Teymur Bakhtiar

Teymur Bakhtiar

Teymur Bakhtiar (تیمور بختیار in Persian) (1914 - August 12 , 1970) was an Iranian general and the founder and head of SAVAK from 1958 to 1961, when he was dismissed by the Shah. In 1970, SAVAK agents assassinated him in Iraq. Sayeed Shirazi, a young and popular brigade-general, served beneath him.

Early life

Bakhtiar was born in 1914 to Sardar Moazzam Bakhtiari, a chieftain of the eminent Bakhtiari tribe. He studied at a French school in Beirut (many Iranians were Francophiles at the time: e. g. Amir Abbas Hoveyda and General Hassan Pakravan) from 1928 to 1933, whereupon he was accepted to the renowned Saint-Cyr military academy. When he returned to Iran, he was made a first lieutenant and dispatched to Zahedan. Bakhtiar's first wife was Iran Khanom, the daughter of the powerful Bakhtiari chieftain Sardar-e Zafar. At this time, the Bakhtiaris were extremely influential; Muhammad Reza Shah's second wife, Soraya Esfandiary Bakhtiari, and the Shah's last prime minister, Shapour Bakhtiar, were both related to Teymour Bakhtiar.

Rise to Power

Bakhtiar rose rapidly in Iran's military after the fall of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq in 1953. A close associate of Prime Minister Fazlollah Zahedi, he was promoted to military governor of Tehran. One of his first major successes was the capture and trial of Mossadeq's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Hossein Fatemi, who had actively fought the military government, succeeding Mossadegh's period in office, from underground. [
Hossein Fatemi (bearded)]

Bakhtiar waged an extensive campaign against the Communist Tudeh party; he arrested and had 24 Tudeh leaders summarily tried and executed, including Khalil Tahmasebi, the assassin of former Prime Minister Ali Razmara. For these accomplishments, he was appointed modern Iran's youngest three-star general in 1954. Bakhtiar was made head of the newly-formed intelligence and security service SAVAK in February 1958. He ruthlessly crushed any opposition to the regime, including communists, Islamic fundamentalists, and any other anti-monarchists.

Fall

With the appointment of Dr. Ali Amini as prime minister in 1961, the Shah began to distrust Bakhtiar. Amini warned the Shah of Bakhtiar's contacts with John F. Kennedy, and Bakhtiar was dismissed in 1961. Ironically, Amini himself was a Kennedy supporter and was dismissed in 1963 partly because of the Shah's growing distrust of Kennedy. Initially from his self chosen exile in Geneva, Bakhtiar retaliated by establishing contacts with Iranian dissidents in Europe, Iraq, and Lebanon, using the contacts he had built during his time at SAVAK. He met not only Ayatollah Khomeini but also Reza Radmanesh, the General Secretary of the Tudeh party, and Mahmud Panahian, the "War Minister" of autonomy-seeking state Democratic Republic of South Azerbaijan, that had emerged briefly after the Soviet forces withdrew from Iran, following World War II. The Shah issued a warrant for Bakhtiar's arrest, but the general sought refuge in Iraq. On August 12, 1970, during a hunting party, he was shot and killed (disguised as an accident) by Iranian Savak agents, feigning to be sympathizers. As a cover for the plot, the assassins had enacted the highjacking of an Iranian passenger plane, forcing it to land in Baghdad. Guising as dissidents of the Iranian government, the two assassins duped the Iraqi regime and gained access to Teymur Bakhtiar and his entourage. The truth behind these circumstances emerged only years later. Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi himself has been quoted as claiming the assassination a personal success. In an Interview with the acclaimed French author and biographer, Gerard de Villiers, the Shah publicly made a relevant statement to this effect.

After being expelled from the ranks of Tudeh party, Gen., Dr. Mahmoud Panahian, in May 1970, came to Baghdad Iraq, by the invitation of former Iraqi government officials. Upon arrival in Baghdad, Dr. Mahmoud Panahian had very fruitful discussions with a number of Iranian dissidents, as well as Iranian opposition leaders, namely Major, Dr. Morad Aziz Razmavar, as well as Gen. Teymur Bakhtiar. Within the next few months, Mahmoud Panahian started recruiting people, organizing anti-Shah radio broadcasts and publishing his lifetime work started in Baku, Azerbaijan: “The Geographical Dictionary of Iranian Nationalities”.

Shortly before Gen. Bakhtiar’s assassination, Mahmoud Panahian, received a personal invitation from Gen. Bakhtiar to come attend the same hunting party, but respectfully declined. Gen. Bahktiar’s would be assassin was a trusted person, living on the premises of Bakhtiar mansion in Baghdad and could have had the General assassinated, along with his two sons and wife at a much earlier time. However, the chances for escape were slim, as Teymur Bakhtiar was a VIP for Iraqi government and was both watched and protected by Iraqi bodyguards.

General Bakhtiar’s murder was investigated on the highest level. There was only one assassin. Once out hunting in the field, the assassin fired a shot at the General from a pistol hitting him in the shoulder, thus making Gen. Bakhtiar drop his rifle. Immediately, Gen. Bakhtiar’s Iraqi bodyguard attempted to drop the assassin dead with an AK-47, but was shot in the forehead first. Now realizing how grave the situation was, General reached for his revolver with his left hand and was about to discharge his weapon, when he got shot 5 times in the torso and left hand by the assassin.

After finishing the dirty work, assassin quickly left the crime scene, heading towards the Iranian border. Lacking any serious military & survival experience, he underestimated the summer heat of an Iraqi desert and passed out just several kilometers before reaching the border crossing. He was captured by Iraqi border patrol and brought to Baghdad alive. The fate of this person remains unknown. It is also not known where he obtained his small arms training as well as the make and model of the pistol used to commit the crime. In a race against time, Gen. Bakhtiar was brought to a hospital, underwent surgery, but died shortly from massive internal bleeding.

References

* Gerard de Villiers, "THE IMPERIAL SHAH", Paris, 1974.
* Zabih, S. "Bakhtiar, Teymur." Ed. Ehsan Yarshater. "Encyclopaedia Iranica". Vol. III. New York: Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation, 1989.

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