Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Iran Revolution Essays - Iranian Revolution, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
  Iran Revolution    Iran is a country located in the Middle East. The main source   of income for the country is oil, the one object that had greatly  influenced its history. Iran's present government is run as an Islamic   Republic. A president, cabinet, judicial branch, and Majilesor or   legislative branch, makes up the governmental positions. A revolution   that overthrew the monarch, which was set in 1930, lasted over 15   years. Crane Brinton's book, An Anatomy of a Revolution, explains set   of four steps a country experiences when a revolution occurs.   Symptoms, rising fever, crisis, and convalescence are the steps that   occur. The Iranian Revolution followed the four steps in Crane   Brinton's theory, symptoms, rising fever, crisis, and convalescence   occurred.  Numerous symptoms led to the crumbling downfall of Reza Shah   Pahlavi, ruler of Iran until 1978. One of these symptoms is rising   expectations which can be seen during the 1960's and 70's. The rich   Shah cleared the way for the land reform law, enacted in 1962. The   land minority had to give up its land to the government, and among   those stripped of land, were the Shi'ah Muslims. Iran's power   structure was radically changed in a program termed the White   Revolution. On January 26, 1963, the White Revolution was endorsed by   the nation. By 1971, when land distribution ended, about 2,500,000   families of the farm population benefited from the reforms. From   1960-72 the percentage of owner occupied farmland in Iran rose from  26 to 78 percent. Per capita income rose from $176 in 1960 to $2,500   in 1978. From 1970-77 the gross national product was reported to   increase to an annual rate of 7.8% (Iran 896). As a result of this   thriving economy, the income gap rapidly widened. Exclusive homes,   extravagant restaurants, and night clubs and streets loaded with   expensive automobiles served as daily reminders of a growing income   spread. This created a perfect environment for many conflicts to arise   between the classes.  Iran's elite class consisted of wealthy land owners,   intelligencia, military leaders, politicians, and diplomats. The Elite   continued to support the monarchy and the Shah. The peasants were   victim of unfulfilled political expectations, surveillance by the   secret police, and the severe social and economic problems that   resulted from modernization. The middle class favored socialism over   capitalism, because capitalism in their view supported the elite, and   does not benefit the lower classes. The middle class was the most   changeable element in the group, because they enjoyed some of the   privileges of the elite, which they would like to protect. At the same   time, they believed that they had been cheated by the elite out of   their share of the industrialization wealth (Orwin 43).  About this time, the middle class, which included students,   technocrats, and modernist professionals, became discontent with  the economy. The key event should have further stabilized the royal   dictatorship, but the increase in oil prices and oil income beginning   in 1974 caused extreme inflation. This was due to the investment   strategy followed by the Shah, which led to a spectacular 42% growth   rate in 1974. (Cottam 14). And because of the Shah's support structure   which enabled the new rich to benefit from inflation, the government   effort to deal with inflation was aimless. Poor Iranians and Iranians   with a fixed income suffered major losses in real income. Better   standards of living were no longer visible. Thus, the majority of the   Iranian people developed a revolutionary predisposition.  As the middle class became discontent in Iran throughout the   1970's, the desertion of intellectuals could be found in great excess.   Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini represented much of the discontent of the   religious sector of Iran. For speaking out against the Shah's   autocratic rule, Khomeini was exiled to Turkey in 1963. In 1965,   Khomeini moved to Iraq where he became the central spokesperson for   expatriate opposition to the Shah. On October 6, 1978, Khomeini was   expelled from Iraq and moved to Paris, where he was accessible to a   larger body of opposition forces. He was also accessible to the   Western Press. Khomeini preached that he would displace the Shah and   expel the foreigners. He also said he would enforce religious and  traditional values, and redirect Iran's wealth away from large   industrialization schemes and toward reforms needed by the common   people.  Throughout the 1970's, Khomeini gained tremendous    
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