inspect Iran’s
nuclear sites. The previous month the IAEA had noted with “gravest concern”
that Iran had enriched uranium and separated plutonium, both of which are used
in the making of nuclear weapons, at previously undisclosed facilities. The
additional protocol was expected to give the international community greater
assurance that Iran could not develop nuclear weapons secretly.
In 2005 attention centered on Iran’s
uranium-enrichment facilities. The 1968 treaty guarantees member nations the right
to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes, such as for use in nuclear reactors,
but highly enriched uranium can be used to make nuclear weapons and is
prohibited by the treaty. In late 2004 the European Union (EU) sought to
negotiate an agreement with Iran. Iran agreed to suspend temporarily its
uranium-enrichment activities, pending a broader agreement under which the EU
would provide economic aid and concessions to Iran in return for a permanent
suspension of uranium enrichment. Negotiations were held during the first half
of 2005, but no agreement was reached. See also Nuclear Weapons
Proliferation.
Iran announced in February 2006 that it had resumed
its uranium-enrichment activities. In April 2006 Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who had been elected in June 2005, revealed that Iran had
successfully enriched uranium to 3.5 percent, making it usable only for nuclear
power reactors. The achievement was regarded as a technical milestone. It was
reached by successfully operating a cascade of 164 gas centrifuges, the devices
used to enrich uranium in the uranium isotope 235 (U-235). U-235 is
fissionable, which means it can produce energy. Nuclear weapons experts said
that on the basis of its latest achievement, even if Iran was intent on
developing an atomic bomb, it could not yet produce sufficient enriched uranium
to manufacture a nuclear weapon. They noted that thousands of centrifuges
operating in a cascade are necessary to enrich uranium in the amount necessary
to make a nuclear bomb and that building such a cascade represented a
significant technical hurdle. Uranium must be enriched in the fissionable
isotope U-235 to more than 90 percent to make an atomic bomb.
An official with Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization
said Iran intended to have 3,000 gas centrifuges operating by March 2007.
Iranian officials also said that Iran would continue to respect the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty and would continue to cooperate with IAEA inspectors to
demonstrate that its nuclear program was for peaceful purposes only. Iran’s
ambassador to the United Nations (UN) said the country did not have a nuclear
weapons program and that Iran’s supreme spiritual leader, Seyed Ali Khamenei,
had issued a decree condemning such weapons.
Nevertheless, the April announcement put Iran on a
collision course with the United States and the European Union, which had urged
Iran to abandon its uranium-enrichment plans. President George W. Bush said the
United States did not want Iran to have “the capacity to make a nuclear
weapon.” The Bush administration’s 2005 national security strategy also
reaffirmed its preemptive military policy and cited Iran as the “single
country” that could pose the biggest threat to the United States.
The Bush administration argued vigorously for the United
Nations Security Council to impose stiff sanctions on Iran. In December 2006
Russia and China, two permanent members of the Council, agreed to a compromise
resolution in which the Security Council imposed limited economic sanctions on
Iran. The resolution banned all countries from supplying Iran with materials or
technology that could be used in a nuclear weapons program or for building
missiles capable of carrying nuclear weapons. It also gave Iran 60 days in
which to cease enriching uranium or else face further sanctions. Iran rejected
the resolution, saying it was being punished for exercising its right to
develop nuclear energy.
In March 2007 the UN Security Council
voted unanimously to tighten sanctions on Iran after a U.S.-led campaign
charged that Iran had failed to cease uranium enrichment and was supplying
weapons to insurgents in Iraq and to Hezbollah and Hamas, which the United
States regards as terrorist organizations. The new sanctions prohibited the
sale or transfer of Iranian weapons to any nation or organization. They also
froze the overseas assets of a number of Iranian citizens and organizations
suspected of involvement in Iran’s nuclear program and its Revolutionary Guard
Corps, Iran’s elite military force. Iran again maintained that its nuclear
program was for peaceful purposes.
Tensions between the United States and Iran
continued throughout 2007. For a brief period the United States Navy stationed
two aircraft carrier battle groups in the Persian Gulf, where they carried out
war exercises. In October the Bush administration took the unusual step of
labeling the Quds Force, an elite unit of Iran’s military, the Revolutionary
Guard Corps, as a terrorist organization. It was the first time in history that
a unit of a nation’s regular military was labeled a terrorist group. The
administration imposed sanctions against the Quds Force, freezing any assets it
might have in the United States. Following the designation, Bush said that it
was very important to prevent Iran from obtaining the “knowledge necessary” to
develop nuclear weapons, warning that a nuclear-armed Iran could lead to World
War III.
Political observers noted that it was the first time the
administration had made a distinction between possessing nuclear weapons and
having “the knowledge” to develop them, an apparent reference to Iran’s success
in linking gas centrifuges for uranium enrichment. Vice President Dick Cheney
seemed to go even further when he said bluntly, “We will not allow Iran to have
a nuclear weapon.” Mohammed ElBaradei, director of the IAEA, urged the Bush
administration to “soften its statements” and give diplomacy a chance to
resolve unanswered questions about Iran’s nuclear program. The IAEA had earlier
issued a report that Iran was operating its uranium-enrichment centrifuges at
below capacity and that it had found no evidence for a nuclear weapons program.
ElBaradei maintained that even if Iran had a secret program, it was still six
to eight years away from developing a nuclear weapon.
The escalating tensions led to a surprise visit to the
capital, Tehrān, by Russia’s president Vladimir Putin in mid-October, the first
visit by a Russian president to Iran since 1943. Putin used the occasion of a
summit meeting of five nations surrounding the Caspian Sea to reject any calls
for the use of military force in the region. All five countries pledged that
they would not allow their territories to be used to launch a military attack
against one another. Both Russia and China, permanent members of the UN
Security Council, initially rejected a call made by France and the United
States for a third round of sanctions against Iran. China has become Iran’s
leading trade partner. Under newly elected president Nicolas Sarkozy, the
French government has joined with the United States in suggesting that military
force might be necessary against Iran.
In December 2007, however, the U.S. intelligence
community reversed its 2005 assessment that Iran had a nuclear weapons program.
Instead, the new assessment by the 16 agencies that make up the intelligence
community, including the Central Intelligence Agency, concluded that Iran had
halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003. The new conclusions were revealed
in the “key judgments” finding on a national intelligence estimate (NIE) report
on Iran’s nuclear capabilities. Among the key judgments was the finding that
the Iranian government’s “decision to halt its nuclear weapons program suggests
it is less determined to develop nuclear weapons than we have been judging
since 2005. Our assessment that the program probably was halted primarily in
response to international pressure suggests Iran may be more vulnerable to
influence on the issue than we judged previously.” The NIE found that if Iran
sought to develop nuclear weapons, it would use uranium enrichment as the means
to do so and would probably not be able to develop such weapons before 2010 or
2013.
The revised NIE assessment followed an IAEA report
in November that concluded Iran was successfully operating 3,000 gas
centrifuges but was not enriching uranium at the level needed to develop a
nuclear weapon. The IAEA called Iran’s cooperation with nuclear inspectors
“reactive” rather than “proactive” and said its knowledge about Iran’s nuclear
program was “diminishing.”
The United States nevertheless continued to
pressure member nations of the UN Security Council to impose additional
sanctions on Iran for its uranium-enrichment program. In March 2008 the
Security Council adopted a compromise resolution that froze the foreign assets
of 13 Iranian companies and imposed a travel ban on five Iranian officials.
Iran appeared to answer the sanctions by announcing the next month that it had
installed an additional 6,000 gas centrifuges at its nuclear complex in Natanz
for a total of 9,000 centrifuges. Some nuclear weapons experts, however,
reported that Iran was having difficulty operating its original 3,000
centrifuges and there was no evidence that it had mastered the technical
difficulties of enriching uranium on an industrial scale.



