Set: Comparative Foreign Policy Exam - Iran

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All 62 terms

TermDefinition
AchaemenidThe first imperial dynasty in Iran, founded by Cyrus the great and overthrown by Alexander the Great.
Cyrus the GreatThe founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, conquered Babylon in 539 and liberated the Jews. Increasingly characterized in modern Iran as the Father of the Nation.
Dr.Mohammad MosaddeqThe nationalist prime minister who oversaw the nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. Was overthrown in a coup orchestrated by the CIA and MI6 in 1953.
Mohammad Reza ShawThe second and last monarch of the Pahlavi Dynasty in Iran.
Fath Ali ShahReigned during the period in which Iran was defeated by the Russians and lost its great power status.
AyatollahLiterally means sign of God, and is an honorific title given to most senior Shia jurists.
Al QaedaAn extremist sunni Islamic movement that views Shias as heretics
BaathistThe ruling party in Iraq from 1968-2003
BazaarPersian for market, also used in a political sense to denote business interests
FatwaA religious judgement.
FirmanA royal decree
Friday prayersWeekly public prayers institutionalized in the Islamic Republic as a political event in which leaders follow communal prayers with a political speech.The most famous are held in Tehran University, but attendance has declined in recent years.
Guardian CouncilThe supervisory body in the Islamic Republic, composed of six religious and six lay lawyers whose function is to assess the compatibility of parliamentary legislation with Islamic Law. Six are elected and six appointed by the Supreme Leader. Its powers were extended in 1990 to allow for the vetting of election candidates and supervision of elections.
HardlinersThose Iranian leaders with a dogmatic adherence to Islamic orthodoxy and authoritarianism. Opposed to democratic developments.
HizbollahLiterally The Party of God. A political group most active in Lebanon, also effectively an Iranian proxy in the Middle East, although it often works on its own accord
ImamIn Sunni Islam denotes any prominent religious leader. In Shia Islam it is used to denote descendants of the Prophet Muhammad.
Imperial CalandarA calendar imposed by Mohammad Reza Shah in 1976, dating from the accession of Cyrus the Great.
Iran/PersiaIran is the name traditionally used by inhabitants of the country, while Persia was used by the Greeks and Romans and is derived from the southern province, Pars. In 1934, the Iranian government requested that foreigners desist from using Persia, but it has come back in recent years.
JihadLiterally means struggle, but has been generalized in the west to mean holy war.
MajlisThe Parliament established following the Constitutional Revolution in 1906.
MullahA member of the ulema
ReformistsA term used to describe those who seek to reform the Islamic Republic and develop an Islamic Democracy
Revolutionary GuardThe elite military organization of the Islamic Republic
ShahPersian term for king
ShiaThe minority branch of Islam, the state religion of Iran, and the majority in Iraq, Bahrein, and Azerbaijan. Divided into numerous sects
TalebanFrom taleb, which literally means student. Students of radical Sunni madrasahs, schools in Pakistan that espouse puritanical interpretations of Islam.
UlemaA religious scholar or cleric.
Oil in IranIran possesses the second largest oil reserves in the world, second only to those of Iraq.
Estimated population of Iranseventy-five million
Morgan ShusterAn American merchant and banker invited by the Iranian Constitutional Government in 1911 to help reform the country's anarchic finances.
Safavid DynastyRuling dynasty in Iran from 1501-1736
Nader ShahRuler of Iran from 1736-1747, revived Iran and invaded India in 1739.
Agha Mohammad Khan QajarClaimed himself Shah in 1796
Russo Iranian warLasted from 1804-1813
Treaty of FinkensteinSigned in 1807, France agreed to train and supply Iran's army while Iran would declare war on Great Britain.
Treat of GolestanSigned in 1813 with Russia, recognized the cession of Iran's Caucasian territories to Russia
Treaty of TurkmenchaiSigned in 1828
Amir KabirSought to restore order to the Iranian kingdom from 1848-1851 but was forced to take his own life.
Baron Julius de ReuterSecured one of the most extensive concessions ever awarded in 1872 with Iran
Tobacco Revolt of 1892Nationwide boycott
National Consultative AssemblyFormed in 1905 to hold the government accountable, enact legislation, and limit the monarch's powers
Anglo-Persian Agreement in 1919A deal denounced by Iranian nationalists as trying to make Iran into a British protectorate.
Anglo-Iranian Oil CompanyPayed more to the British government than to the Iranian government, and a source of substantial grievance for the Iranian people.
Kermit RooseventCIA operative who personally delivered the firman dismissing Mosaddeq to the Shah to sign.
Three interpretations of the 1953 coupMonarchist perspective, that the Shah was reinstated through popular support of the people; Secular nationalist perspective, that Mosaddeq was overthrown because he had the courage and integrity to stand up to imperialists; Religious narrative, diminishes the role of the ulema in allowing the coup
Anglo-American myths of the 1953 coupJustified through Cold War necessity, that Mosaddeq was not actually a democratically elected leader, and that the Iranians could not handle democracy
American grants and loans to Iran in the 1950sTotaled roughly 1.1 billion, about half for military assistance and a little more than half for economic assistance
Iraqi Revolution of 1958Made the Shah realize that something needed to change in Iran
White RevolutionEssentially a land reform bill which replaced feudal tenant system with small landowners. Alienated the ulema and the landed aristocracy, and was viewed as being instituted by the Americans
1963 riotsLed by Ruhollah Khomeini, a religious jurist who was catapulted to the top of the clerical leadership due to his political affiliations
Nuclear assistance to IranIn 1974 the US signed a 10 year agreement to supply Iran with enriched uranium for energy purposes
Sales of military equipment to IranAmounted to 10.4 billion between 1972 and 1976
Iran hostage crisisLasted for 444 days, starting on 11/4/79, and not the first embassy seizure in that year. It was used by Khomeini to unify the Iranian public, although he was likely not one of the original orchestraters
Iran-Iraq warBegan in September of 1980 and ended in August 1988. a result of poor diplomacy on Iran's part and aggression on Saddam Hussein's part.
Algiers Accord of 1981US agreed not to interfere in the internal affairs of Iran and released 10 billion in frozen assets also ended formal relations between the US and Iran
Donald Rumsfeld in Iraq1984, coincided with the official restoration of relations to Iraq
HalabjaA town in Iraq where Kurdish citizens were wiped out in gas attacks by Saddam Hussein's Anfal campagin
US in the Iran-Iraq warBy 1987 the US had effectively entered in on Iraq's side by retaliating against Iranian attacks
USS VincennesAttacked a civilian airliner killing 290 people.
President Ali Akbar Hashemi RafsanjaniA mullah, shrewd politician and merchant who came to power in 1989 after Khomeini's death. He engineered key constitutional amendments, including increasing the power of the presidency
Salman RushdieBritish author of the Satanic Verses, a novel some viewed as blaspheming against the prophet muhammad, was issued a fatwah and a death sentence. Iran had actually awarded him a prize for one of his earlier books
Abu Musa islandAn island that was apparently annexed by Iran yet of insignificant size of value, an international media problem for Iran

Set Information

Terms 62
Creator jkmuller
Created May 3, 2008
Groups None
Subjects iran, history, politics
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