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Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran

Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran
Part of the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of the Second World War

Soviet tankmen of the 6th Tank Division drive through the streets of Tabriz on their T-26 light tank.
Date25–31 August 1941[1]
(6 days)
Location32°N 53°E / 32°N 53°E / 32; 53
Result

Allied victory

Territorial
changes

Occupation of Iran by Allied forces

  • Northern Iran occupied by the Soviet Union
  • Southern Iran occupied by the British Empire
Belligerents
 Soviet Union
United Kingdom
 •  India
 •  Australia
Pahlavi Iran
Commanders and leaders
Dmitry Kozlov
Sergei Trofimenko
Edward Quinan
William Slim
Reza Shah
Ali Mansur
Mohammad Ali Foroughi
Gholamali Bayandor 
Ahmad Nakhjavan
M. Shahbakhti [fa]
Strength
Soviet:
3 armies
British:
2 divisions and 3 brigades
4 sloops
1 gunboat
1 corvette
1 armed merchant cruiser
1 armed yacht
Unknown number of auxiliary vessels
9 divisions
60 aircraft
2 sloops
4 patrol boats
Casualties and losses
Soviet:
40 KIA
3 planes lost
British:
22 KIA[3]
50 WIA[3]
1 tank destroyed
~800 KIA
2 sloops sunk
2 patrol boats captured
6 planes lost
Civilian casualties:
~200 Iranian civilians killed

Map of the invasion

The Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran or Anglo-Soviet invasion of Persia was the joint invasion of the neutral Imperial State of Iran by the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union in August 1941. The two powers announced that they would stay until six months after the end of the war with their enemy Nazi Germany (World War II), which turned out to be 2 March 1946. On that date the British began to withdraw, but Moscow delayed until May, citing "threats to Soviet security".[4]

The invasion, code name Operation Countenance, was largely unopposed by the numerically and technologically outmatched Iranian forces. The multi-pronged coordinated invasion took place along Iran's borders with the Kingdom of Iraq, Azerbaijan SSR, and Turkmen SSR, with fighting beginning on 25 August and ending on 31 August when the Iranian government formally agreed to surrender, having already agreed to a ceasefire on 30 August.[1]

The invasion took place two months after the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union's subsequent alliance with the United Kingdom. The attack also took place less than two months after Allied victories over pro-Axis forces in neighbouring Iraq and French Syria and Lebanon.

The invasion's strategic purpose was to ensure the safety of Allied supply lines to the USSR (see the Persian Corridor), secure Iranian oil fields, limit German influence in Iran (Reza Shah was considered friendly to Nazi Germany) and preempt a possible Axis advance from Turkey through Iran toward the Baku oil fields or British India. Following the invasion, on 16 September 1941 Reza Shah abdicated and was forced into exile by the invading British. He was replaced by his young son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.[5]

Background

In 1925, after years of civil war, turmoil, and foreign intervention, Persia became unified under the rule of Reza Khan, who crowned himself as Reza Shah that same year. (In 1935 Reza Shah asked foreign delegates to use "Iran", the historical name of the country, used by its native people, in formal correspondence.) Reza Shah commenced an ambitious program of economic, cultural, and military modernization. Iran, which had been a divided and isolated country under the rule of the Qajar dynasty[6] (in power during 1789–1925), attempted industrialization. Reza Shah's regime established schools, built infrastructure, modernized cities, and expanded transportation networks.[7][page needed] The Shah pursued a foreign policy of neutrality, but depended on Western financing in order to finance his ambitious modernization projects.[5][page needed][7][page needed]

In early 1940, as Britain was involved in war with Germany in North Africa, it grew concerned about German access to the Persian Gulf, especially in light of Germany's non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union.[8][9] The British began to accuse Iran of supporting Nazism and of being pro-German.[5][page needed] Although Reza Shah declared neutrality at an early stage of World War II, Iran assumed greater strategic importance to the British government, which feared that the Abadan Refinery (of the UK-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Company) might fall into German hands; refining eight million tons of oil in 1940, the refinery made a crucial contribution to the Allied war effort.[5][page needed][10] Relations between Britain and Iran had been strained since 1931 when the Shah unilaterally cancelled the D'Arcy Concession - a 1901 agreement that had given the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company the exclusive right to prospect for Iranian oil for 60 years, with Iran receiving 16 percent of the net profit. Led by the Shah, the Iranian imperial government accused the Company of undercutting its share of the profit by clandestinely reinvesting new capital into subsidiary companies, and thus excluding a significant sum from the annual capital gain calculation. Though the Shah promptly renegotiated a second concession with the Anglo-Iranian Company - with terms that better protected the Iranians' stake - the diplomatic conflict created an impression that the Shah was hostile to British oil interests.[5][page needed][7][page needed]

Following Operation Barbarossa, the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Britain and the Soviet Union became formal Allies, providing further impetus for an Allied invasion.[11] In a major strategic analysis in the New York Times on a Sunday following Barbarossa, the famous international correspondent C. L. Sulzberger stated, in reference to the Operation Orient, "It is considered virtually a certainty by military experts that if the Reich succeeds...an attack on Egypt will be launched. Should the Germans...occupy the Caucasus and then push on to Iran and the Persian Gulf they will then outflank the British Middle Eastern positions by a wide sweep and perhaps by Autumn begin to make trouble in Iraq."[12] With the Wehrmacht steadily advancing through the Soviet Union, the Persian Corridor formed by the Trans-Iranian Railway offered one of the easiest ways to supply the Soviets with Lend-Lease goods sent by sea from the then technically neutral United States.[13] British and Soviet planners recognized the importance of that railway and sought to control it. As increasing U-boat attacks and winter ice[when?] made convoys to Arkhangelsk (which commenced in August 1941) dangerous, the railway seemed an increasingly attractive strategic route.

The two Allied nations applied pressure on Iran and on the Shah, which led to increased tensions and to anti-British rallies in Tehran. The British described the protests as "pro-German".[5][page needed][7][page needed] Iran's strategic location threatened Soviet Caucasian oil and the Soviet armies' rear, and any German advance south-eastwards would threaten British communications between India and the Mediterranean.[14]: 215–216 

In July and August, the Shah refused demands from the British for the expulsion of German residents from Iran (mostly workers and diplomats). A British embassy report, dated 1940, estimated that there were almost 1,000 German nationals in Iran.[15] According to Iran's Ettela'at newspaper, there were 690 German nationals in Iran (out of a total of 4,630 foreigners, including 2,590 British).[16] Joan Beaumont estimates that "probably no more than 3,000 Germans actually lived in Iran, but they were believed to have a disproportionate influence because of their employment in strategic government industries and in Iran's transport and communications network."[14]: 215 

However, the Iranians began to reduce their trade with the Germans in the face of Allied demands.[5][page needed][7][page needed] Reza Shah sought to remain neutral, not wanting to anger either side. This approach became increasingly difficult in the face of Anglo-Soviet demands. British forces were already present in sizeable numbers in Iraq as a result of the Anglo-Iraqi War of May 1941. Thus Britain had troops stationed on the western border of Iran before the surprise invasion on 25 August 1941.[citation needed]

Invasion

The invasion was a surprise attack described by Allied forces as rapid and conducted with ease.[17] Prior to the invasion, two diplomatic notes were delivered to the Iranian government on 19 July and 17 August, requiring the Iranian government to expel German nationals.[18] The second of the notes was recognised by the prime minister Ali Mansur as a disguised ultimatum.[19][20] General Archibald Wavell later wrote in his despatch, "it was apparent that the Iranian Government fully expected an early British advance into Khuzistan and that reinforcements, including light and medium tanks, were being sent to Ahvaz".[21][22]

 
Soviet and Indian soldiers meet in late August.

Following the invasion, Sir Reader Bullard and Andrey Andreyevich Smirnov, the British and Soviet ambassadors to Iran, were summoned. The Shah demanded to know why they were invading his country and why they had not declared war. Both answered that it was because of "German residents" in Iran. When the Shah asked if the Allies would stop their attack if he expelled the Germans, the ambassadors did not answer. The Shah sent a telegram to US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, pleading with him to stop the invasion. As the neutral United States had nothing to do with the attack, Roosevelt was not able to grant the Shah's plea but stated that he believed that the "territorial integrity" of Iran should be respected.[5][page needed][7][page needed]

Beginning of the invasion

The Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy attacked from the Persian Gulf, while other British Commonwealth forces came by land and air from Iraq. The Soviet Union invaded from the north, mostly from Transcaucasia, with the 44th and 47th armies of the Transcaucasian Front (General Dmitry Timofeyevich Kozlov), and the 53rd army of the Central Asian Military District, occupying Iran's northern provinces. Air force and naval units also participated in the battle. The Soviets used about 1,000 T-26 tanks for their combat operations.[5][page needed]

Six days after the invasion and the ensuing Allied occupation of southern Iran, the British divisions previously known as "Iraq Command" (also known as Iraqforce) were renamed "Persia and Iraq Force" (Paiforce), under the command of Lieutenant-General Edward Quinan. Paiforce was made up of the 8th and 10th Indian Infantry divisions, the 2nd Indian Armoured Brigade, 4th British Cavalry Brigade (later renamed 9th Armoured Brigade) and the 21st Indian Infantry Brigade. The invading Allies had 200,000 troops and modern aircraft, tanks, and artillery.[citation needed]

 
Page book of The Regained Glory, a book on the subject of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. This page is about the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran.

In response to the invasion, the Iranian Army mobilised nine infantry divisions, some of them motorised; two of the divisions also had tanks. The Iranian army had a standing force of 126,000–200,000 men. While Iran had taken numerous steps through the previous decade to strengthen, standardise and create a modern army, they did not have enough training, armour and air power to fight a multi-front war. Reza Shah's modernisations had not been completed by the time war broke out,[5][page needed] and the Iranian Army had been more concerned with civilian repression than invasions.[23][page needed]

The Iranian army was armed with the vz. 24 rifle, a Czech version of the German Mauser.[24] Iranian troops also had other Czech small arms like the ZB vz. 30 and ZB-53.[25][26] Iran had bought 100 FT-6 and Panzer 38(t) light tanks as well as some AH-IV tankettes and additional LaFrance TK-6 armoured cars, enough to outfit their 1st and 2nd divisions.[27] Further Iranian orders had been delayed by World War II.[28] While it was a large order and they were excellent tanks, they were not enough to defeat a multi-front invasion by two great powers. The changing nature of tank warfare in the 1930s made all but 50 of them obsolete when the invasion began. The Imperial Iranian Air Force at the time flew a motley collection of outdated biplanes, including aircraft from the Hawker Hart family such as the Hawker Fury as well as French aircraft such as the Bréguet 14, Bréguet 19, Potez VIII and Blériot-SPAD S.42.[29][30] They also had at the time some aircraft made by Polikarpov, although not the modern ones such as the Airco DH.4, Airco DH.9 and the original Polikarpov R-5.[29][30] Prior to the attack, the RAF dropped leaflets on Iranian troops, asking them not to fight and to understand their country was "not threatened" as it was being "liberated" from possible Nazi destruction.[citation needed]

 
Soviet and British soldiers rendezvous near Qazvin.

The Iranians had little time to organise a defence, as the Allies achieved a tactical surprise.[5][page needed] The war began in the early morning hours of 25 August, when RAF aircraft entered Iranian airspace. They bombed targets in the cities of Tehran and Qazvin and various other towns and dropped leaflets urging the Iranians to surrender. The Soviets bombed targets in cities such as Tabriz, Ardabil and Rasht. Civilian and residential areas were hit, and several hundred people were killed and wounded.[5][page needed] Reza Shah refused requests by his generals to destroy the road and transportation networks, largely because he did not want to damage the infrastructure that he had painstakingly built during his reign. That contributed to the speedy victory of the Allies.[5][page needed]

With no allies, Iranian resistance was rapidly overwhelmed and neutralised by Soviet and British tanks and infantry. The British and Soviet forces met at Sanandaj (called Senna by the British) (160 kilometres (100 mi) west of Hamadan) and Qazvin (called Kazvin by the British) (160 kilometres (100 mi) west of Tehran and 320 kilometres (200 mi) north-east of Hamadan) on 30 and 31 August respectively.[5] Faced with massive defeats, the Shah ordered his military to stop fighting and stand down on 29 August, four days into the invasion.[5][page needed]

British theatre

Invasion of Khuzestan

The British assembled a naval task force under Commodore Cosmo Graham to seize Bandar Shahpur, Abadan, and Khorramshahr. It attacked at dawn on 25 August 1941.[31]

 
1950s era Iranian postage stamp illustrating the Iranian warship Palang (Leopard). The British Royal Navy sank the Palang while it was moored at an Abadan pier during the surprise attack on Iran in August 1941.[17]

The naval attack began at 04:10 at Abadan when HMS Shoreham opened fire on the Iranian sloop Palang, sinking it in a single salvo.[31] The Abadan Refinery was of vital importance to the British commanders as well as keeping the employees of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company safe from possible reprisals. Khuzestan Province was defended by 27,000 troops from the 1st, 2nd, 6th and 16th infantry divisions, consisting of both light and mechanised infantry. All Iranian tanks were deployed in Khuzestan as part of the 1st and 2nd divisions.[28] A British naval and paratrooper landing force landed at Abadan, securing the city and the refinery.[citation needed] Shoreham remained in the area and provided naval gunfire support.[31] The Iranians managed to put up a resistance, and the refinery and the city were captured that afternoon after hand-to-hand combat resulted in the deaths of several British and Indian troops.

The Australian armed merchant cruiser HMAS Kanimbla and her escorts successfully navigated the Khor Musa inlet, arriving at Bandar Shapur at 04:15. The Kanimbla successfully landed two battalions of its troops, facing no resistance from Iranian patrol boats. Seven Axis merchant vessels were seized, while an eighth was scuttled.[31] The naval base there was secured that evening following heavy fighting. At Khorramshahr, HMAS Yarra surprised the Iranian sloop Babr, sinking it at its dock. There had been no time to prepare resistance, as the Iranians had been taken by surprise and the head of the navy, Gholamali Bayandor, was killed.[5][page needed]

 
Persian Gulf Command map showing position of posts and stations

The surprise led to virtually no resistance in other areas of Khuzestan. The RAF attacked airbases and communications and rapidly gained air superiority. They destroyed numerous Iranian aircraft on the ground, and protected their forces from Iranian counter-attacks.[citation needed]

The 8th Indian Division (18th Brigade plus the 25th Brigade under command from the 10th Indian Division) advanced from Basra towards Qasr Sheikh (which was taken on 25 August) across the Shatt al-Arab waterway and captured the city of Khorramshahr, which was next to Abadan on the same day. The Karun River was not secured, as Iranian snipers remained, impeding British advance for a short time. Britain also landed troops at Bandar Abbas, and the Shatt al-Arab was secured. By 26 August, there was no organised resistance remaining in the area, with the Iranian forces overwhelmed by superior firepower, 350 Iranians taken prisoner and many killed or scattered.[citation needed]

The British hoped to capture Ahvaz and then drive north into Zagros Mountains passes to reach Qazvin, where they would link up with British troops in central Iran and Soviet troops from the north. By the early morning of 27 August, the British forces had reached Ahvaz.[5][page needed] The Iranians, led by General Mohammad Shahbakhti, had prepared a strong defence. Iranian infantry had entrenched themselves around the city, with artillery support and tanks. Although Iranians had taken heavy losses and their morale was decreasing, they were prepared to fight hard. The Indian Army advance came to a halt and they were hesitant to cross the Karun River and attack the city. A British attack on the defences around the city was repelled by Iranian tanks and infantry.[5][page needed]

Whether the Iranian defence could have been successful is debatable and on 29 August, after some more sporadic fighting, word reached the Iranian commanders at Ahvaz that their government had accepted a ceasefire and they were not to fight any longer.[5][page needed] The British and Iranians agreed as part of the ceasefire that the Iranians would not lay down their arms and remain at their posts but they would be joined by the British troops, who would carry out a parade in the city. In exchange, the Iranians would safely evacuate British residents in the city to British troops. The British with their Indian troops paraded in the city, with full military honours given by the Iranian general.[citation needed]

Invasion of Central Iran

 
Map of Iraq and western Iran in 1941

Farther north, the 10th Indian Infantry Division[32] under Major-General William Slim attacked central Iran. Slim directed the battle remotely via radio from India. The Indian Army infantry and armour massed at the Iraqi border town of Khanaqin (160 kilometres (100 mi) north-east of Baghdad and 480 kilometres (300 mi) from Basra). Unlike the terrain in Khuzestan, the British were attacking in Kermanshah Province, with mountainous terrain, advancing along steep mountain passes and a narrow road.[citation needed]

The British force broke through the border at the town of Qasr-e Shirin and moved into the Naft-e Shah oilfield with little opposition. The British stated that the operation had been carried out with minimum losses for the Iranians, but British troops faced a determined defence by 2,000 Iranians as they tried to capture the town of Gilan-e Gharb 30 kilometres (20 mi) inside of Iran, which if successful would block the British from moving through the steep Pai Tak mountain pass.[citation needed] The RAF provided close air support and was involved in several dogfights with Iranian aircraft. Six Iranian fighters were shot down and several others damaged, for no loss, ensuring air superiority. The RAF also bombed several local towns and dropped leaflets urging surrender.

The British captured Gilan-e-Gharb and attacked Iranian forces who defended the town of Sarpol-e Zahab.[citation needed] With overwhelming firepower and decreasing Iranian morale, the British captured that town, scattering the remaining defenders. The Pai Tak Pass and the road to Kermanshah and eventually Tehran was open. The armoured columns began to secure the pass and the areas around it.[citation needed] The British forces moved along the Kermanshah highway towards the city of Shahabad. There was little Iranian resistance but some trees were cut down and a section of the road was even dynamited, which delayed the British forces for several hours.[citation needed]

The main Iranian forces in the region consisted of the 5th and 12th infantry divisions of 30,000 troops with supporting artillery at Kermanshah and Sanandaj. They were all light infantry (as the mechanised and armour had been stretched thin fighting on multiple fronts). The British reached the outskirts of Shahabad in the early morning hours of 28 August after delays. At the village of Zibri, they faced a strong Iranian garrison willing to put up a fight which caused the British several casualties, but with poor Iranian leadership and overwhelming British firepower, resistance crumbled and the British took Shahabad on the morning of the same day.[citation needed] By 29 August, the British had reached the town of Kerend and were within 3 kilometres (2 mi) of Kermanshah and the Iranian commanders were told of the ceasefire order and stood down. The defenders declared Kermanshah an open city and the British entered on 1 September. They also entered Sanandaj peacefully and eventually Qazvin, which had already been captured by the Red Army.[citation needed]

Soviet theatre

Invasion of Northwestern Iran

 
British supply convoy with Soviet escorts in Iran, September 1941

The Soviet forces attacked on 25 August and Iranian airbases were destroyed by preliminary air attacks. The Soviets attacked using three armoured spearheads, totalling over 1,000 tanks and motorised infantry; the Iranians had no tanks in the area.[5][page needed] The first force, consisting of the 47th Army[32] broke through the border and moved from Soviet Azerbaijan into Iranian Azerbaijan. They moved towards Tabriz and Lake Urmia. They captured the Iranian city of Jolfa. An Iranian reconnaissance aircraft discovered the forces south of Jolfa moving towards Marand. It was possible for the Iranian 3rd Division under General Matboodi to move motorised infantry towards Shibli to halt the breakthrough, but due to being taken by surprise, he failed to make the proper counter-attack. He also failed to destroy the bridges and highways with explosives, allowing the Soviets to rapidly move through the region.[5][page needed] Five Iranian bombers were intercepted trying to attack the Soviet positions around Jolfa.[citation needed]

The 53rd Army crossed the border and moved towards the city of Ardabil, defended by Iran's 15th Division led by Brigadier-General Qaderi.[32] Two Iranian regiments began to move towards the town of Nir to confront the invaders. Despite having a solid force and well-motivated troops, Qaderi jumped into his car and abandoned his troops. He sabotaged the defence even further by ordering the supply trucks delivering food, weapons and artillery to unload their weapons to make way for his personal belongings. General Qaderi´s actions, led to the Iranian troops to be left without any reinforcements, which concluded to a fast defeat against the Soviet Army. The Soviets bypassed Nir and moved south.[5][page needed] On another front, the Soviet Army launched an attack on the village of Alikaran where the Iranian border guards were caught by surprise. The Officer in command, Khalil Alinejad, ordered his troops back to the village to warn the population of the Soviet invasion, while he and a handfull of troops gave them covering fire. Officer Alinejad and his troops where killed, and the village of Alikaran was shortly captured by the Red-Army forces. Ardabil was bombed by the Soviet Air Force and received minor damage to its barracks. Cut off and bypassed, both the Iranian 15th Division in Ardabil and the 3rd Division in Tabriz began to collapse. Despite that, the regular troops tried to maintain order and began to march towards the enemy without many of their commanders. However, lacking food, supplies and ammunition, the troops were forced to abandon much of their heavy equipment. Heavy pockets of resistance remained, with some desperate fighting until the end. They were unsurprisingly beaten by the Soviets, who by August 26, occupied all of Iranian Azerbaijan (including Tabriz and Ardabil).[5][page needed]

 
British soldiers inspecting a Soviet T-26, 31 August 1941

On 25 August, the Soviet attack against Gilan Province began with their Caspian Sea Flotilla, led by Rear-Admiral Sedelnikov. The flotilla consisted of more than a dozen patrol boats, destroyers, multiple anti-aircraft barges and landing craft. Facing them were three Iranian gunboats. Meanwhile, the 44th Army crossed the border and moved into Gilan Province. They moved along the Astara highway and the main coastal highway (Jadeh-e-Shomal). Heavy Iranian forces in the area made the naval landing force secure Iranian cities, which were then joined by the land forces. The flotilla landed troops and rapidly captured the border city of Astara. The landing force boarded their ships and moved towards their next targets.[5][page needed]

The main objective of the attack was to capture Iran's Caspian Sea port of Bandar Pahlavi. The Iranian forces in Gilan, led by General Iranpour, made their stand at the provincial capital of Rasht and Bandar Pahlavi and offered a stubborn resistance.[citation needed] The Iranian forces sank barges at the entrance to Pahlavi harbour, and lacking coastal artillery, moved a battery of 75 mm guns to the area. The Iranians fought desperately, and despite Soviet superiority, the Iranians prevented them from landing. The Iranians were careful to not fire their guns while Soviet aircraft flew overhead to prevent them from disclosing their location. Soviet aircraft were kept at bay by 47 mm anti-aircraft artillery on Iranian barges.[5][page needed]

The next day, however, the Soviet Air Force moved into action, using many heavy bombers. In groups of 4 aircraft each, their bombers attacked military positions and civilian targets throughout Gilan, including Bandar Pahlavi and Rasht. At least 200 civilians were killed during the bombings. The bombings also destroyed many Iranian positions, and resistance was finally crushed by the 44th Army advancing from land, capturing both cities. Fighting was very intense, and the Soviets took their heaviest casualties of the invasion here. However, lacking armour and air power, the Iranians could not stop the enemy.[5][page needed] On 28 August, they were forced to surrender. Nevertheless, some Iranian forces refused to accept defeat, and retreated to Ramsar to continue fighting. Their efforts were undercut when the Iranian government announced a ceasefire the next day.[5][page needed] By then, the Soviet forces had reached the city of Chalus, meaning that they could cross the Chalus Highway (Jadeh-e-Chalus) and reach Tehran across the Alborz Mountains.[citation needed]

Soviet advance on Iranian heartland

 
Soviet soldiers crossing the border on 25 August 1941

Meanwhile, the Soviet invasion force in Iranian Azerbaijan had moved south. The 47th Army had been delayed in the Jolfa area when three individual Iranian soldiers managed to block an important bridge until they ran out of ammunition and were killed.[32] The Soviets did not use artillery for fear that they would damage the bridge and delay their advance further.[16] The 47th Army moved south, capturing Dilman (100 kilometres (80 mi) west of Tabriz) and then Urmia (Oromiyeh), ostensibly to block the escape of "German agents". The latter was defended by only a few snipers. The Soviets responded by bombing targets in the city, killing over a dozen people and wounding many others, and much of the city's bazaar was burned.

Meanwhile, the 53rd Army moved south of Ardebil towards the Tehran-Karaj-Tabriz highway, capturing the city of Mianeh, East Azerbaijan and moving southeast towards Qazvin and Tehran by 27–28 August.[32] Iran's 15th and 3rd divisions had already been bypassed and defeated, and there was only sporadic resistance against the Soviets. The Soviet armoured spearhead drove down the highway and poised to take Qazvin on the 29th (151 kilometres (94 mi) from Tehran), followed by Saveh and Qom, south of Tehran, cutting the main Tehran-Saveh-Persian Gulf highway and cutting Iran effectively in two. But the Iranians accepted the ceasefire on 29 August, and the Soviets entered the now "open city" on 30 August. At the same time, elements of the 53rd Army captured the city of Hamadan. One civilian (a small child) was killed in a small bombing raid, and the sporadic resistance was defeated. They stopped their advance on 1 September and did not move further towards Tehran from Qazvin in light of negotiations with Iran's government.[citation needed]

Invasion of Northeastern Iran

On 25 August, the Soviet Army invaded northeastern Iran from Soviet Turkmenistan. Details of this invasion were not nearly as extensive as details of the others. The Soviet invasion force had to cross mountainous terrain, and its goals were to recruit new troops from the Turkmen Sahra, assemble with the Soviet troops and to capture the city of Mashhad, the second largest city in Iran.[citation needed]

Defending Mashhad and Khorasan Province was Iran's 9th Infantry Division, totalling 8,000 troops. They were light infantry, and it was unlikely that they could defend against the more numerous Soviet forces with armour and air power. The Soviet Air Force bombed Mashhad Airport, destroying many Iranian fighter aircraft, along with numerous military barracks. The Soviet forces advanced in three columns across the border. There was heavy fighting for three days, and by 28 August, the Iranians had been driven back after taking heavy casualties. Mashhad fell to the Soviets the same day.[citation needed]

Final phase and outcome

 
British and Soviet officers inspect troops, in preparations to the Joint Soviet-British military parade in Tehran. Iran, September 1941.

By 28–29 August 1941, the Iranian military situation was in complete chaos. The Allies had complete control over the skies of Iran, and large sections of the country were in their hands. Major Iranian cities (such as Tehran) were suffering repeated air raids. In Tehran itself, the casualties had been light, but the Soviet Air Force dropped leaflets over the city, warning the population of an upcoming massive bombing raid and urging them to surrender before they suffered imminent destruction.[2] Tehran water and food supply had faced shortages, and soldiers fled in fear of the Soviets killing them upon capture. Faced with total collapse, the royal family (except the Shah and the Crown Prince) fled to Isfahan.[5][page needed][2]

The collapse of the army that Reza Shah had spent so much time and effort creating was humiliating. Many of the military generals had behaved incompetently or secretly sympathised with the British and ended up sabotaging the Iranian resistance.[5][page needed] The army generals met in secret to discuss surrender options. When the Shah learned of the generals' actions, he beat the head of the armed forces General Ahmad Nakhjavan with a cane and physically stripped him of his rank. He was nearly shot by the Shah on the spot, but at the insistence of the Crown Prince, he was sent to prison instead.[2]

The Shah ordered the resignation of the pro-British Prime Minister Ali Mansur, whom he blamed for demoralising the military.[2] He was replaced with Mohammad Ali Foroughi, a former prime minister.[5][page needed] The Shah ordered the Iranian military to end resistance and order a ceasefire. He entered into negotiations with the British and Soviets.[5][page needed][2]

 
Indian troops guarding the Abadan Refinery in Iran, 4 September 1941

Foroughi was an enemy of Reza Shah (he was forced into retirement in earlier years for political reasons, and his son was executed by firing squad). When he entered into negotiations with the British, instead of negotiating a favourable settlement, Foroughi implied that both he and the Iranian people wanted to be "liberated" from the Shah's rule.[2] The British and Foroughi agreed that for the Allies to withdraw from Iran, the Iranians would have to assure that the German minister and his staff should leave Tehran; the German, Italian, Hungarian and Romanian legations should close and all remaining German nationals (including all families) to be handed over to the British and Soviet authorities. The last order would mean almost certain internment or, in the case of those handed to the Soviets, possible death. Reza Shah delayed on the last demand. Instead, he planned the secret evacuation of all German nationals from Iran. By 18 September, most of the German nationals had escaped via the Turkish border.[16]

In response to the Shah's defiance, the Red Army on 16 September moved to occupy Tehran. Fearing execution by the communists, many people (especially the wealthy) fled the city. Reza Shah, in a letter handwritten by Foroughi, announced his abdication, as the Soviets entered the city on 17 September. The British wanted to restore the Qajar Dynasty to power because they had served British interests well prior to Reza Shah's reign. However, the heir to the throne, Hamid Hassan Mirza, was a British citizen who spoke no Persian. Instead, with the help of Ardeshir Reporter, Crown Prince Mohammad Reza Pahlavi took the oath to become the Shah of Iran.[2] Reza Shah was arrested before he was able to leave Tehran, and he was placed into British custody. He was sent to exile as a British prisoner in South Africa, where he died in 1944.[5][page needed][7][page needed] The Allies withdrew from Tehran on 17 October and Iran was partitioned between Britain and the Soviet Union for the duration of the war, with the Soviets stationed in northern Iran and the British south of Hamadan and Qazvin.

Occupation

 
Soviet and British sphere of influence, Iran, 1946

The Persian Corridor became the route for a massive flow of supplies (over 5 million tons of matériel) to the Soviet Union and also the British in the Middle East. At the end of August 1942, German intelligence agents spread leaflets in Tabriz and other cities; an underground fascist organisation called Melnune Iran, was founded. Agents of Melnune Iran instigated anti-government protests in the Lake Urmia region. The Bakhtiari and Qashqai peoples carried out armed resistance against the new government.[33]

The new Shah signed a Tripartite Treaty Alliance with Britain and the Soviet Union on 29 January 1942, to aid in the allied war effort in a non-military way.[citation needed] This treaty committed the Allies to leaving Iran "not more than six months after the cessation of hostilities". In September 1943, Iran declared war on Germany, which qualified it for membership in the United Nations (UN). At the Tehran Conference in November of that year, Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin reaffirmed their commitment to Iranian independence and territorial integrity, with a willingness to extend economic assistance to Iran. The treaty ruled that Iran was not considered to be "occupied" by the Allies, but instead a member of the Allies.[7][page needed]

 
Lend-Lease Program US planes stand ready to be picked up at Abadan Air Field, Iran.[34]

The effects of the war were very disruptive for Iran. Much of the state bureaucracy had been damaged by the invasion and food and other essential items were scarce.[35] The Soviets appropriated most of the harvest in northern Iran, leading to food shortages for the general public. The British and Soviet occupiers used the delivery of grain as a bargaining chip and the food crisis was exacerbated because foreign troops needed to eat and use the transport network to move military equipment. The British meanwhile pressured the Shah to appoint Ahmad Qavam to be the prime minister, who proceeded to mismanage the entire food supply and economy. In 1942, bread riots took place in Tehran, martial law was declared and several rioters were killed by the police. Inflation increased by 450 percent, imposing great hardship on the lower and middle classes. In some areas there were famine deaths but there was virtually no armed resistance against the occupation.[7][page needed]

 
A supply train passing through Iran after the invasion

In 1943, 30,000 Americans helped to man the Persian Corridor and 26–34 percent of the supplies sent to the Soviet Union under the Lend-Lease Act were sent through Iran. The Americans also assuaged Iranian fears of colonisation by the two powers by confirming that they would respect the independence of Iran. The US also extended Lend-Lease assistance to Iran and began to train the Iranian army. Arthur Millspaugh became the finance minister of Iran but ran into much opposition trying to direct Iranian finances.[7][page needed]

There were two notable German attempts to undertake operations against the Allies in 1943. In the middle of 1943, Abwehr's Operation Francois was an attempt to use the dissident Qashqai people in Iran to sabotage British and American supplies bound for the Soviet Union. Also in 1943, Operation Long Jump was an unsuccessful German plot to assassinate the "Big Three" Allied leaders (Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt) at the Tehran Conference.[36]

Withdrawal

During the three years of occupation, Joseph Stalin had expanded Soviet political influence in Azerbaijan and Iranian Kurdistan in northwestern Iran, as well as in Iran founding the communist Tudeh Party of Iran. The Soviets had attempted during their occupation to stir tensions between the tenant-farmers and the landlords (known in Iran as arbabs).[citation needed] On 12 December 1945, after weeks of violent clashes a Soviet-backed separatist People's Republic of Azerbaijan was founded. The Kurdish People's Republic was also established in late 1945. Iranian government troops sent to reestablish control were blocked by Red Army units.

When the deadline for withdrawal arrived on 2 March 1946, six months after the end of the war, the British began to withdraw, but Moscow refused, citing "threats to Soviet security". Soviet troops did not withdraw from Iran proper until May 1946, following Iran's official complaint to the newly formed United Nations Security Council, which became the first complaint filed by a country in the UN's history, and a test for the UN's effectiveness in resolving global issues in the aftermath of the war. However, the UN Security Council took no direct steps to pressure the Soviets to withdraw.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Immortal : A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces, Steven R. Ward, Georgetown University Press, 2009, p. 169
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Milani, Abbas (2011). The Shah. ISBN 978-1-4039-7193-7.
  3. ^ a b Compton Mackenzie, Eastern Epic, p. 136
  4. ^ a b "UN History". Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Farrokh, Kaveh (2011). Iran at War: 1500–1988. ISBN 978-1-78096-221-4.[page needed]
  6. ^ Pollack, p. 28
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Pollack, Kenneth (2004). The Persian Puzzle: Deciphering the Twenty-Five Year Conflict. ISBN 978-1-58836-434-0.[page needed]
  8. ^ "NAZI-SOVIET DEAL ON IRAN REPORTED; Moscow Said to Open German Route to Near East in Return for Indian Ocean Outlet BRITISH CAUTION TURKEY London Fears War Materials May Go Through Nation -- Close Watch Kept". The New York Times.
  9. ^ "Iran Reported Shipping Through Soviet to Reich". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Reed, Stanley; Fitzgerald, Alison (2010). In Too Deep: BP and the Drilling Race That Took it Down. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-95090-6.
  11. ^ Esposito (1998), p. 127
  12. ^ "NAZIS IN A RACE AGAINST TIME TO WIN THE WAR; Russia Must Be Conquered and a New Transport System Set Up Quickly". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Samii, Bill (6 May 2005). "World War II — 60 Years After: The Anglo-Soviet Invasion of Iran and Washington-Tehran Relations". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 25 August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  14. ^ a b Beaumont, Joan (January 1981). "Great Britain and the Rights of Neutral Countries: The Case of Iran, 1941". Journal of Contemporary History. 16 (1): 213–228. doi:10.1177/002200948101600112. JSTOR 260624. S2CID 159929729.
  15. ^ "Abbas Milani, Iran, Jews and the Holocaust: An answer to Mr. Black". iranian.com. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
  16. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 10 July 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  17. ^ a b Stewart, Richard Anthony (1988). Sunrise at Abadan: The British and Soviet invasion of Iran, 1941. New York: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-92793-6.
  18. ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica". iranicaonline.org.
  19. ^ Stewart, Richard A. (1988). Sunrise at Abadan: The British and Soviet Invasion of Iran, 1941. New York: Praeger. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-275-92793-6.
  20. ^ "No. 37685". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 August 1946. pp. 4097–4098.
  21. ^ "No. 37685". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 August 1946. p. 4098.
  22. ^ Ward, Steven R. (2009). Immortal: A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces. Georgetown University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-1-58901-258-5.
  23. ^ Kaveh Farrokh, Iran at War: 1500–1988, Osprey. 2011; ISBN 978-1-84603-491-6.[page needed]
  24. ^ Parsa, Ali. "Brno, the Persian Mauser". Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  25. ^ "Militaria". www.militaria.cz. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  26. ^ "ZB 53 / Vz.37". Modern Firearms. 27 October 2010. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  27. ^ Barret, Dave. . Archived from the original on 4 October 2012.
  28. ^ a b "Armour in Iran Army". Archived from the original on 22 February 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  29. ^ a b "HISTORY OF THE IMPERIAL IRANIAN AIR FORCE". www.iiaf.net. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  30. ^ a b "Iran Aircraft List (Current and Former Types)". www.militaryfactory.com. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  31. ^ a b c d O'Hara, Vincent P. (2011). Tucker, Spencer (ed.). World War II at Sea: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 1 (illustrated, reprint ed.). ABC-CLIO. pp. 86–87. ISBN 978-1-59884-457-3.
  32. ^ a b c d e Stone, Stone &. "War Diary Records for Invasion of Iran 1941".
  33. ^ Гречко/Grechko 1976, p. 224.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 September 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 October 2009. Retrieved 12 January 2010.
  36. ^ Blum, Howard (2 June 2020). "The Search for the Truth About the Nazi Plot to Assassinate FDR". Time. Retrieved 25 August 2021.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Bibliography

  • Esposito, John (1998). Islam and Politics (4th ed.). Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-2774-6.
  • Гречко/Grechko, А. А. (1976). Годы Войны/Gody voiny, 1941–1943 [The War Years, 1941–1943] (in Russian). Moskva: Voenizdat. OCLC 14013882.
  • Mackenzie, Compton (1951). Eastern Epic: September 1939 – March 1943, Defence. Vol. I. London: Chatto & Windus. OCLC 53462081.
  • Kozhanov, Nikolay A. "The Pretexts and Reasons for the Allied Invasion of Iran in 1941." Iranian Studies 45#4 (2012): 479–497.
  • Pollack, Kenneth (2004). The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict between Iran and America. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-4000-6315-4.
  • Stewart, Richard A. Sunrise at Abadan: the British and Soviet invasion of Iran, 1941 (Praeger Publishers, 1988), A standard scholarly history.
  • Wavell, Archibald (1942). Despatch on Operations in Iraq, East Syria, and Iran From 10th April, 1941 to 12th January 1942 (PDF). London: HMSO. as published in "No. 37685". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 August 1946. pp. 4093–4101.

External links

  • BBC WW2 People's War – Persia Invaded
  • Strange Menagerie: the US in Iran 1941–1946
  • Pink Elephants on the road to Baghdad – personal account of the invasion by a British soldier
  • "Despatch on Operations in Iraq, East Syria, and Iran From 10th April, 1941, to 12th January 1942" (PDF). Supplement to the London Gazette, Number 37685. 13 August 1946. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
  • "No. 37703". The London Gazette (Supplement). 27 August 1946. pp. 4333–4340. General Sir H. Maitland Wilson's official despatch on the Persia and Iraq Command covering the period 21 August 1942 to 17 February 1943, after the invasion had been completed.

anglo, soviet, invasion, iran, occupation, northern, iran, russian, empire, during, world, persian, campaign, world, this, article, cites, sources, does, provide, page, references, help, improve, introducing, citations, that, more, precise, providing, page, nu. For the occupation of northern Iran by the Russian Empire during World War I see Persian campaign World War I This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help to improve it by introducing citations that are more precise and providing page numbers for existing citations August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Anglo Soviet invasion of IranPart of the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of the Second World WarSoviet tankmen of the 6th Tank Division drive through the streets of Tabriz on their T 26 light tank Date25 31 August 1941 1 6 days LocationImperial State of Iran32 N 53 E 32 N 53 E 32 53ResultAllied victory Abdication of Reza Shah Pahlavi on 16 September 1941 1 Crown Prince Mohammad Reza Pahlavi took the oath to become the Shah of Iran 2 Opening of the Persian Corridor to provide the USSR with supplies from the Persian GulfTerritorialchangesOccupation of Iran by Allied forces Northern Iran occupied by the Soviet Union Southern Iran occupied by the British EmpireBelligerents Soviet Union United Kingdom India AustraliaPahlavi IranCommanders and leadersDmitry Kozlov Sergei Trofimenko Edward Quinan William SlimReza Shah Ali MansurMohammad Ali Foroughi Gholamali Bayandor Ahmad NakhjavanM Shahbakhti fa StrengthSoviet 3 armiesBritish 2 divisions and 3 brigades4 sloops1 gunboat1 corvette1 armed merchant cruiser1 armed yachtUnknown number of auxiliary vessels9 divisions60 aircraft2 sloops4 patrol boatsCasualties and lossesSoviet 40 KIA3 planes lostBritish 22 KIA 3 50 WIA 3 1 tank destroyed 800 KIA2 sloops sunk2 patrol boats captured6 planes lostCivilian casualties 200 Iranian civilians killedMap of the invasion The Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran or Anglo Soviet invasion of Persia was the joint invasion of the neutral Imperial State of Iran by the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union in August 1941 The two powers announced that they would stay until six months after the end of the war with their enemy Nazi Germany World War II which turned out to be 2 March 1946 On that date the British began to withdraw but Moscow delayed until May citing threats to Soviet security 4 The invasion code name Operation Countenance was largely unopposed by the numerically and technologically outmatched Iranian forces The multi pronged coordinated invasion took place along Iran s borders with the Kingdom of Iraq Azerbaijan SSR and Turkmen SSR with fighting beginning on 25 August and ending on 31 August when the Iranian government formally agreed to surrender having already agreed to a ceasefire on 30 August 1 The invasion took place two months after the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union and the Soviet Union s subsequent alliance with the United Kingdom The attack also took place less than two months after Allied victories over pro Axis forces in neighbouring Iraq and French Syria and Lebanon The invasion s strategic purpose was to ensure the safety of Allied supply lines to the USSR see the Persian Corridor secure Iranian oil fields limit German influence in Iran Reza Shah was considered friendly to Nazi Germany and preempt a possible Axis advance from Turkey through Iran toward the Baku oil fields or British India Following the invasion on 16 September 1941 Reza Shah abdicated and was forced into exile by the invading British He was replaced by his young son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Invasion 2 1 Beginning of the invasion 2 2 British theatre 2 2 1 Invasion of Khuzestan 2 2 2 Invasion of Central Iran 2 3 Soviet theatre 2 3 1 Invasion of Northwestern Iran 2 3 2 Soviet advance on Iranian heartland 2 3 3 Invasion of Northeastern Iran 2 4 Final phase and outcome 3 Occupation 4 Withdrawal 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground EditIn 1925 after years of civil war turmoil and foreign intervention Persia became unified under the rule of Reza Khan who crowned himself as Reza Shah that same year In 1935 Reza Shah asked foreign delegates to use Iran the historical name of the country used by its native people in formal correspondence Reza Shah commenced an ambitious program of economic cultural and military modernization Iran which had been a divided and isolated country under the rule of the Qajar dynasty 6 in power during 1789 1925 attempted industrialization Reza Shah s regime established schools built infrastructure modernized cities and expanded transportation networks 7 page needed The Shah pursued a foreign policy of neutrality but depended on Western financing in order to finance his ambitious modernization projects 5 page needed 7 page needed In early 1940 as Britain was involved in war with Germany in North Africa it grew concerned about German access to the Persian Gulf especially in light of Germany s non aggression pact with the Soviet Union 8 9 The British began to accuse Iran of supporting Nazism and of being pro German 5 page needed Although Reza Shah declared neutrality at an early stage of World War II Iran assumed greater strategic importance to the British government which feared that the Abadan Refinery of the UK owned Anglo Iranian Oil Company might fall into German hands refining eight million tons of oil in 1940 the refinery made a crucial contribution to the Allied war effort 5 page needed 10 Relations between Britain and Iran had been strained since 1931 when the Shah unilaterally cancelled the D Arcy Concession a 1901 agreement that had given the Anglo Iranian Oil Company the exclusive right to prospect for Iranian oil for 60 years with Iran receiving 16 percent of the net profit Led by the Shah the Iranian imperial government accused the Company of undercutting its share of the profit by clandestinely reinvesting new capital into subsidiary companies and thus excluding a significant sum from the annual capital gain calculation Though the Shah promptly renegotiated a second concession with the Anglo Iranian Company with terms that better protected the Iranians stake the diplomatic conflict created an impression that the Shah was hostile to British oil interests 5 page needed 7 page needed Following Operation Barbarossa the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 Britain and the Soviet Union became formal Allies providing further impetus for an Allied invasion 11 In a major strategic analysis in the New York Times on a Sunday following Barbarossa the famous international correspondent C L Sulzberger stated in reference to the Operation Orient It is considered virtually a certainty by military experts that if the Reich succeeds an attack on Egypt will be launched Should the Germans occupy the Caucasus and then push on to Iran and the Persian Gulf they will then outflank the British Middle Eastern positions by a wide sweep and perhaps by Autumn begin to make trouble in Iraq 12 With the Wehrmacht steadily advancing through the Soviet Union the Persian Corridor formed by the Trans Iranian Railway offered one of the easiest ways to supply the Soviets with Lend Lease goods sent by sea from the then technically neutral United States 13 British and Soviet planners recognized the importance of that railway and sought to control it As increasing U boat attacks and winter ice when made convoys to Arkhangelsk which commenced in August 1941 dangerous the railway seemed an increasingly attractive strategic route The two Allied nations applied pressure on Iran and on the Shah which led to increased tensions and to anti British rallies in Tehran The British described the protests as pro German 5 page needed 7 page needed Iran s strategic location threatened Soviet Caucasian oil and the Soviet armies rear and any German advance south eastwards would threaten British communications between India and the Mediterranean 14 215 216 In July and August the Shah refused demands from the British for the expulsion of German residents from Iran mostly workers and diplomats A British embassy report dated 1940 estimated that there were almost 1 000 German nationals in Iran 15 According to Iran s Ettela at newspaper there were 690 German nationals in Iran out of a total of 4 630 foreigners including 2 590 British 16 Joan Beaumont estimates that probably no more than 3 000 Germans actually lived in Iran but they were believed to have a disproportionate influence because of their employment in strategic government industries and in Iran s transport and communications network 14 215 However the Iranians began to reduce their trade with the Germans in the face of Allied demands 5 page needed 7 page needed Reza Shah sought to remain neutral not wanting to anger either side This approach became increasingly difficult in the face of Anglo Soviet demands British forces were already present in sizeable numbers in Iraq as a result of the Anglo Iraqi War of May 1941 Thus Britain had troops stationed on the western border of Iran before the surprise invasion on 25 August 1941 citation needed Invasion EditThe invasion was a surprise attack described by Allied forces as rapid and conducted with ease 17 Prior to the invasion two diplomatic notes were delivered to the Iranian government on 19 July and 17 August requiring the Iranian government to expel German nationals 18 The second of the notes was recognised by the prime minister Ali Mansur as a disguised ultimatum 19 20 General Archibald Wavell later wrote in his despatch it was apparent that the Iranian Government fully expected an early British advance into Khuzistan and that reinforcements including light and medium tanks were being sent to Ahvaz 21 22 Soviet and Indian soldiers meet in late August Following the invasion Sir Reader Bullard and Andrey Andreyevich Smirnov the British and Soviet ambassadors to Iran were summoned The Shah demanded to know why they were invading his country and why they had not declared war Both answered that it was because of German residents in Iran When the Shah asked if the Allies would stop their attack if he expelled the Germans the ambassadors did not answer The Shah sent a telegram to US President Franklin D Roosevelt pleading with him to stop the invasion As the neutral United States had nothing to do with the attack Roosevelt was not able to grant the Shah s plea but stated that he believed that the territorial integrity of Iran should be respected 5 page needed 7 page needed Beginning of the invasion Edit The Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy attacked from the Persian Gulf while other British Commonwealth forces came by land and air from Iraq The Soviet Union invaded from the north mostly from Transcaucasia with the 44th and 47th armies of the Transcaucasian Front General Dmitry Timofeyevich Kozlov and the 53rd army of the Central Asian Military District occupying Iran s northern provinces Air force and naval units also participated in the battle The Soviets used about 1 000 T 26 tanks for their combat operations 5 page needed Six days after the invasion and the ensuing Allied occupation of southern Iran the British divisions previously known as Iraq Command also known as Iraqforce were renamed Persia and Iraq Force Paiforce under the command of Lieutenant General Edward Quinan Paiforce was made up of the 8th and 10th Indian Infantry divisions the 2nd Indian Armoured Brigade 4th British Cavalry Brigade later renamed 9th Armoured Brigade and the 21st Indian Infantry Brigade The invading Allies had 200 000 troops and modern aircraft tanks and artillery citation needed Page book of The Regained Glory a book on the subject of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi This page is about the Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran In response to the invasion the Iranian Army mobilised nine infantry divisions some of them motorised two of the divisions also had tanks The Iranian army had a standing force of 126 000 200 000 men While Iran had taken numerous steps through the previous decade to strengthen standardise and create a modern army they did not have enough training armour and air power to fight a multi front war Reza Shah s modernisations had not been completed by the time war broke out 5 page needed and the Iranian Army had been more concerned with civilian repression than invasions 23 page needed The Iranian army was armed with the vz 24 rifle a Czech version of the German Mauser 24 Iranian troops also had other Czech small arms like the ZB vz 30 and ZB 53 25 26 Iran had bought 100 FT 6 and Panzer 38 t light tanks as well as some AH IV tankettes and additional LaFrance TK 6 armoured cars enough to outfit their 1st and 2nd divisions 27 Further Iranian orders had been delayed by World War II 28 While it was a large order and they were excellent tanks they were not enough to defeat a multi front invasion by two great powers The changing nature of tank warfare in the 1930s made all but 50 of them obsolete when the invasion began The Imperial Iranian Air Force at the time flew a motley collection of outdated biplanes including aircraft from the Hawker Hart family such as the Hawker Fury as well as French aircraft such as the Breguet 14 Breguet 19 Potez VIII and Bleriot SPAD S 42 29 30 They also had at the time some aircraft made by Polikarpov although not the modern ones such as the Airco DH 4 Airco DH 9 and the original Polikarpov R 5 29 30 Prior to the attack the RAF dropped leaflets on Iranian troops asking them not to fight and to understand their country was not threatened as it was being liberated from possible Nazi destruction citation needed Soviet and British soldiers rendezvous near Qazvin The Iranians had little time to organise a defence as the Allies achieved a tactical surprise 5 page needed The war began in the early morning hours of 25 August when RAF aircraft entered Iranian airspace They bombed targets in the cities of Tehran and Qazvin and various other towns and dropped leaflets urging the Iranians to surrender The Soviets bombed targets in cities such as Tabriz Ardabil and Rasht Civilian and residential areas were hit and several hundred people were killed and wounded 5 page needed Reza Shah refused requests by his generals to destroy the road and transportation networks largely because he did not want to damage the infrastructure that he had painstakingly built during his reign That contributed to the speedy victory of the Allies 5 page needed With no allies Iranian resistance was rapidly overwhelmed and neutralised by Soviet and British tanks and infantry The British and Soviet forces met at Sanandaj called Senna by the British 160 kilometres 100 mi west of Hamadan and Qazvin called Kazvin by the British 160 kilometres 100 mi west of Tehran and 320 kilometres 200 mi north east of Hamadan on 30 and 31 August respectively 5 Faced with massive defeats the Shah ordered his military to stop fighting and stand down on 29 August four days into the invasion 5 page needed British theatre Edit Invasion of Khuzestan Edit The British assembled a naval task force under Commodore Cosmo Graham to seize Bandar Shahpur Abadan and Khorramshahr It attacked at dawn on 25 August 1941 31 1950s era Iranian postage stamp illustrating the Iranian warship Palang Leopard The British Royal Navy sank the Palang while it was moored at an Abadan pier during the surprise attack on Iran in August 1941 17 The naval attack began at 04 10 at Abadan when HMS Shoreham opened fire on the Iranian sloop Palang sinking it in a single salvo 31 The Abadan Refinery was of vital importance to the British commanders as well as keeping the employees of the Anglo Iranian Oil Company safe from possible reprisals Khuzestan Province was defended by 27 000 troops from the 1st 2nd 6th and 16th infantry divisions consisting of both light and mechanised infantry All Iranian tanks were deployed in Khuzestan as part of the 1st and 2nd divisions 28 A British naval and paratrooper landing force landed at Abadan securing the city and the refinery citation needed Shoreham remained in the area and provided naval gunfire support 31 The Iranians managed to put up a resistance and the refinery and the city were captured that afternoon after hand to hand combat resulted in the deaths of several British and Indian troops The Australian armed merchant cruiser HMAS Kanimbla and her escorts successfully navigated the Khor Musa inlet arriving at Bandar Shapur at 04 15 The Kanimbla successfully landed two battalions of its troops facing no resistance from Iranian patrol boats Seven Axis merchant vessels were seized while an eighth was scuttled 31 The naval base there was secured that evening following heavy fighting At Khorramshahr HMAS Yarra surprised the Iranian sloop Babr sinking it at its dock There had been no time to prepare resistance as the Iranians had been taken by surprise and the head of the navy Gholamali Bayandor was killed 5 page needed Persian Gulf Command map showing position of posts and stations The surprise led to virtually no resistance in other areas of Khuzestan The RAF attacked airbases and communications and rapidly gained air superiority They destroyed numerous Iranian aircraft on the ground and protected their forces from Iranian counter attacks citation needed The 8th Indian Division 18th Brigade plus the 25th Brigade under command from the 10th Indian Division advanced from Basra towards Qasr Sheikh which was taken on 25 August across the Shatt al Arab waterway and captured the city of Khorramshahr which was next to Abadan on the same day The Karun River was not secured as Iranian snipers remained impeding British advance for a short time Britain also landed troops at Bandar Abbas and the Shatt al Arab was secured By 26 August there was no organised resistance remaining in the area with the Iranian forces overwhelmed by superior firepower 350 Iranians taken prisoner and many killed or scattered citation needed The British hoped to capture Ahvaz and then drive north into Zagros Mountains passes to reach Qazvin where they would link up with British troops in central Iran and Soviet troops from the north By the early morning of 27 August the British forces had reached Ahvaz 5 page needed The Iranians led by General Mohammad Shahbakhti had prepared a strong defence Iranian infantry had entrenched themselves around the city with artillery support and tanks Although Iranians had taken heavy losses and their morale was decreasing they were prepared to fight hard The Indian Army advance came to a halt and they were hesitant to cross the Karun River and attack the city A British attack on the defences around the city was repelled by Iranian tanks and infantry 5 page needed Whether the Iranian defence could have been successful is debatable and on 29 August after some more sporadic fighting word reached the Iranian commanders at Ahvaz that their government had accepted a ceasefire and they were not to fight any longer 5 page needed The British and Iranians agreed as part of the ceasefire that the Iranians would not lay down their arms and remain at their posts but they would be joined by the British troops who would carry out a parade in the city In exchange the Iranians would safely evacuate British residents in the city to British troops The British with their Indian troops paraded in the city with full military honours given by the Iranian general citation needed Invasion of Central Iran Edit Map of Iraq and western Iran in 1941 Farther north the 10th Indian Infantry Division 32 under Major General William Slim attacked central Iran Slim directed the battle remotely via radio from India The Indian Army infantry and armour massed at the Iraqi border town of Khanaqin 160 kilometres 100 mi north east of Baghdad and 480 kilometres 300 mi from Basra Unlike the terrain in Khuzestan the British were attacking in Kermanshah Province with mountainous terrain advancing along steep mountain passes and a narrow road citation needed The British force broke through the border at the town of Qasr e Shirin and moved into the Naft e Shah oilfield with little opposition The British stated that the operation had been carried out with minimum losses for the Iranians but British troops faced a determined defence by 2 000 Iranians as they tried to capture the town of Gilan e Gharb 30 kilometres 20 mi inside of Iran which if successful would block the British from moving through the steep Pai Tak mountain pass citation needed The RAF provided close air support and was involved in several dogfights with Iranian aircraft Six Iranian fighters were shot down and several others damaged for no loss ensuring air superiority The RAF also bombed several local towns and dropped leaflets urging surrender The British captured Gilan e Gharb and attacked Iranian forces who defended the town of Sarpol e Zahab citation needed With overwhelming firepower and decreasing Iranian morale the British captured that town scattering the remaining defenders The Pai Tak Pass and the road to Kermanshah and eventually Tehran was open The armoured columns began to secure the pass and the areas around it citation needed The British forces moved along the Kermanshah highway towards the city of Shahabad There was little Iranian resistance but some trees were cut down and a section of the road was even dynamited which delayed the British forces for several hours citation needed The main Iranian forces in the region consisted of the 5th and 12th infantry divisions of 30 000 troops with supporting artillery at Kermanshah and Sanandaj They were all light infantry as the mechanised and armour had been stretched thin fighting on multiple fronts The British reached the outskirts of Shahabad in the early morning hours of 28 August after delays At the village of Zibri they faced a strong Iranian garrison willing to put up a fight which caused the British several casualties but with poor Iranian leadership and overwhelming British firepower resistance crumbled and the British took Shahabad on the morning of the same day citation needed By 29 August the British had reached the town of Kerend and were within 3 kilometres 2 mi of Kermanshah and the Iranian commanders were told of the ceasefire order and stood down The defenders declared Kermanshah an open city and the British entered on 1 September They also entered Sanandaj peacefully and eventually Qazvin which had already been captured by the Red Army citation needed Soviet theatre Edit Invasion of Northwestern Iran Edit British supply convoy with Soviet escorts in Iran September 1941 The Soviet forces attacked on 25 August and Iranian airbases were destroyed by preliminary air attacks The Soviets attacked using three armoured spearheads totalling over 1 000 tanks and motorised infantry the Iranians had no tanks in the area 5 page needed The first force consisting of the 47th Army 32 broke through the border and moved from Soviet Azerbaijan into Iranian Azerbaijan They moved towards Tabriz and Lake Urmia They captured the Iranian city of Jolfa An Iranian reconnaissance aircraft discovered the forces south of Jolfa moving towards Marand It was possible for the Iranian 3rd Division under General Matboodi to move motorised infantry towards Shibli to halt the breakthrough but due to being taken by surprise he failed to make the proper counter attack He also failed to destroy the bridges and highways with explosives allowing the Soviets to rapidly move through the region 5 page needed Five Iranian bombers were intercepted trying to attack the Soviet positions around Jolfa citation needed The 53rd Army crossed the border and moved towards the city of Ardabil defended by Iran s 15th Division led by Brigadier General Qaderi 32 Two Iranian regiments began to move towards the town of Nir to confront the invaders Despite having a solid force and well motivated troops Qaderi jumped into his car and abandoned his troops He sabotaged the defence even further by ordering the supply trucks delivering food weapons and artillery to unload their weapons to make way for his personal belongings General Qaderi s actions led to the Iranian troops to be left without any reinforcements which concluded to a fast defeat against the Soviet Army The Soviets bypassed Nir and moved south 5 page needed On another front the Soviet Army launched an attack on the village of Alikaran where the Iranian border guards were caught by surprise The Officer in command Khalil Alinejad ordered his troops back to the village to warn the population of the Soviet invasion while he and a handfull of troops gave them covering fire Officer Alinejad and his troops where killed and the village of Alikaran was shortly captured by the Red Army forces Ardabil was bombed by the Soviet Air Force and received minor damage to its barracks Cut off and bypassed both the Iranian 15th Division in Ardabil and the 3rd Division in Tabriz began to collapse Despite that the regular troops tried to maintain order and began to march towards the enemy without many of their commanders However lacking food supplies and ammunition the troops were forced to abandon much of their heavy equipment Heavy pockets of resistance remained with some desperate fighting until the end They were unsurprisingly beaten by the Soviets who by August 26 occupied all of Iranian Azerbaijan including Tabriz and Ardabil 5 page needed British soldiers inspecting a Soviet T 26 31 August 1941 On 25 August the Soviet attack against Gilan Province began with their Caspian Sea Flotilla led by Rear Admiral Sedelnikov The flotilla consisted of more than a dozen patrol boats destroyers multiple anti aircraft barges and landing craft Facing them were three Iranian gunboats Meanwhile the 44th Army crossed the border and moved into Gilan Province They moved along the Astara highway and the main coastal highway Jadeh e Shomal Heavy Iranian forces in the area made the naval landing force secure Iranian cities which were then joined by the land forces The flotilla landed troops and rapidly captured the border city of Astara The landing force boarded their ships and moved towards their next targets 5 page needed The main objective of the attack was to capture Iran s Caspian Sea port of Bandar Pahlavi The Iranian forces in Gilan led by General Iranpour made their stand at the provincial capital of Rasht and Bandar Pahlavi and offered a stubborn resistance citation needed The Iranian forces sank barges at the entrance to Pahlavi harbour and lacking coastal artillery moved a battery of 75 mm guns to the area The Iranians fought desperately and despite Soviet superiority the Iranians prevented them from landing The Iranians were careful to not fire their guns while Soviet aircraft flew overhead to prevent them from disclosing their location Soviet aircraft were kept at bay by 47 mm anti aircraft artillery on Iranian barges 5 page needed The next day however the Soviet Air Force moved into action using many heavy bombers In groups of 4 aircraft each their bombers attacked military positions and civilian targets throughout Gilan including Bandar Pahlavi and Rasht At least 200 civilians were killed during the bombings The bombings also destroyed many Iranian positions and resistance was finally crushed by the 44th Army advancing from land capturing both cities Fighting was very intense and the Soviets took their heaviest casualties of the invasion here However lacking armour and air power the Iranians could not stop the enemy 5 page needed On 28 August they were forced to surrender Nevertheless some Iranian forces refused to accept defeat and retreated to Ramsar to continue fighting Their efforts were undercut when the Iranian government announced a ceasefire the next day 5 page needed By then the Soviet forces had reached the city of Chalus meaning that they could cross the Chalus Highway Jadeh e Chalus and reach Tehran across the Alborz Mountains citation needed Soviet advance on Iranian heartland Edit Soviet soldiers crossing the border on 25 August 1941 Meanwhile the Soviet invasion force in Iranian Azerbaijan had moved south The 47th Army had been delayed in the Jolfa area when three individual Iranian soldiers managed to block an important bridge until they ran out of ammunition and were killed 32 The Soviets did not use artillery for fear that they would damage the bridge and delay their advance further 16 The 47th Army moved south capturing Dilman 100 kilometres 80 mi west of Tabriz and then Urmia Oromiyeh ostensibly to block the escape of German agents The latter was defended by only a few snipers The Soviets responded by bombing targets in the city killing over a dozen people and wounding many others and much of the city s bazaar was burned Meanwhile the 53rd Army moved south of Ardebil towards the Tehran Karaj Tabriz highway capturing the city of Mianeh East Azerbaijan and moving southeast towards Qazvin and Tehran by 27 28 August 32 Iran s 15th and 3rd divisions had already been bypassed and defeated and there was only sporadic resistance against the Soviets The Soviet armoured spearhead drove down the highway and poised to take Qazvin on the 29th 151 kilometres 94 mi from Tehran followed by Saveh and Qom south of Tehran cutting the main Tehran Saveh Persian Gulf highway and cutting Iran effectively in two But the Iranians accepted the ceasefire on 29 August and the Soviets entered the now open city on 30 August At the same time elements of the 53rd Army captured the city of Hamadan One civilian a small child was killed in a small bombing raid and the sporadic resistance was defeated They stopped their advance on 1 September and did not move further towards Tehran from Qazvin in light of negotiations with Iran s government citation needed Invasion of Northeastern Iran Edit On 25 August the Soviet Army invaded northeastern Iran from Soviet Turkmenistan Details of this invasion were not nearly as extensive as details of the others The Soviet invasion force had to cross mountainous terrain and its goals were to recruit new troops from the Turkmen Sahra assemble with the Soviet troops and to capture the city of Mashhad the second largest city in Iran citation needed Defending Mashhad and Khorasan Province was Iran s 9th Infantry Division totalling 8 000 troops They were light infantry and it was unlikely that they could defend against the more numerous Soviet forces with armour and air power The Soviet Air Force bombed Mashhad Airport destroying many Iranian fighter aircraft along with numerous military barracks The Soviet forces advanced in three columns across the border There was heavy fighting for three days and by 28 August the Iranians had been driven back after taking heavy casualties Mashhad fell to the Soviets the same day citation needed Final phase and outcome Edit British and Soviet officers inspect troops in preparations to the Joint Soviet British military parade in Tehran Iran September 1941 By 28 29 August 1941 the Iranian military situation was in complete chaos The Allies had complete control over the skies of Iran and large sections of the country were in their hands Major Iranian cities such as Tehran were suffering repeated air raids In Tehran itself the casualties had been light but the Soviet Air Force dropped leaflets over the city warning the population of an upcoming massive bombing raid and urging them to surrender before they suffered imminent destruction 2 Tehran water and food supply had faced shortages and soldiers fled in fear of the Soviets killing them upon capture Faced with total collapse the royal family except the Shah and the Crown Prince fled to Isfahan 5 page needed 2 The collapse of the army that Reza Shah had spent so much time and effort creating was humiliating Many of the military generals had behaved incompetently or secretly sympathised with the British and ended up sabotaging the Iranian resistance 5 page needed The army generals met in secret to discuss surrender options When the Shah learned of the generals actions he beat the head of the armed forces General Ahmad Nakhjavan with a cane and physically stripped him of his rank He was nearly shot by the Shah on the spot but at the insistence of the Crown Prince he was sent to prison instead 2 The Shah ordered the resignation of the pro British Prime Minister Ali Mansur whom he blamed for demoralising the military 2 He was replaced with Mohammad Ali Foroughi a former prime minister 5 page needed The Shah ordered the Iranian military to end resistance and order a ceasefire He entered into negotiations with the British and Soviets 5 page needed 2 Indian troops guarding the Abadan Refinery in Iran 4 September 1941 Foroughi was an enemy of Reza Shah he was forced into retirement in earlier years for political reasons and his son was executed by firing squad When he entered into negotiations with the British instead of negotiating a favourable settlement Foroughi implied that both he and the Iranian people wanted to be liberated from the Shah s rule 2 The British and Foroughi agreed that for the Allies to withdraw from Iran the Iranians would have to assure that the German minister and his staff should leave Tehran the German Italian Hungarian and Romanian legations should close and all remaining German nationals including all families to be handed over to the British and Soviet authorities The last order would mean almost certain internment or in the case of those handed to the Soviets possible death Reza Shah delayed on the last demand Instead he planned the secret evacuation of all German nationals from Iran By 18 September most of the German nationals had escaped via the Turkish border 16 In response to the Shah s defiance the Red Army on 16 September moved to occupy Tehran Fearing execution by the communists many people especially the wealthy fled the city Reza Shah in a letter handwritten by Foroughi announced his abdication as the Soviets entered the city on 17 September The British wanted to restore the Qajar Dynasty to power because they had served British interests well prior to Reza Shah s reign However the heir to the throne Hamid Hassan Mirza was a British citizen who spoke no Persian Instead with the help of Ardeshir Reporter Crown Prince Mohammad Reza Pahlavi took the oath to become the Shah of Iran 2 Reza Shah was arrested before he was able to leave Tehran and he was placed into British custody He was sent to exile as a British prisoner in South Africa where he died in 1944 5 page needed 7 page needed The Allies withdrew from Tehran on 17 October and Iran was partitioned between Britain and the Soviet Union for the duration of the war with the Soviets stationed in northern Iran and the British south of Hamadan and Qazvin Occupation Edit Soviet and British sphere of influence Iran 1946 The Persian Corridor became the route for a massive flow of supplies over 5 million tons of materiel to the Soviet Union and also the British in the Middle East At the end of August 1942 German intelligence agents spread leaflets in Tabriz and other cities an underground fascist organisation called Melnune Iran was founded Agents of Melnune Iran instigated anti government protests in the Lake Urmia region The Bakhtiari and Qashqai peoples carried out armed resistance against the new government 33 The new Shah signed a Tripartite Treaty Alliance with Britain and the Soviet Union on 29 January 1942 to aid in the allied war effort in a non military way citation needed This treaty committed the Allies to leaving Iran not more than six months after the cessation of hostilities In September 1943 Iran declared war on Germany which qualified it for membership in the United Nations UN At the Tehran Conference in November of that year Roosevelt Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin reaffirmed their commitment to Iranian independence and territorial integrity with a willingness to extend economic assistance to Iran The treaty ruled that Iran was not considered to be occupied by the Allies but instead a member of the Allies 7 page needed Lend Lease Program US planes stand ready to be picked up at Abadan Air Field Iran 34 The effects of the war were very disruptive for Iran Much of the state bureaucracy had been damaged by the invasion and food and other essential items were scarce 35 The Soviets appropriated most of the harvest in northern Iran leading to food shortages for the general public The British and Soviet occupiers used the delivery of grain as a bargaining chip and the food crisis was exacerbated because foreign troops needed to eat and use the transport network to move military equipment The British meanwhile pressured the Shah to appoint Ahmad Qavam to be the prime minister who proceeded to mismanage the entire food supply and economy In 1942 bread riots took place in Tehran martial law was declared and several rioters were killed by the police Inflation increased by 450 percent imposing great hardship on the lower and middle classes In some areas there were famine deaths but there was virtually no armed resistance against the occupation 7 page needed A supply train passing through Iran after the invasion In 1943 30 000 Americans helped to man the Persian Corridor and 26 34 percent of the supplies sent to the Soviet Union under the Lend Lease Act were sent through Iran The Americans also assuaged Iranian fears of colonisation by the two powers by confirming that they would respect the independence of Iran The US also extended Lend Lease assistance to Iran and began to train the Iranian army Arthur Millspaugh became the finance minister of Iran but ran into much opposition trying to direct Iranian finances 7 page needed There were two notable German attempts to undertake operations against the Allies in 1943 In the middle of 1943 Abwehr s Operation Francois was an attempt to use the dissident Qashqai people in Iran to sabotage British and American supplies bound for the Soviet Union Also in 1943 Operation Long Jump was an unsuccessful German plot to assassinate the Big Three Allied leaders Stalin Churchill and Roosevelt at the Tehran Conference 36 Withdrawal EditFurther information Iran crisis of 1946 During the three years of occupation Joseph Stalin had expanded Soviet political influence in Azerbaijan and Iranian Kurdistan in northwestern Iran as well as in Iran founding the communist Tudeh Party of Iran The Soviets had attempted during their occupation to stir tensions between the tenant farmers and the landlords known in Iran as arbabs citation needed On 12 December 1945 after weeks of violent clashes a Soviet backed separatist People s Republic of Azerbaijan was founded The Kurdish People s Republic was also established in late 1945 Iranian government troops sent to reestablish control were blocked by Red Army units When the deadline for withdrawal arrived on 2 March 1946 six months after the end of the war the British began to withdraw but Moscow refused citing threats to Soviet security Soviet troops did not withdraw from Iran proper until May 1946 following Iran s official complaint to the newly formed United Nations Security Council which became the first complaint filed by a country in the UN s history and a test for the UN s effectiveness in resolving global issues in the aftermath of the war However the UN Security Council took no direct steps to pressure the Soviets to withdraw 4 See also EditList of British military equipment of World War II List of Soviet Union military equipment of World War II Anglo Iraqi War 1941 Anglo Persian Oil Company Anglo Persian War 1856 1857 Anglo Russian Convention of 1907 Anglo Soviet Treaty of 1942 Dunsterforce Foreign interventions by the Soviet Union History of Iran 1941 Iranian legislative election Iran Britain relations Iran Russia relations Iraqforce Persian Campaign in World War One Persian Corridor Russo Persian Wars Trans Iranian Railway 1953 Iranian coup d etatReferences Edit a b c Immortal A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces Steven R Ward Georgetown University Press 2009 p 169 a b c d e f g h Milani Abbas 2011 The Shah ISBN 978 1 4039 7193 7 a b Compton Mackenzie Eastern Epic p 136 a b UN History Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Farrokh Kaveh 2011 Iran at War 1500 1988 ISBN 978 1 78096 221 4 page needed Pollack p 28 a b c d e f g h i j Pollack Kenneth 2004 The Persian Puzzle Deciphering the Twenty Five Year Conflict ISBN 978 1 58836 434 0 page needed NAZI SOVIET DEAL ON IRAN REPORTED Moscow Said to Open German Route to Near East in Return for Indian Ocean Outlet BRITISH CAUTION TURKEY London Fears War Materials May Go Through Nation Close Watch Kept The New York Times Iran Reported Shipping Through Soviet to Reich The New York Times Reed Stanley Fitzgerald Alison 2010 In Too Deep BP and the Drilling Race That Took it Down Wiley ISBN 978 0 470 95090 6 Esposito 1998 p 127 NAZIS IN A RACE AGAINST TIME TO WIN THE WAR Russia Must Be Conquered and a New Transport System Set Up Quickly The New York Times Samii Bill 6 May 2005 World War II 60 Years After The Anglo Soviet Invasion of Iran and Washington Tehran Relations RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 25 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Beaumont Joan January 1981 Great Britain and the Rights of Neutral Countries The Case of Iran 1941 Journal of Contemporary History 16 1 213 228 doi 10 1177 002200948101600112 JSTOR 260624 S2CID 159929729 Abbas Milani Iran Jews and the Holocaust An answer to Mr Black iranian com Retrieved 22 September 2011 a b c Iranian History 1941 Archived from the original on 10 July 2013 Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b Stewart Richard Anthony 1988 Sunrise at Abadan The British and Soviet invasion of Iran 1941 New York Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 92793 6 Foundation Encyclopaedia Iranica Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica iranicaonline org Stewart Richard A 1988 Sunrise at Abadan The British and Soviet Invasion of Iran 1941 New York Praeger p 85 ISBN 978 0 275 92793 6 No 37685 The London Gazette Supplement 13 August 1946 pp 4097 4098 No 37685 The London Gazette Supplement 13 August 1946 p 4098 Ward Steven R 2009 Immortal A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces Georgetown University Press p 154 ISBN 978 1 58901 258 5 Kaveh Farrokh Iran at War 1500 1988 Osprey 2011 ISBN 978 1 84603 491 6 page needed Parsa Ali Brno the Persian Mauser Retrieved 30 August 2015 Militaria www militaria cz Retrieved 11 December 2021 ZB 53 Vz 37 Modern Firearms 27 October 2010 Retrieved 11 December 2021 Barret Dave Iranian Tanks Archived from the original on 4 October 2012 a b Armour in Iran Army Archived from the original on 22 February 2013 Retrieved 15 September 2014 a b HISTORY OF THE IMPERIAL IRANIAN AIR FORCE www iiaf net Retrieved 13 October 2021 a b Iran Aircraft List Current and Former Types www militaryfactory com Retrieved 13 October 2021 a b c d O Hara Vincent P 2011 Tucker Spencer ed World War II at Sea An Encyclopedia Vol 1 illustrated reprint ed ABC CLIO pp 86 87 ISBN 978 1 59884 457 3 a b c d e Stone Stone amp War Diary Records for Invasion of Iran 1941 Grechko Grechko 1976 p 224 Abadan Airfield Photo Archived from the original on 28 September 2014 Retrieved 15 September 2014 Iran in world War II Archived from the original on 16 October 2009 Retrieved 12 January 2010 Blum Howard 2 June 2020 The Search for the Truth About the Nazi Plot to Assassinate FDR Time Retrieved 25 August 2021 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint url status link Bibliography EditEsposito John 1998 Islam and Politics 4th ed Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2774 6 Grechko Grechko A A 1976 Gody Vojny Gody voiny 1941 1943 The War Years 1941 1943 in Russian Moskva Voenizdat OCLC 14013882 Mackenzie Compton 1951 Eastern Epic September 1939 March 1943 Defence Vol I London Chatto amp Windus OCLC 53462081 Kozhanov Nikolay A The Pretexts and Reasons for the Allied Invasion of Iran in 1941 Iranian Studies 45 4 2012 479 497 Pollack Kenneth 2004 The Persian Puzzle The Conflict between Iran and America New York Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6315 4 Stewart Richard A Sunrise at Abadan the British and Soviet invasion of Iran 1941 Praeger Publishers 1988 A standard scholarly history Wavell Archibald 1942 Despatch on Operations in Iraq East Syria and Iran From 10th April 1941 to 12th January 1942 PDF London HMSO as published in No 37685 The London Gazette Supplement 13 August 1946 pp 4093 4101 External links EditBBC WW2 People s War Persia Invaded Persia and Iraq Command Strange Menagerie the US in Iran 1941 1946 Pink Elephants on the road to Baghdad personal account of the invasion by a British soldier Despatch on Operations in Iraq East Syria and Iran From 10th April 1941 to 12th January 1942 PDF Supplement to the London Gazette Number 37685 13 August 1946 Retrieved 26 September 2009 No 37703 The London Gazette Supplement 27 August 1946 pp 4333 4340 General Sir H Maitland Wilson s official despatch on the Persia and Iraq Command covering the period 21 August 1942 to 17 February 1943 after the invasion had been completed Persia in World War 2 History of the campaign in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran amp oldid 1154012246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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