Sheikh Khazal rebellion

Sheikh Khazal rebellion[4] refers to the 1924 Arab separatist uprising by Khazal al-Kabi, the Sheikh of Muhammara, in Iranian Khuzestan. The rebellion was quickly and efficiently suppressed by Reza Shah with minimal casualties, subduing the Bakhtiari tribes allied with Sheikh Khazal and resulting in his surrender and the end of Arab autonomy in Khuzestan.[5]

Sheikh Khazal rebellion
Part of Arab separatism in Khuzestan

The palace of Khazal in Shadegan
DateJuly 1922 – November 1924
Location
Result

Iranian victory

  • Rebellious Arab forces disbanded
  • Bakhtiaris defeated
  • Khazal arrested
  • Sheikhdom of Mohammerah abolished
Belligerents
Sublime State of Persia Emirate of Muhammara
Bakhtiari Tribesmen
Supported by:
 United Kingdom[1] (until mid-1924)
Commanders and leaders

Reza Shah

Fazlollah Zahedi
Khazal ibn Jabir Al-Kabi
Youssef Khan Mujahid[2]
Strength
274 soldiers (1922)[3]
3,000 (1924)
Several dozen Arab militiamen
Several hundred Bakhtiari militiamen
Casualties and losses
115 killed (1922)[3]

Background

Khuzestan (also known as Arabistan) had become an autonomous functioning region[5] and remained much out of the reach of the central government by 1923. Prior to the rise of Reza Khan, Foreign influence was destroying Iran's independence and destabilizing the country. During the Constitutional Revolution, Iranians tried to break the Anglo-Russian control in their government but they failed. Soon after Iran turned into a battlefield during World War 1, which led to Britain's forces occupying much of Iran and controlling Tehran's governments. Consequently, Tabriz, Rasht, and Mashhad resisted Tehran's orders and the tribes (one quarter of the population) ignored central government authority. Iran's leaders responded to this situation in four ways; with a British policy, a pro-Russian policy, a third power policy, and with isolation.[6][7] Sheikh Khazal was supported by the British, who sent him some 3,000 arms and additional ammunition by 1919.[7] He had been collecting taxes, but in fact paid a very small fraction to the central government.[7]

Reza Shah

In 1921, realizing the threat posed by Reza Khan, who had just staged a coup d'état with Seyyed Zia'eddin Tabatabaee, Khazal proceeded to take steps in order to protect himself. In February 1922, the issue of taxation from tribal areas of Mohammerah was reopened by the Iranian government.[3]

Sheikh Khazal al-Kabi

Sheikh Khazal and Bakhtiari Khan's met between April 29 and May 2, 1922, in Dar-e Khazinah to establish a cooperation; another meeting between the parties in Ahvaz produced a formal document that Khazal and Bakhtiaris would cooperate in every respect, although both would "continue to serve Iranian government faithfully and loyally".[3] The agreement was an important step which paved the way to the establishment of the Southern League.[3] The nucleus of the alliance, based on Sheikh Khazal and the Bakhtiaris, later tried to attract additional elements, including the Vali of Posht-e Kuh, Qavam ol-Molk of Khamsah and possibly Sawlat ol-Dowlat.[3] The League however had no formal existence, being largely a temporary tribal confederation with common interests.

Conflict

1922 events

In July 1922, a column of 274 Iranian soldiers, including 12 officers under command of Colonel Hasan Agha, were sent by Reza Khan to Khuzestan through Bakhriari mountains to put pressure on Sheikh Khazal.[3] The Bakhtiaris, unaware that the column was designated to Khuzestan and thinking their aim was to occupy their land, attacked them and destroyed the force.[2] Only a handful of Iranian soldiers escaped the massacre.[2] Enraged Reza Khan swore to take revenge on the incident; the Bakhtiaris however requested to be informed of such military operations in the future, in order to avoid misunderstandings. Reza Shah was however preoccupied with other troubles in Iranian frontier, most notably the Kurdish rebellion of Simko Shikak, preventing him from concentrating on retaliation towards the Bakhtiaris.[3] The troubles with Bakhtiaris however continued in mid-September, when two minor Sheikhs of Bakhtiaris destroyed the village of Chughurt.[3]

Negotiations

On 23 October 1923, Khazal was demanded to yield much of his possessions to the government, but the Sheikh rejected.[7] He attempted to form an alliance with all the Bakhtiari, Lur and Khamseh tribes, in order to prevent Reza Shah from gaining too much power. His ultimate aim was that through this tribal alliance the Zagros Mountains would become a nearly impenetrable barrier against the forces of the central government. However, the various tribal groups often clashed with each other and were unable to come to agreements, and his proposal was mostly unanswered.

He then turned to Ahmad Shah Qajar and the Imperial Court of Tehran, presenting himself as a fiercely loyal defender and advocate of the Qajar dynasty, and calling upon the Court to take action against the ambitions of Reza Pahlavi. This eventually came to nothing as well. Khazal then sought to ally himself with the Majles (Iranian Parliament) opposition to Reza Shah, writing a number of letters to the opposition leader, Ayatollah Seyyed Hassan Modarres. In these letters Khazal presented himself as a staunch constitutionalist from the very beginning of the movement, emphatic as an Iranian nationalist, and a liberal democrat who found Reza Shah's authoritarianism to be personally offensive. The opposition accepted Khazal's proposal cautiously and not without much deliberation, as they did not trust him. However, the parliamentary opposition to Reza Shah failed.

Indifference from the Qajar court and the refusal of the British to lend him support ultimately led Khazal to go to the League of Nations in 1924 in an effort to gain international recognition of his sheikhdom and to gather support for the separation of his territory from Iran. This effort, however, ended in failure. Prior to the rise of Reza Shah, Khazal had never attempted to separate his sheikhdom from Qajar Persia, to which he had maintained staunch loyalty.

November 1924

In November 1924, Reza Pahlavi sent 3,000 soldiers to subdue the rebellious Sheikh.[8] Two task forces were set, one for Dezful headed by Major-General Ayrom and another, under General Zahedi and Colonel Ali Akbar Javaheri-Farsi, were set from Isfahan and Shiraz through the Zagros mountains into Khuzestan plain. The force under General Zahedi and Javaheri-Farsi defeated the Bakhtiari tribe who were Khazal's allies and submitted other Bakhtiaris into submission as well. Reza's arrival to Bushehr and concentration of Iranian soldiers around Ahwaz were enough to convince the Sheikh to seek a negotiated settlement.[9] Because of Colonel Javaheri-Farsi bravery and leadership during the conflict and hatred by remaining Shikh’s defeated supporters , Colonel Ali Akbar Javaheri-Farsi was ambushed one early morning and was assassinated in Ahvaz. He remains one of the heroes of the liberation of Khuzestan province in Iran up to now.

Khazal then turned to the British for help,[9] and this time presented himself as a defender of Islam and Shari'a (Islamic law) against Reza Shah's Iranian secularism. Forced to choose between Khazal and Reza Pahlavi, the British completely withdrew their support and protection for Khazal's rule, claiming that the only reason they had supported him to begin with was due to the central government's inability to properly enforce its rule in Khuzestan. With British withdrawal of support, Sheikh Khazal disbanded his Arab forces and retired to Mohammerah.[9]

Aftermath

1925 conclusion

In January 1925, Reza Shah sent his military commanders to the province to assert the authority of the provisional government in Tehran. An Imperial farman (executive order) was issued restoring the old name of the province, Khuzestan instead of Arabistan, and Khazal lost his authority over the various tribes under his command.

Later that spring Reza Shah made two attempts to convince Khaz'al to meet him in Tehran to discuss his position in the new government. However, Khazal was suspicious of Reza Shah's motives and refused to go there himself, instead stating that he would send an emissary. A few weeks later in April 1925, Reza Shah ordered one of his commanders, who had a friendly relationship with Khazal, to meet Khazal ostensibly to convince him to journey to Tehran. The commander, General Fazlollah Zahedi, accompanied by several government officials, met with Khazal and spent an evening with him on board his yacht, anchored in the Shatt al-Arab river.

Later that evening a gunboat led by Meguertitch Khan Davidkhanian, sent by Reza Shah, stealthily made its way next to the yacht, which was then immediately boarded by fifty Persian marines. The soldiers arrested Khazal and took him by motorboat down the river to Mohammerah, where a car was waiting to take him to the military base in Ahvaz. From there he was taken to Dezful, accompanied by his son, and then to the city of Khorramabad in Lorestan, and then eventually to Tehran. Upon his arrival, Khazal was warmly greeted and well received by Reza Shah, who assured him that his problems would be quickly settled, and that in the meantime, he would be treated very well. However, many of his personal assets in Iran were quickly liquidated and his properties eventually came under the domain of the Imperial government after Reza Shah was crowned the new Shah. The sheikhdom was abolished and the provincial authority took full control of regional affairs destroying any form of local Arab autonomy.

Further ethnic tensions

Khazal spent the rest of his life under virtual house arrest, unable to travel beyond Tehran's city limits. He was able to retain ownership of his properties in Kuwait and Iraq, where he was exempted from taxation. He died in May 1936 while alone in his house, as earlier in the day his servants had been taken to court by the police. It is said that he did not die of natural causes, but that he was murdered by one of the guards stationed outside his house under direct orders from Reza Shah.

See also

Further reading

  • Shahnavaz, Shahbaz (2013). "Ḵazʿal Khan". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. XVI, Fasc. 2. pp. 188–197.

References

  1. Price, M. (2005). Iran's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook. ABC-CLIO. p. 159. ISBN 9781576079935. Retrieved 2015-02-11.
  2. Bakhtiary, A. M. The Last of the Khans: The Life of Morteza Quli Khan Samsam Bakhtiari. p155.
  3. Cronin, S. Tribal Politics in Iran: Rural Conflict and the New State, 1921–1941. pp52-5.
  4. Price, M. Iran`s diverse peoples: a reference sourcebook. p.159. "... and finally supporting a rebellion by Shaykh Khazal."
  5. Yazdi, Leila Papoli (March 2013). "What He Thought...What He Did: An Archaeological Study of the Persian Gulf Coasts Colonial Sites of Sheikh Khazal Khan in the Early Twentieth Century". International Journal of Historical Archaeology. 17: 1–17. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  6. Zirinsky, Michael P. (Nov 1992). "IMPERIAL POWER AND DICTATORSHIP: BRITAIN AND THE RISE OF REZA SHAH, 1921-1926". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 24 (4): 25. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  7. Farrokh, K. (2011). Iran at War: 1500-1988. Osprey Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781780962214. Retrieved 2015-02-11.
  8. Ward Steven R. Immortal: A military history of Iran and its armed forces. p.138.
  9. Ward Steven R. Immortal: A military history of Iran and its armed forces. p.139.
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