Ill-fated Prime Minister "Hoveyda"

Jun 24, 2005
1,442
0
#1
"A patriot with ideas and an orchid..."


http://www.iranian.com/Books/2000/June/Hoveyda/prison.html
I Believe after Dr. M. Mossadegh, he cared about Iran dearly....He was "Left-Behind" to DIE ..Why?.....Shah's 747 Plane did not have an empty seat ???....
God rest his soul....My heart goes out to him...He died for Absolutly NO REASON...He never harmed a soul..... :sad3:


[SIZE=+3]The fall guy
[/SIZE]

June 5, 2000
The Iranian
Excerpt from Chpater One of Abbas Milani's The Persian Sphinx: Amir-Abbas Hoveyda and the Riddle of the Iranian Revolution (2000, Mage Publishers). Hoveyda photos here
All his life, books had been his solace and passion, his sanctuary from the ordeals of the mundane. When he was free, history was the map by which he navigated the treacherous waters of what he once called the "Byzantine" world of Iranian politics. Now imprisoned, a captive of the Islamic Revolution, the past would become a portent of his future.
By March 28, 1979, Amir Abbas Hoveyda, who had served the shah of Iran as prime minister for almost thirteen years, had been in jail for some five months. On November 8, 1978, in an attempt to appease the rapidly rising tide of revolutionary fervor, the shah had ordered Hoveyda's arrest. There was no appeasing the tide, however, and fearing for their lives, the royal family fled Iran on January 16, 1979, with little realistic hope of ever returning. They took with them much of their personal belongings, including the royal dog. Their long-trusted prime minister, however, they chose to leave behind.
On the morning of February 11, 1979, when the revolutionary tide-or squall-finally swept to power, Hoveyda was left all but unattended in his royal prison. In the chaos of the early hours his guards-all agents of the much-despised secret police, known by its Persian acronym of savak-had fled, fearing for their own safety. Rather than risk an escape attempt himself, Hoveyda chose to surrender to the new Islamic victors. He thus gained the ill fortune of being the highest-ranking official and the only prime minister of the ancien régime to fall into the hands of the Islamic revolutionaries. Five other former prime ministers-Ali Amini, Jafar Sharif-Emami, Jamshid Amouzegar, Gholam-Reza Azhari, and Shapour Bakhtiar-succeeded in fleeing the country on, or around, the eve of the revolution.
Hoveyda spent most of his jail time reading, but on that cold March day, the only visible cot-side volume was an ornate, gilded copy of Islam's holy book. He used the Koran not so much for spiritual guidance but as a source book to prepare his defense for what he had been led to believe would be his public trial in an Islamic court of law.
Sometimes Hoveyda read romans policiers, as well. Since his youth, he had been an avid mystery reader. He preferred the French Série Noir, a specialized imprint in the tradition of American "hard-boiled" detective fiction by writers like Dashiell Hammett or Raymond Chandler. Recently, Hoveyda had asked his cousin, Fereshteh Ensha, for books about the French and the Chinese revolutions. The dreaded "revolutionary terror" he read about in those books, a terror at once self-righteous, unbending, and vengeful, was no longer a mere abstraction. Since the fateful day when he had surrendered to the new revolutionary forces, that terror, this time in an Islamic guise, had been shaping, and haunting, his daily life.
* * *
In his salad days, Amir Abbas Hoveyda wore an orchid on the lapel of his dapper tailored suits. Francesco Smalto, an Italian couturier and tailor to the shah of Iran, was also Hoveyda's tailor for many years. Lest he appear impertinent to the shah, who in the words of one observer suffered from "narcissistic grandiosity," Hoveyda remained discreet about his use of the royal tailor. Less discreet were his colorful ties, chosen usually to match the color of the orchid he wore.
Now he was mostly bald and wore a dark Nelson cap from which some strands of white disheveled hair escaped. He sat in a dark, rumpled shirt and matching pants. Over the shirt, he wore a yellow worn-out sweater. A pair of white, ankle-high athletic socks covered his feet, exposing his shinbones when he sat down. His cane stood next to the cot. He had first begun to use the cane in the summer of 1964, after a car accident left him with a damaged knee and fractured hip. He continued to carry it long after his rehabilitation. In the often-cynical world of Iranian politics, many saw the cane as more form than function, although since the accident, Hoveyda was often worried about losing his balance according to his physician. His critics said Hoveyda always had an eye for his place in history and he knew that in modern Iran all notable prime ministers had some idiosyncratic trademark. An opera hat, a fur cap, even pajamas and a blanket had served as ministerial trademarks in the past. Hoveyda's cane, along with a pipe, and an orchid had become his emblems. But that was all in the past. Now weak, battered, though not defeated, he needed his cane to maintain his upright, some thought defiant, gait.
By late March, Hoveyda was being held in Qasr Prison, where he had been an inmate for about two weeks. Before his transfer to Qasr, he had been incarcerated for a few days in the Madreseh-ye Refah (Welfare School), which was both Ayatollah Khomeini's place of residence and headquarters for the incipient revolution. The school had been built as a bastion of religious training, a refuge from the secular education championed by the Pahlavi dynasty. Its founders included Shiite clerics like Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Ali Khamenei, two of the Islamic Republic's most powerful politicians today. The Refah School was established in 1968, just three years after Hoveyda had been first appointed Iran's prime minister.
The school's location, next to two of Tehran's most symbolically significant buildings, was full of historic ironies. On one side stood the Majlis building, on the other the Sepahsalar Mosque. The Majlis was the country's House of Parliament and had come to symbolize the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-06 and its incumbent secular turn in Iranian politics. Hoveyda's tenure as a prime minister had begun in 1965 when Hassan Ali Mansur, his close friend and Iran's premier at the time, was shot by Islamic terrorists as he was about to enter the same parliament building. The gun used in Mansur's murder had been provided by Rafsanjani.
Next to the parliament was the Sepahsalar Mosque, a grand religious monument, which had served a role akin to Westminster Abbey in London. For more than half a century, the mosque had been the scene of every important, and official, religious rite or ritual held in the capital. The mosque had been built as an endowment by Hoveyda's maternal great-uncle, from whom it also took its name. As one of the many beneficiaries of the endowment, Hoveyda's mother received a monthly check from the mosque of 100 tomans.
With the collapse of the Pahlavi regime, the Majlis, which had for many years been a mere rubber stamp to royal decrees and only a hollow shell of its constitutional mandate, now stood empty, almost derelict. The political center of gravity had switched to the school that for two decades had remained-literally and metaphorically-hidden in the shadow of its grand neighbors, quietly offering its strictly religious curriculum to a small and select body of students. During the first hours of the revolution, prominent figures of the old regime were rounded up and brought to the Refah School, tributes from a jubilant crowd to their new masters.? The arrival of the prisoners at the school created a strange cohabitation of the jailer and the jailed, a forced communion between the victor and the vanquished.
Ayatollah Khomeini lived in a room overlooking the schoolyard. Prisoners were kept in another wing, across from the ayatollah's temporary residence. In those feverish first weeks of the revolution, the small schoolyard was regularly filled with people who filed in, dutifully chanted their enthusiastic devotion to the new regime and their hatred of the old, and then filed out. It is not hard to imagine the terrible impact those angry, exuberant, and menacing voices must have had on the men and women held captive in the building. In the frightening turmoil of the revolution's first hours, and shortly after his arrival at the Refah School, Hoveyda received his first visit from two high-ranking members of the new regime: Khomeini's son, Ahmad, and Abol Hasan Bani Sadr, a French-educated sociologist and one of Ayatollah Khomeini's closest advisors. Moments earlier the two men had been summoned by the ayatollah. "I've heard that some of those arrested have been badly beaten by mobs," he had said. He then had enjoined Ahmad and Bani Sadr to act as his emissaries and visit the prisoners. "Reassure them," the ayatollah had said, "that Islam does not condone such cruelties; tell them that henceforth they shall be treated fairly and that they will be tried according to the rules of Islamic law."
The two ambassadors of hope stopped first at a large classroom that had become a jail for many of the Imperial Army's top generals. Some of the prisoners remained bravely defiant at such "reassurance," while others broke down and wept. There was also a civilian in the room, Salar Jaf, who had gained infamy in the Kurdish regions of Iran as an alleged operative of savak. It was said that Jaf had obtained his seat in parliament as a reward. He waxed philosophical about his fate, saying in a sardonic tone, "For a while it was our turn to pillage; now the tables have turned."
After conveying the ayatollah's words of assurance to the prisoners, Bani Sadr and Ahmad Khomeini crossed the hallway to the room where Hoveyda was held in solitary confinement. He was the revolution's trophy prisoner, and his private room was a token of this portentous status. There was a bed in one corner, a small, gray metal desk in the other. A threadbare Persian carpet, some twelve feet long, covered much of the floor. On the desk was a tiny tricolored flag of Iran; the lion and the sun-a reminder of the country's pre-Islamic glories and, since the mid-nineteenth century, a symbol of the institution of monarchy-had been cut out of the center of the flag......
 
Last edited:
Jun 24, 2005
1,442
0
#3
Hoveyda’s Tragic Fate
By Cyrus Kadivar - 23 DECEMBER 1999/LONDON/UK

Contents:

Arrest of Hoveyda
Scapegoat
Prisoner of the Revolution
Trial or Inquisition?
Execution of a statesman


ARREST OF HOVEYDA

In the first week of November 1978 during the crumbling days of the monarchy, the beleaguered Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi held a crisis meeting with a dozen or more military and civilian advisers at Niavaran Palace in the northern suburb of Tehran. For several hours the monarch listened to his advisers as they debated the possible arrest of Amir Abbas Hoveyda. General Hassan Pakravan, a former security chief and diplomat, argued strongly against such a move by banging his fist on the table. On the other hand men like Iran’s ambassador to Washington, Ardeshir Zahedi, and Martial Law Chief, General Oveissi, insisted that Hoveyda’s arrest was absolutely necessary to calm down the howling mobs outside the gates. This was undoubtedly a shrewd attempt by the hardline royalists to deflect criticism of the sovereign by placing all the blame on a scapegoat. The decision that lay before His Majesty was a difficult one for as the Shah was perfectly aware, Hoveyda was a cultured, honest but shrewd politician who had served his King as an immensely able administrator. During his tenure Iran had witnessed tremendous economic and social development albeit at the price of political reforms. His detractors would later say of him that Hoveyda’s greatest fault lay in lending his first-rate, liberal mind to make the Shah’s regime intellectually respectable in a manner that none of his predecessors, nor indeed the monarch himself, with his militaristic, disciplinarian approach, could ever have done. Ironically, by faithfully carrying out the wishes of the King, he had contributed to the Shah’s estrangement from his own people and brought about the climate of dissent that had exploded into revolution. It was near to midnight when the Shah reluctantly accepted to sacrifice his loyal prime minister of 13 years to save his throne. Before the knock on the door, the Shah telephoned Hoveyda and told him of the decision taken and that he would be taken to a place where his safety would be ensured. An hour later, General Mehdi Rahimi, Tehran’s Police Chief, arrived at Hoveyda’s modest flat in civilian clothes, accompanied by two other officers, all of whom appearing courteous but solemn. After reading a letter signed by General Azhari, the prime minister and head of the military government, in which Hoveyda was informed of his arrest according to Article 5 of the Martial Law Regulations, the former premier was given time to pack a few things, including his pipe and books, including a French biography of Marcel Proust. Throughout the drive to a SAVAK guest house in Jamshidiyeh, Hoveyda remained calm and composed often joking with his military escort in his usual charming manner that had once made him popular amongst the Iranian people. A few days before his arrest, Sir Anthony Parsons, the British ambassador to Tehran, had tried to warn Hoveyda to flee the country before it was too late. Hoveyda had simply laughed and said: "I am an Iranian and I have done nothing that I am ashamed of. I have absolutely no intention of running away."



SCAPE GOAT

Hoveyda’s arrest was announced on 8th November 1978 sending shivers down other members of the royal regime. Three months later, on 8th January 1979, the daily newspapers Keyhan and Ettela’at published photos of Hoveyda and four other ministers: Daryoush Homayoun (former minister of information under Amuzegar), Manouchehr Azmoun (former minister of state under Sharif-Emami), Mansour Rouhani (former minister of agriculture under Hoveyda), and Gholam Reza Nikpay (former mayor of Tehran). At about this time Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiyar ordered the Ministry of Justice to prepare for a public trial of Hoveyda and General Nematollah Nassiri (former head of SAVAK). In numerous interviews Hoveyda and the other arrested officials pleaded their innocence telling reporters that they had been detained last November under Article 5 of the Martial Law Regulations during the Azhari government. Eight days later, on 16th January 1979, the Shah and Empress Farah left Iran. In a telephone conversation with his brother Fereydoun Hoveyda, then UN ambassador in New York, the former premier expressed his disillusionment with the Shah’s conduct. "How can a true leader abandon his post like that?" he enquired, adding somewhat sadly that all those years of service to the sovereign had been a tragic mistake. For the next few weeks Hoveyda spent his time reading and listening to BBC and VOA news bulletins on shortwave radio.

PRISONER OF THE REVOLUTION

Bakhtiar’s government collapsed on Sunday, 11th February 1979 after a two-day insurrection by leftist and Islamic guerrilla groups. The defeat of the Shah’s loyal Imperial Guard and the surrender of the military High Command to the revolution marked the end of 2,500 years of monarchy. Niavaran Palace and key military, SAVAK and government buildings were seized. The streets fell to the mob as army and police resistance melted away. On that same day, the warders of the prison at Jamshidiyeh Military Base abandoned their posts leaving some of the 200 inmates mostly former arrested officials of the Shah’s regime to their own fates. In the ensuing melee many, including Houshang Nahavandi, once head of the Empress’s Bureau, Abdul Majid Majidi, the former Budget Bureau Director, and Daryoush Homayoun, succeeded in getting away. After months of hiding, they eventually made their way out of Iran. Others who were recognised were not so fortunate. General Nassiri, the former head of SAVAK, was savagely tortured by the mob and put in front of the television cameras beside General Rahimi before their executions a few days later by a firing squad. Meanwhile Hoveyda remained alone and isolated in the guest house pouring himself another glass of whisky and swallowing a couple of valium tablets. Beyond his window he could hear the sound of gunfire as armed revolutionaries roamed the streets. In the prevailing pandemonium, his regular liaison with the outside world was his doctor cousin, Fereshteh Razavi, a courageous and resourceful woman who acted as his personal physician as well. Hoveyda telephoned her in the morning to describe his new circumstances but turned down a plan to escape saying that his face was too well-known not to be instantly recognised and instead decided that he should turn himself in. Fereshteh telephoned Dariush Foruhar, one of the leaders of the National Front, who contacted Khomeini’s headquarters. Within the hour several pasdars, or revolutionary guards, and a couple of mullahs arrived at Fereshteh’s house and together they drove to pick up Hoveyda. Blindfolded and bundled in a blanket, Hoveyda was placed in a captured army vehicle and driven first to the National Front offices, and was later in the day moved to the Alavieh School in south Tehran where Khomeini had set up his headquarters since his return to Iran on the 1st February 1979. As he himself must have known, it was for him the beginning of the end. "I am not afraid of anything," Hoveyda told a makeshift news conference. Seated beside the downcast Sheikholeslamzadeh, Azmoun and Rouhani, the Shah’s former premier was defiant. "I believe in God, and believers do not fear anything...I believe in the law," he said. "I could have flown abroad months ago. Where are the other prime ministers?" It was a dramatic performance. Hoveyda was leaning on his cane and looked tired, but he attempted some of his old joviality making wisecracks from time to time. He even had his customary pipe with him. Asked by a journalist whether the former imperial regime had made mistakes, Hoveyda replied: "If there were no mistakes, I would not be here!"



TRIAL OR INQUISITION?

On 15th March 1979, news was given of Amir Abbas Hoveyda’s trial at Tehran’s notorious Qasr prison, the charges ranging from spying for the West to waging war against God and his emissaries. Since his arrest by the revolutionaries Hoveyda had hoped to get a fair and Islamic trial. After hearing the long list of fantastic charges brought against him, Hoveyda began to lose hope. During a brief visit, his cousin, Fereshteh Razavi, was shocked by Hoveyda’s appearance. Huddled on the cold, damp floor of a tiny cell without a lavatory, the former statesman had lost his charm and luster. In his cell, Hoveyda handed Fereshteh a letter in which he had written that he now knew he would be condemned and executed, but that it was better than staying in prison. Despite an international effort to rescue him and the widespread outrage against the treatment he was receiving, Hoveyda was denied any form of legal assistance. Shortly before his trial resumed in early April, Hoveyda was visited by a French television crew and interviewed by Christine Ockrent. Hustled through the gates of Qasr prison the French visitors were marched through dark passages to Hoveyda’s cell. Ockrent scarcely recognised him. Hoveyda who in his heyday could be seen touring the country wearing an orchid in the lapel of his elegant suits now sat crumpled on a cot in the corner of his cell. With his back to the wall, wearing a cap and white socks, he was not happy and his face said it all. "So many people are anxious for news of you," Chrisiane Ockrent told him. "Do you have anything to tell them?" In the film which was shown in France two weeks later, Hoveyda looked sad and frightened, his eyes glistened with tears. "It is not worth asking me questions," he said, shaking his head in despair. "A scapegoat should be allowed to keep silent, it’s better that way." On 5th April despite assurances from Mehdi Bazargan, the head of the Revolutionary Provisional Government, and Abol Hussein Bani Sadr that the former PM would get a "fair trial", Hoveyda was hauled out of bed bewildered and blinking into the revolutionary court to be put on trial for his life. As he entered the courtroom, reporters noticed that he had lost twenty kilos. His head twitched nervously, his face was sickly and he was sweating profusely. It was only when he had sat down that he regained his composure. Facing Mahdi Hadavi, the revolutionary prosecutor, Hoveyda sat on a high wooden chair before two small tables in a crowded courtroom. The prosecutor was a pale, narrow, ill-shaven man who had presided over many similar proceedings. Hoveyda, always conscious of his public image, apologised for his awful appearance. Dressed in a black leather jacket and brown trousers he seemed upset by the huge cardboard placard bearing his name hanging round his neck. "Do I have to wear this?" he asked. "Everybody knows who I am." The judge, Sadeq Khalkhali, allowed him to remove the placard. It was the only concession he was prepared to make. Hoveyda complained that he could not answer questions properly since he was under the influence of sleeping pills. For twenty-five days he had been deprived of a radio and newspapers. "I have no clue what is happening in the world these days," he said. Only after continued complaints was he given copies of the charges, which consisted of an inquisitorial list of crimes. Hoveyda, who had pleaded "not-guilty" must have realised that no defence of his, however convincing or well-presented, would have made any difference to the outcome of his trial. Nonetheless, Hoveyda maintained his dignity. "I do not fear death. The life of an individual is nothing compared to that of a nation," he said. "A man is born one day and dies the next." He spoke emotionally about his eighty year old mother and waved the chance to see her. "Let her live with past memories," he said sadly. In the transcripts of the proceedings that appeared in the Iranian press, Hoveyda maintained that his hands were stained with "neither blood nor money." He denied that he was a Bahai and asked how could a Muslim wage war against his own god. "We were all part of a system," Hoveyda stated. "Everyone worked for the [ancien] regime. I did not create that system. We were all responsible! I could have escaped like five other prime ministers and spent my days strolling down the Champs-Elysees or the streets of New York. Instead I chose to remain in my own country." In private meetings with Khalkhali, Hoveyda pleaded to be allowed to write his memoirs. Sometimes from his cell, Hoveyda would exchange French books with other prisoners, notably his friend and supporter General Pakravan who had once spared Khomeini’s life.



EXECUTION OF A STATESMAN

The second session of the Islamic Revolutionary Court in Tehran began on 7th April 1979 at 2:30pm with the reading of the Koran. Before his trial, Hoveyda was blindfolded and brought out of his cell in Qasr prison and taken to a room where he rested for a few minutes. After lighting his pipe Hoveyda was escorted into the courtroom. On that spring afternoon Hoveyda was wearing a pale trouser and a suede coat and had a downcast expression when he faced the tribunal. Hoveyda tried to be as calm as possible exchanging pleasantries with members of the Court. "Seeing you smile gives me great courage," he told one of his judges. The courtroom was overheated and a revolutionary guard helped Hoveyda out of his coat before seating him in the designated chair. A photograph taken at his trial shows him uncomfortable in a white sweater. Ayatollah Khalkhali, the presiding judge, repeated the charges against the Shah’s faithful prime minister. Because the proceedings were kept secret it is not clear how Hoveyda defended himself. Finally, Hoveyda was asked if he had a final statement. "I have nothing to add to what I have already told the Court," he said. "You tell me not to go into details...But I ask the youth who have been tortured by SAVAK to pardon me. Even I was arrested and imprisoned by SAVAK. If life permits me I shall write my memoirs." Khalkhali then asked if there was anything else he wanted to add to which Hoveyda said that he did not. At 5:35pm the prisoner was taken out of the room. As Hoveyda awaited the verdict an Iranian reporter met with him and interviewed him for eight minutes. "What are your feelings about the sentence which will be passed and what do you expect it will be?" asked the reporter. "I don’t care what sentence I will receive," Hoveyda said. "Fortunately, I am imprisoned by Muslims and I am confident that Islamic Justice will prevail." The reporter asked if he considered himself innocent. "No, I don’t consider myself innocent," Hoveyda replied. "I accept full responsibility for my government." Before leaving his cell, the reporter asked Hoveyda if he had any final wish. "Yes," Hoveyda replied. "I am interested in studying different things. During my lifetime I have never gone to sleep at night without first reading a book. Of course, here in prison, I have access to all types of books. I have read all of them. Perhaps you could ask them to bring me another collection!" It was 6:05pm when a panel of seven judges found Hoveyda "guilty" and voted that he be executed. Immediately after the death sentence was pronounced, Khalkhali rushed around the prison ordering all the doors to be locked and the phones disconnected. Within minutes, Hoveyda was dragged out of his cell and driven to the prison yard. In his numerous interviews, Ayatollah Khalkhali boasted that the Shah’s prime minister had offered him a million dollars to extend his life for six more months. Hoveyda was tied to a metal ladder and shot. The first bullets hit him in the neck but did not kill him. He was ordered by his executioner, a mullah by the name of Hadi Ghaffari, to hold up his head. The next bullet hit him in the head. At the time of his murder Amir Abbas Hoveyda was 53. His corpse was then trucked to the city morgue where it was photographed with a few grinning militants standing over him with their automatic weapons. Hoveyda’s body was buried in a secret location.

***

PB:(
 
Jun 24, 2005
1,442
0
#4
Hoveyda’s Tragic Fate
By Cyrus Kadivar - 23 DECEMBER 1999/LONDON/UK

Contents:

Arrest of Hoveyda
Scapegoat
Prisoner of the Revolution
Trial or Inquisition?
Execution of a statesman


ARREST OF HOVEYDA

In the first week of November 1978 during the crumbling days of the monarchy, the beleaguered Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi held a crisis meeting with a dozen or more military and civilian advisers at Niavaran Palace in the northern suburb of Tehran. For several hours the monarch listened to his advisers as they debated the possible arrest of Amir Abbas Hoveyda. General Hassan Pakravan, a former security chief and diplomat, argued strongly against such a move by banging his fist on the table. On the other hand men like Iran’s ambassador to Washington, Ardeshir Zahedi, and Martial Law Chief, General Oveissi, insisted that Hoveyda’s arrest was absolutely necessary to calm down the howling mobs outside the gates. This was undoubtedly a shrewd attempt by the hardline royalists to deflect criticism of the sovereign by placing all the blame on a scapegoat. The decision that lay before His Majesty was a difficult one for as the Shah was perfectly aware, Hoveyda was a cultured, honest but shrewd politician who had served his King as an immensely able administrator. During his tenure Iran had witnessed tremendous economic and social development albeit at the price of political reforms. His detractors would later say of him that Hoveyda’s greatest fault lay in lending his first-rate, liberal mind to make the Shah’s regime intellectually respectable in a manner that none of his predecessors, nor indeed the monarch himself, with his militaristic, disciplinarian approach, could ever have done. Ironically, by faithfully carrying out the wishes of the King, he had contributed to the Shah’s estrangement from his own people and brought about the climate of dissent that had exploded into revolution. It was near to midnight when the Shah reluctantly accepted to sacrifice his loyal prime minister of 13 years to save his throne. Before the knock on the door, the Shah telephoned Hoveyda and told him of the decision taken and that he would be taken to a place where his safety would be ensured. An hour later, General Mehdi Rahimi, Tehran’s Police Chief, arrived at Hoveyda’s modest flat in civilian clothes, accompanied by two other officers, all of whom appearing courteous but solemn. After reading a letter signed by General Azhari, the prime minister and head of the military government, in which Hoveyda was informed of his arrest according to Article 5 of the Martial Law Regulations, the former premier was given time to pack a few things, including his pipe and books, including a French biography of Marcel Proust. Throughout the drive to a SAVAK guest house in Jamshidiyeh, Hoveyda remained calm and composed often joking with his military escort in his usual charming manner that had once made him popular amongst the Iranian people. A few days before his arrest, Sir Anthony Parsons, the British ambassador to Tehran, had tried to warn Hoveyda to flee the country before it was too late. Hoveyda had simply laughed and said: "I am an Iranian and I have done nothing that I am ashamed of. I have absolutely no intention of running away."



SCAPE GOAT

Hoveyda’s arrest was announced on 8th November 1978 sending shivers down other members of the royal regime. Three months later, on 8th January 1979, the daily newspapers Keyhan and Ettela’at published photos of Hoveyda and four other ministers: Daryoush Homayoun (former minister of information under Amuzegar), Manouchehr Azmoun (former minister of state under Sharif-Emami), Mansour Rouhani (former minister of agriculture under Hoveyda), and Gholam Reza Nikpay (former mayor of Tehran). At about this time Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiyar ordered the Ministry of Justice to prepare for a public trial of Hoveyda and General Nematollah Nassiri (former head of SAVAK). In numerous interviews Hoveyda and the other arrested officials pleaded their innocence telling reporters that they had been detained last November under Article 5 of the Martial Law Regulations during the Azhari government. Eight days later, on 16th January 1979, the Shah and Empress Farah left Iran. In a telephone conversation with his brother Fereydoun Hoveyda, then UN ambassador in New York, the former premier expressed his disillusionment with the Shah’s conduct. "How can a true leader abandon his post like that?" he enquired, adding somewhat sadly that all those years of service to the sovereign had been a tragic mistake. For the next few weeks Hoveyda spent his time reading and listening to BBC and VOA news bulletins on shortwave radio.

PRISONER OF THE REVOLUTION

Bakhtiar’s government collapsed on Sunday, 11th February 1979 after a two-day insurrection by leftist and Islamic guerrilla groups. The defeat of the Shah’s loyal Imperial Guard and the surrender of the military High Command to the revolution marked the end of 2,500 years of monarchy. Niavaran Palace and key military, SAVAK and government buildings were seized. The streets fell to the mob as army and police resistance melted away. On that same day, the warders of the prison at Jamshidiyeh Military Base abandoned their posts leaving some of the 200 inmates mostly former arrested officials of the Shah’s regime to their own fates. In the ensuing melee many, including Houshang Nahavandi, once head of the Empress’s Bureau, Abdul Majid Majidi, the former Budget Bureau Director, and Daryoush Homayoun, succeeded in getting away. After months of hiding, they eventually made their way out of Iran. Others who were recognised were not so fortunate. General Nassiri, the former head of SAVAK, was savagely tortured by the mob and put in front of the television cameras beside General Rahimi before their executions a few days later by a firing squad. Meanwhile Hoveyda remained alone and isolated in the guest house pouring himself another glass of whisky and swallowing a couple of valium tablets. Beyond his window he could hear the sound of gunfire as armed revolutionaries roamed the streets. In the prevailing pandemonium, his regular liaison with the outside world was his doctor cousin, Fereshteh Razavi, a courageous and resourceful woman who acted as his personal physician as well. Hoveyda telephoned her in the morning to describe his new circumstances but turned down a plan to escape saying that his face was too well-known not to be instantly recognised and instead decided that he should turn himself in. Fereshteh telephoned Dariush Foruhar, one of the leaders of the National Front, who contacted Khomeini’s headquarters. Within the hour several pasdars, or revolutionary guards, and a couple of mullahs arrived at Fereshteh’s house and together they drove to pick up Hoveyda. Blindfolded and bundled in a blanket, Hoveyda was placed in a captured army vehicle and driven first to the National Front offices, and was later in the day moved to the Alavieh School in south Tehran where Khomeini had set up his headquarters since his return to Iran on the 1st February 1979. As he himself must have known, it was for him the beginning of the end. "I am not afraid of anything," Hoveyda told a makeshift news conference. Seated beside the downcast Sheikholeslamzadeh, Azmoun and Rouhani, the Shah’s former premier was defiant. "I believe in God, and believers do not fear anything...I believe in the law," he said. "I could have flown abroad months ago. Where are the other prime ministers?" It was a dramatic performance. Hoveyda was leaning on his cane and looked tired, but he attempted some of his old joviality making wisecracks from time to time. He even had his customary pipe with him. Asked by a journalist whether the former imperial regime had made mistakes, Hoveyda replied: "If there were no mistakes, I would not be here!"



TRIAL OR INQUISITION?

On 15th March 1979, news was given of Amir Abbas Hoveyda’s trial at Tehran’s notorious Qasr prison, the charges ranging from spying for the West to waging war against God and his emissaries. Since his arrest by the revolutionaries Hoveyda had hoped to get a fair and Islamic trial. After hearing the long list of fantastic charges brought against him, Hoveyda began to lose hope. During a brief visit, his cousin, Fereshteh Razavi, was shocked by Hoveyda’s appearance. Huddled on the cold, damp floor of a tiny cell without a lavatory, the former statesman had lost his charm and luster. In his cell, Hoveyda handed Fereshteh a letter in which he had written that he now knew he would be condemned and executed, but that it was better than staying in prison. Despite an international effort to rescue him and the widespread outrage against the treatment he was receiving, Hoveyda was denied any form of legal assistance. Shortly before his trial resumed in early April, Hoveyda was visited by a French television crew and interviewed by Christine Ockrent. Hustled through the gates of Qasr prison the French visitors were marched through dark passages to Hoveyda’s cell. Ockrent scarcely recognised him. Hoveyda who in his heyday could be seen touring the country wearing an orchid in the lapel of his elegant suits now sat crumpled on a cot in the corner of his cell. With his back to the wall, wearing a cap and white socks, he was not happy and his face said it all. "So many people are anxious for news of you," Chrisiane Ockrent told him. "Do you have anything to tell them?" In the film which was shown in France two weeks later, Hoveyda looked sad and frightened, his eyes glistened with tears. "It is not worth asking me questions," he said, shaking his head in despair. "A scapegoat should be allowed to keep silent, it’s better that way." On 5th April despite assurances from Mehdi Bazargan, the head of the Revolutionary Provisional Government, and Abol Hussein Bani Sadr that the former PM would get a "fair trial", Hoveyda was hauled out of bed bewildered and blinking into the revolutionary court to be put on trial for his life. As he entered the courtroom, reporters noticed that he had lost twenty kilos. His head twitched nervously, his face was sickly and he was sweating profusely. It was only when he had sat down that he regained his composure. Facing Mahdi Hadavi, the revolutionary prosecutor, Hoveyda sat on a high wooden chair before two small tables in a crowded courtroom. The prosecutor was a pale, narrow, ill-shaven man who had presided over many similar proceedings. Hoveyda, always conscious of his public image, apologised for his awful appearance. Dressed in a black leather jacket and brown trousers he seemed upset by the huge cardboard placard bearing his name hanging round his neck. "Do I have to wear this?" he asked. "Everybody knows who I am." The judge, Sadeq Khalkhali, allowed him to remove the placard. It was the only concession he was prepared to make. Hoveyda complained that he could not answer questions properly since he was under the influence of sleeping pills. For twenty-five days he had been deprived of a radio and newspapers. "I have no clue what is happening in the world these days," he said. Only after continued complaints was he given copies of the charges, which consisted of an inquisitorial list of crimes. Hoveyda, who had pleaded "not-guilty" must have realised that no defence of his, however convincing or well-presented, would have made any difference to the outcome of his trial. Nonetheless, Hoveyda maintained his dignity. "I do not fear death. The life of an individual is nothing compared to that of a nation," he said. "A man is born one day and dies the next." He spoke emotionally about his eighty year old mother and waved the chance to see her. "Let her live with past memories," he said sadly. In the transcripts of the proceedings that appeared in the Iranian press, Hoveyda maintained that his hands were stained with "neither blood nor money." He denied that he was a Bahai and asked how could a Muslim wage war against his own god. "We were all part of a system," Hoveyda stated. "Everyone worked for the [ancien] regime. I did not create that system. We were all responsible! I could have escaped like five other prime ministers and spent my days strolling down the Champs-Elysees or the streets of New York. Instead I chose to remain in my own country." In private meetings with Khalkhali, Hoveyda pleaded to be allowed to write his memoirs. Sometimes from his cell, Hoveyda would exchange French books with other prisoners, notably his friend and supporter General Pakravan who had once spared Khomeini’s life.



EXECUTION OF A STATESMAN

The second session of the Islamic Revolutionary Court in Tehran began on 7th April 1979 at 2:30pm with the reading of the Koran. Before his trial, Hoveyda was blindfolded and brought out of his cell in Qasr prison and taken to a room where he rested for a few minutes. After lighting his pipe Hoveyda was escorted into the courtroom. On that spring afternoon Hoveyda was wearing a pale trouser and a suede coat and had a downcast expression when he faced the tribunal. Hoveyda tried to be as calm as possible exchanging pleasantries with members of the Court. "Seeing you smile gives me great courage," he told one of his judges. The courtroom was overheated and a revolutionary guard helped Hoveyda out of his coat before seating him in the designated chair. A photograph taken at his trial shows him uncomfortable in a white sweater. Ayatollah Khalkhali, the presiding judge, repeated the charges against the Shah’s faithful prime minister. Because the proceedings were kept secret it is not clear how Hoveyda defended himself. Finally, Hoveyda was asked if he had a final statement. "I have nothing to add to what I have already told the Court," he said. "You tell me not to go into details...But I ask the youth who have been tortured by SAVAK to pardon me. Even I was arrested and imprisoned by SAVAK. If life permits me I shall write my memoirs." Khalkhali then asked if there was anything else he wanted to add to which Hoveyda said that he did not. At 5:35pm the prisoner was taken out of the room. As Hoveyda awaited the verdict an Iranian reporter met with him and interviewed him for eight minutes. "What are your feelings about the sentence which will be passed and what do you expect it will be?" asked the reporter. "I don’t care what sentence I will receive," Hoveyda said. "Fortunately, I am imprisoned by Muslims and I am confident that Islamic Justice will prevail." The reporter asked if he considered himself innocent. "No, I don’t consider myself innocent," Hoveyda replied. "I accept full responsibility for my government." Before leaving his cell, the reporter asked Hoveyda if he had any final wish. "Yes," Hoveyda replied. "I am interested in studying different things. During my lifetime I have never gone to sleep at night without first reading a book. Of course, here in prison, I have access to all types of books. I have read all of them. Perhaps you could ask them to bring me another collection!" It was 6:05pm when a panel of seven judges found Hoveyda "guilty" and voted that he be executed. Immediately after the death sentence was pronounced, Khalkhali rushed around the prison ordering all the doors to be locked and the phones disconnected. Within minutes, Hoveyda was dragged out of his cell and driven to the prison yard. In his numerous interviews, Ayatollah Khalkhali boasted that the Shah’s prime minister had offered him a million dollars to extend his life for six more months. Hoveyda was tied to a metal ladder and shot. The first bullets hit him in the neck but did not kill him. He was ordered by his executioner, a mullah by the name of Hadi Ghaffari, to hold up his head. The next bullet hit him in the head. At the time of his murder Amir Abbas Hoveyda was 53. His corpse was then trucked to the city morgue where it was photographed with a few grinning militants standing over him with their automatic weapons. Hoveyda’s body was buried in a secret location.

***

PB:(
 
Oct 18, 2002
11,593
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#5
His brother Fereydoon Hoveyda reports that when he pleaded with Bakhtiar to save Hoveyda, Bakhtiar replied:"Shah imprisoned him, he should be the one to free him now." Bakhtiar stated that if Shah asks for Hoveyda's release, he will do so. But the Shah never made that request. He took his dogs on his plane, but left his most loyal prime minister to perish.
 
Jun 24, 2005
1,442
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#6
deerouz said:
His brother Fereydoon Hoveyda reports that when he pleaded with Bakhtiar to save Hoveyda, Bakhtiar replied:"Shah imprisoned him, he should be the one to free him now." Bakhtiar stated that if Shah asks for Hoveyda's release, he will do so. But the Shah never made that request. He took his dogs on his plane, but left his most loyal prime minister to perish.
Absolutly!
You know there is "One thing" I believe in my life more than anything else is "Karma"....Shah created the worst possible "Negitive-Karma" for himself by leaving "Hoveyda" , "Nassiri" and a few others behind to die....!? These men took bullets for him specially nasiri to the last minute yelled oput "Zendeh Baad Shah"..... :sad3:

Look how shah died and how her daughter Leila died ( God knows if it was suicide or just the effect of her drugs)...I was very sad for Leila's death since she was just a baby when her father died but, as we say in our culture, "Maaran konand... Mooran Keshand..."

When people ask me why I hate the shah so much, I say:" Hoveyda and Nassiri..." Some people say: "Shah had no clue he was NOT comming back to Iran again..." and I say: "Well....for someone who took his father's "Bones" with him, I like to think he had a clue he was not coming back this time....."

Anyways,
Just as musch as like Dr. Shariati, I like Dr. Mossadegh...Hoveyda....and Nassiri...Becasue the died with an "Honor"...Honoring their country, and humanity....

May they all rest in Peace and Harmony.....

Persian_Beauty
 
Oct 18, 2002
11,593
3
#7
Well Nassiri (head of SAVAK) was not the one who shouted Javid Shah, it was General Rahimi (Army commander of Tehran) who did. In court, Nassiri was actually crying and shouting profanities against Shah. Same thing happened in 1332 when Mosaddegh's guards arrested Nassiri; his first course of action was to badmouth Shah and ask Mosaddegh for forgiveness.

Rahimi was a true soldier and was executed only for following orders. Nassiri, on the other hand, was not only weak and inhuman, but also corrupt and ineffective. Instead of creating a true intelligence service, he spent his years in Savak building his personal wealth and torturing young students. If one Pahlavi official received a just punishment from Khalkhali, that would be Nassiri.
 
Oct 20, 2003
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#8
PB, aziz I would not have punished Nassiri without a fair trail. However how much do you know about the background of Nassiri's? Do you know about his role in the 1953Coupe against Mossadegh? Do you know that he was head of Savak for some time? There were a number of other generals who were executed in the early days after the revolution, what was so special about Nassiri? I think it is unfair to put him at the same level as Mossadegh or even Hoveda (I am no fan of Amir Abbass).
 
Jun 24, 2005
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#9
Iranpaak said:
PB, aziz I would not have punished Nassiri without a fair trail. However how much do you know about the background of Nassiri's? Do you know about his role in the 1953Coupe against Mossadegh? Do you know that he was head of Savak for some time? There were a number of other generals who were executed in the early days after the revolution, what was so special about Nassiri? I think it is unfair to put him at the same level as Mossadegh or even Hoveda (I am no fan of Amir Abbass).
You are right!
What i meant was the fact that they were left behind to die by the Shah...Nassiri, as guilty as he was in the case of Dr. Mossadegh, he was "Loyal" to the shah...I was merely stating how "Namard" shah really was...

I named the shah Ary-az-mehr instead of Aryamehr...since he had "No Mehr" to his own Military....? I think that is the WORST betrayl any goverment can do by letting his military left behind....

PB
 
Jun 24, 2005
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#10
deerouz said:
Well Nassiri (head of SAVAK) was not the one who shouted Javid Shah, it was General Rahimi (Army commander of Tehran) who did. In court, Nassiri was actually crying and shouting profanities against Shah. Same thing happened in 1332 when Mosaddegh's guards arrested Nassiri; his first course of action was to badmouth Shah and ask Mosaddegh for forgiveness.

Rahimi was a true soldier and was executed only for following orders. Nassiri, on the other hand, was not only weak and inhuman, but also corrupt and ineffective. Instead of creating a true intelligence service, he spent his years in Savak building his personal wealth and torturing young students. If one Pahlavi official received a just punishment from Khalkhali, that would be Nassiri.

Thank you for correcting me....It was Rahimi...I just got the names mixed up...Yes you are right...It was Rahimi...(rahimi and Nassiri sounds pretty close to me:blah: )....

As correct as you are in this case, my point was the fact that shah left them behind (Rahimi and Hoveyda)...and nassiri...regardless of deserving or not deserving what came to them, it does not justify the shah's betrayl and "Namardi"...

PB
 

shahinc

Legionnaire
May 8, 2005
6,745
1
#11
Deerouz Jan, Was it Rahimi that when they took him to "poshteh boom" to kill him ask them to open his eyes and his hands and kill him like a soldier ??!!!

Is it the same guy that almost got away by taking the weapons of the guards ??
 
Oct 20, 2003
9,345
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#12
Based on Khaterat Alam, Shah was not too impressed with Nassiri's intellegent and his ability.The Shah never fully trusted Hoveyda and people like him (possibly because the Shah inferiority complex), he had more trust in Alam (not as educated as Hoveyda), than people like Hoveyda. Hoveyda apparantly was closer to Farah than the Shah.
 
Jun 24, 2005
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#14
Iranpaak said:
Based on Khaterat Alam, Shah was not too impressed with Nassiri's intellegent and his ability.The Shah never fully trusted Hoveyda and people like him (possibly because the Shah inferiority complex), he had more trust in Alam (not as educated as Hoveyda), than people like Hoveyda. Hoveyda apparantly was closer to Farah than the Shah.

You may be very much correct on your point but, why do you think he did not replace Nassiri with Alam or whomever he felt comfortable with? They do that every where in the World (Replacing chief of Staff)?

No matter how bad these guys were he should not have left them behind to get killed....

Even Saddam stayed in Iraq and did not run away...(God only knows the exact reasoning behind it...but, that's besides the point)...Saddam's sons got killed and now so will he...But, Shah's 747 along with his dogs and his father's bones ran out of the country at the most crucial moment of our country's history...where Iranians and Iran needed him most...he was a incompetent leader to begin with so, I would not expect anything more from his staff...


yours truly,
PB
 
Oct 20, 2003
9,345
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#15
Alam was Prime Minister in 1340s. Later he became minister of the Shah's court (darbar). However, his role was much beyond Darbar. He was the Shah's closest confidant and adviser on domestic and international matters as well as the Shah's very private matters. For example, Alam would meet with ambassadors of the U.S. and U.K. on regular basis, rather than the Hoveyda or foreign ministery officials on important issues. Nassiri was head of Savak and later ambassador to Pakistan before coming back to Iran. Reportedly the Shah was quiet angry with Nassiri when he was Iran's ambassador in Pakistan and his failure to detect the communists takeover of Aghanistan.
Not quiet comparable jobs.
 
Oct 18, 2002
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#16
Dear PB:

I think Iranpaak meant: "The Shah was not impressed with Nassiri's LACK of intelligence and ability".

Nevertheless we agree on your point about the Shah leaving his servants to death and running away to save his own skin.
 

Tehrani53

Football Fan
Aug 12, 2005
26
0
72
California
#17
In 1972, During the IIAF Officers graduation ceremony, the SHAH stood to attention for 4 hours.

He did not need to, nor was he meant to be there but he was there, and it happened every year in the freezing cold...I was there to see it for myself and am sure that others are out there to confirm the same.....
What went wrong???

Collective JAHALAT/OLAGHI/KHARSHDAN of a nation.........

I say forget all about it all as life is fantastic in the land of the free and home of the brave...........
 
Aug 27, 2005
8,688
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Band e 209
#18
PB jaan,
That plane wasn't a 747 but 707. Even Air force One was 707 till first term presidency of Bill Clinton.
That Plane (Shah's 707) was part of the Iranian Air force fleet assigned to Royal Flights and actually was returned to Iran by Moroccan gvmt in 1358. Also it was the same plane took Bani Sadr and Rajavi to Paris and later on was returned to Iran by French gvmt. regardless yes there was enough room in it for many other Butt-smoocher to go along.
Don't know about Hoveyda but Nasiri got what he deserved and he was the one who was crying and begging in live TV, and still Iranian students blood was dripping from his fingers when he was transfered to firing squad for treatment.....lol
As soon as I don't know who came up with the name Arya Mehr, opposition groups specially decedent students inside Iran and abroad started calling him Ari-Az-Mehr, which I believe it goes back to before White revolution of 1341.
8 Industrial/Developed countries realized that Shah is going to be a cumbersome, non-trust worthy when he decided to be too POR ROO and started to be an over active member to establish OPEC, Openly criticize US energy policies, Talking about establishing Asian Union (Keshvar haye bazar moshtarak asiaei), took over all those small Persian gulf Islands which all are located on strategic Tangeh Hormoz which It might indicate his ambitions to control the Gulf, starting the nuclear energy industry and so on.
Finally during G5 summit of Guadalupe Island president Valéry Jiscar d'Estaing openly requested the removal of shah and rest of the of the head of other states (except Israel) gave the green light, so shah left, I don't agree the way he left (crying on internationality televised scene) but he had to go.
He did not stay in Iran like Saddam (who didn't have a scape route) because he knew that Iranian Armed Forces already had promised General Huyser of US that they will not stand in front of Opposing Iranian people and under no circumstance they will take any order from shah or support him what so ever, Shah was watching General Huyser's multiple trips to Iran without general visiting with him at all. sole purpose of General Huyser's last trip was meeting with Mohandes Bazargan (later became the Prime Minister of Iranian interim Gvmt) and I don't know how general would know that.
 
Jun 24, 2005
1,442
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#19
Motori said:
PB jaan,
That plane wasn't a 747 but 707. Even Air force One was 707 till first term presidency of Bill Clinton.
That Plane (Shah's 707) was part of the Iranian Air force fleet assigned to Royal Flights and actually was returned to Iran by Moroccan gvmt in 1358. Also it was the same plane took Bani Sadr and Rajavi to Paris and later on was returned to Iran by French gvmt. regardless yes there was enough room in it for many other Butt-smoocher to go along.
Don't know about Hoveyda but Nasiri got what he deserved and he was the one who was crying and begging in live TV, and still Iranian students blood was dripping from his fingers when he was transfered to firing squad for treatment.....lol
As soon as I don't know who came up with the name Arya Mehr, opposition groups specially decedent students inside Iran and abroad started calling him Ari-Az-Mehr, which I believe it goes back to before White revolution of 1341.
8 Industrial/Developed countries realized that Shah is going to be a cumbersome, non-trust worthy when he decided to be too POR ROO and started to be an over active member to establish OPEC, Openly criticize US energy policies, Talking about establishing Asian Union (Keshvar haye bazar moshtarak asiaei), took over all those small Persian gulf Islands which all are located on strategic Tangeh Hormoz which It might indicate his ambitions to control the Gulf, starting the nuclear energy industry and so on.
Finally during G5 summit of Guadalupe Island president Valéry Jiscar d'Estaing openly requested the removal of shah and rest of the of the head of other states (except Israel) gave the green light, so shah left, I don't agree the way he left (crying on internationality televised scene) but he had to go.
He did not stay in Iran like Saddam (who didn't have a scape route) because he knew that Iranian Armed Forces already had promised General Huyser of US that they will not stand in front of Opposing Iranian people and under no circumstance they will take any order from shah or support him what so ever, Shah was watching General Huyser's multiple trips to Iran without general visiting with him at all. sole purpose of General Huyser's last trip was meeting with Mohandes Bazargan (later became the Prime Minister of Iranian interim Gvmt) and I don't know how general would know that.
I like your observation and explanation of what happened in the late 70's in Iran...My point about the Shah leaving his "Aaaaaartesh" and Prime minester behind to die "Regardless of them deserving the punishment or not" was a WRONG thing to do for a KING!!!

However, I appreciate the correction on the 707 "Airforce One"...:nuke:

PB:cheers:
 
Aug 27, 2005
8,688
0
Band e 209
#20
Persian_Beauty said:
I like your observation and explanation of what happened in the late 70's in Iran...My point about the Shah leaving his "Aaaaaartesh" and Prime minester behind to die "Regardless of them deserving the punishment or not" was a WRONG thing to do for a KING!!!

However, I appreciate the correction on the 707 "Airforce One"...:nuke:

PB:cheers:
PB Jaan,
I don't condone any of those 2 minutes one way conversation and then Firing Squad, pure barbaric act of savageness. Every single one of those guys deserved a Fair, Open and with presence of a Councilor trial.
Hatred for nasiri because he was head of savak it goes back to 1953, when him (a colonel by then) in command of bunch of Hafteer Kesh stormed Dr. Mussadegh's resident and arrested and dragged him to a prison in rather humiliating manner.
Shah couldn't possibly count on Artesh support when he knew Armed Forces are brain washed by American military advisers. only remaining loyal was the Imperial Guards which could easily be out numbered by Main artesh and I PERSONALLY think shah didn't want to cause such a clash.
In 1978 in live Radio-Television interview Shah addressed Iranians and said " I HEARD THE MESSAGE!!" that is when he knew that he is doomed and his Monarchy is at its last seconds. Iran's faith had already been decided by US, UK and France. Check this out it is eye opener.

http://discardedlies.com/entries/2005/07/g8_summit_26_years_ago.php