The Soviet Socialist Republic of Iran, 1920-1921 : birth of the trauma / Cosroe Chaquèri.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | MEF Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi | Genel Koleksiyon | DS 316.6 .C43 1995 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 0000017 |
Series number taken from CIP data sheet.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 613-630) and index.
tForeword Preface Acknowledgments 1 Introduction 3 2 The Caspian Coast 12 3 The Caspian Region and Iran's Colonial Dysdevelopment 22 4 Kuchek Khan and the Development of the Jangali Movement 43 5 The Jangali Political Program and Structure 61 6 The New Jangali Dilemma 81 7 The Jangalis in the Eyes of Foreign Powers 109 8 The Bolshevik Diplomatic Offensive and the Advent of Iranian Communism 142 9 Resurgence of the Movement and the Landing of Soviet Troops in Northern Iran 166 10 Establishment of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Iran 188 11 An Unlikely Coalition 214 12 Gilan Under Communist Rule 250 13 Triangular Negotiations 276 14 The Persian Question in British Eastern Policy and the 1921 Coup d'Etat 296 15 Two-Pronged Soviet Policy, Continued 329 16 Soviet Mediation, Revolution's Kiss of Death 351 17 Iran's Liberation at the Crossroads of Neocolonialism and "Socialism in One Country" 376 18 Epilogue 407 Appendix 457 Notes 479 References 613 Index 631
The story of the Jangalis, noncommunist revolutionaries who battled tsarist and British occupation forces in their homeland between 1915 and 1921, is critical to an understanding of twentieth-century Iran. Yet their struggle, commanded by the legendary Kuchek Khan, has been neglected, often deliberately falsified. The Pahlavi regime imposed a curtain of silence, Soviet historians attacked the movement's noncommunist leaders, and the British generally have accepted the Soviet interpretation. Now Cosroe Chaqueri brings fresh evidence, based on recently available documents from secret Soviet archives, that sheds dramatic new light on a brief but decisive moment in modern Iranian history. In reconstructing the record of the guerrilla movement that, with Soviet Russia's help, led to the establishment of the "first Soviet Socialist Republic" in the East, Chaqueri discredits the false versions of that episode and examines the internal and neocolonial external forces that precipitated its downfall. He blames foreign intervention but also locates the roots of Iran's failure to achieve independence in the socioeconomic and mental structures that have controlled the actions of Iranian leaders from ancient times until today's neo-Islamic regime.