Al Zone media, what's illegal, my US invasions of several countries actually that have been happening recently, and also my entire life.
I'm Robert Evans. This is Behind the Bastards, a podcast about bad people, the worst in all of history, several of whom are currently in the Trump administration, where they have recently orchestrated what is already ramping up to be a bloody war with Iran. We're covering what's happening in an ongoing basis on our daily news podcast. It could happen here, but you know that's not what we do overt Behind the Bastards. You know, we're not breaking news here.
Our specialty is like pieces of shit, and that makes us, i think, well suited to talk about why is stuff like why is the Western world's relationship with Iran? What it is?
Like?
How did all of this shit start? Like what was going on that kind of led to the present situation?
And if you want to tell that story, you have to start with the seventeen hundreds and the eighteen hundreds in the period of like particularly what's called the Great Game, which is, you know, kind of this thing that happens at the height of British and Russian imperialism, and you have to talk about the Shaw, the very first Shah of Iran, because it's the Shaws of Iran that lead us to the current regime in Iran, and that lead us to a lot of things about the current conflict
and like why it's taken on the dimensions that it's taken on. So in order to talk about all of this, we're bringing on my buddy and doctor Kavejoda also podcaster, much more impressive than doctor. I should have led with podcaster Kava I'm sorry, welcome to the show.
And musician, thank you so much.
And musician many things. You're a multi till apology.
The key is to be bad at all of them. That's the key to doing this right. If you want to do more, that's a polycraft, not mess.
But yeah, you want to you want to know what you are good at?
Though?
What what am I good at?
Being my friend it's.
My best job.
Also being a doctor and a podcast.
I'm good at one of those three things.
Yeah, I'm hoping it's doctor.
That's that's the one that's especially sort of the one good at. The rest is you're going to find out listener and viewer not as much, but you know, give it my darnedest.
Yeah, well, I mean this is obviously like what's going on right now the United States is doing. I mean, we we've just killed a school full of little girls, like a lot of really ugly stuff. But if you want to like the story of like why did the
US start fucking around with Iran? Like why why is the current Iranian regime the way it is, that all starts well before the US gets involved, right, that that starts with you know, like most of our imperial ambitions, we cribbed off the notes of the Brits and the Russians from like a century or so ago, and it's those imperial powers who made sure that Iran wound up with a shah in the first place, which is why you know, we have a revolution, because the Shaws rule
so badly that they inspire revolution, which brings us the Ayahtolas. And all of these are our stories in and of themselves. But this week we're going to be talking about like the first Shah of Iran, of the Palavi dynasty, right, Like that's where we're obviously Iran had previous shaws, but we're talking about like the dad of the guy who got exiled when the current government of Iran took over, And how much do you know about the first about Reza Khan, like the first of that line of shaws.
That's so first of all, the thank you for having me back on first of all.
Second, oh shit, I talked right over that.
Yeah, I'm so happy.
No, I'm so happy that you're covering this topic because you're exactly right. There is a long history of involvement of Western powers, and as an American, the American powers, you know, really explicitly in nineteen fifty three, as we're gonna I'm sure talk about that really set off a chain of events that led us to where we are now. And you know, you could argue did a lot of
damage and destabilize the region. So what bothers me the most is that it's a story that most people in the United States.
Do not know.
They don't know the real reason why people in Iran may have taken over that embassy back in seventy nine. You don't really know some of the anger, the anti American feeling that happened at that time, because before that there was great relations you know, for a while between the two countries. So I think it's a really important story. I do know more or less the basics of it. I never was that interested in the Shaws because, like I'm just the concept of a monarchy just rubs me
the wrong way. In general, it seems like a terrible idea.
I'm not into it.
But there are these characters in there, which I'm sure we're going to talk about, like Moza Deech, who are really interesting people. And there is a story here that really explains a lot about what's happening here. The reson his son Mohammed Reza Khan and now his son who's now a player, and what's happening currently the news. So it is, it is, It's something I know a little bit about. But part part of the thing is like when you grow up Iranian and your parents came over
after the revolution. A lot of these parents are very politically savvy, well read, studied, We're politically active, but getting a lot of information from them was hard about what happened during the revolution, not just because everyone has only their side of it, but because Irani's get so upset
about it. It would just be like, did that bastard did this, and that son of a bitch did this, and then you're like, you're losing the story here with this, and you can't really get the story from your family. So it is nice to I think we're going to go into more depth about what actually happened now.
And I get that in part. I think because if I had to, if I got exiled and had to explain overseas like a bunch of the different infighting around leftist movements, or like a bunch of the different right wing grifters who got us here, I would probably just wind up cursing, like right after a while, right, and this son of a bitch and this piece of shit.
There's a lot of that.
Yeah, Yeah, you have to really work to be and I want to clarify we're not even getting past We're only gonna up to nineteen forty one in these episodes. I wanted to do both shows at once, but there's so much behind how the British and the Russians like maneuver the situation that leads to this dynasty into being, and how the oil situation gets started that you have to really talk to. So we will come back and we will do the sequel to these episodes, which we'll
talk more about Mozada as well. We're going to talk about him some of these episodes, but he's like it becomes the prime Minister, I think at fifty one, so that's even a little past the era we're talking about. But this, this is really important because this is what sets this is what starts like everything into motion that we're seeing, unfortunately come to very like a very bloody head right now. Right, So we're going to start these
episodes talking about a period of time. This is going to be kind of over to the to the US. This is like happening in like the Civil War reconstruction era, right, and in Europe that's also a time of great change and of war. You know, not only is Europe industrializing rapidly in the eighteen seventies, Germans beat France in eighteen seventy in the Franco Prussian War, and the British Empire,
you know, is kind of watching this. They're seeing Germany become a major world power because Germany becomes a country in eighteen seventy one as the result of that war, and very suddenly France isn't the primary land power in Western Europe. Anymore. Germany is and so Britain, which had primarily been worried about France previously, has two growing and
major concerns in this period after eighteen seventy. One is that you've got this Kaiser and he seems really interested in expanding Germany's military capacity, right, And the Brits are kind of fine with the fact that Germany's got the most powerful army in Europe. You're like, Uprussians can have your big army, right that that's fine as long as they stay on the continent. But once you start building boats, that's when the Brits are not happy with you. Right, Yeah,
no one else is allowed to have a navy. That's really the British Empire's primary like foreign policy during this period, vise of the Europe is like other people want boats? Wait a second, like, hold the fuck up?
Can I can?
I also make a quick note, I love the way when you say the Germans. I don't know if you've been meant to do this. You slipped into cid Germans.
Germans. It's very good.
And there's a beautiful, beautiful case of a small town German Man who went to New York City recently and had some salsa verde on a taco and is suing because like the spice like destroyed his body and like said, like for days made him ill. It was like New York City Salsa Verde. I was just thinking, motherfucker, I canned some Barbera CoA last week that could wipe out all of Germany. If that's if that's really the level of spice tolerance over there. I know this guy's just
a hay seed grifter from a small town. Sorry, my German friends, I know you can handle spices.
No, no, listen. We had a whole series of commercials in the eighties, remember where they're like pace made in New York.
City, New York City, got a road New.
York City salsa.
Yeah yeah.
It was like a whole fairy offensive to me. Yeah, I don't think it would be allowed to have salsa.
Yeah.
So anyway, Yeah, so the Brits are looking at the at the Germans start to expand their navy and they're like, well fuck, Like if Britannia doesn't rule the waves, like what do we really have right? We can't the home islands are in danger if we can't keep if we can't keep control of the sea. So that's one of Great Britain's major concerns in this period. The other thing that's really freaking them out is India, right, protecting India.
That is the jewel in the British Empire's crown. It's their most valuable possession, right and the Germans are nowhere near India, thank god. But over the course of the nineteenth century, Imperial Russia starts expanding troublingly close to India.
Right like they start, there's a couple of different fits and starts where the Russians will you know, expand their territory and they keep getting closer to the British raj I want to quote from the article a very British Coup in the World Policy Journal by Sharen Brisik, quote, the British watch nervously is the distance between the Russian Empire and India, too, thousand miles at the beginning of the nineteenth century, shrank so much that by centuries end,
as the Russian Empire expanded eastward at the amazing average of fifty five square miles per day, as little as twenty miles separated the two empires in Central Asia's premieres squeeze between these expanding powers was Persia, described by George Nathan Curzon, one time Viceroy of India and subsequent Foreign Secretary, as one of the pieces on a chessboard upon which is being played out a game for the domination of the world.
We're real proud of being upon, real proud of that one.
Great thanks for calling us pieces on a chessboard.
Fantastic.
Purson Is We're talking about him a lot in these episodes. I should do an episode on just him. He's one of these, like when we talk about British imperialists, he is like one of the imperialists of imperialists in the British Empire's history. And this is why Curzon's comment is why participants came to call this struggle in what's often I referred to as like the Near East right between Russia and Great Britain, as the Great Game.
Right.
This is a diplomatic, propagandistic, and sometimes military struggle between the British and Russian empires over Central Asia. One part of the Great Game is that the Great Britain invades and occupies Afghanistan for a while. Doesn't work well, right, But that's part of why that happens, right, is it's part of the stupid game they're playing with the Russians, and it's all in the name of keeping India safe.
Right.
They don't want Russia to get Afghanistan and they don't want Russia to get.
Persia, right. Perfect.
Yeah. The actual name the Great Game, I think comes in eighteen forty, is the invention of a British spy named Arthur Connolly who was corresponding with a colleague in Kandahar, Afghanistan, and wrote, you've a great game, a noble game before you. Now obviously again everyone dies, like a lot of the British Expeditionary Force dies, So I don't know how great a game they thought that was. By the end there, this is the thing.
This is the thing that bothers me. I don't know much about this time period, so this is really interesting to hear. I do know a little bit more about the coup, as we mentioned that you'll get to at some point in the future. In One nauseating fact about that is the callous nature in which these like British and American spies and propagandists, how they talk about it afterwards, like how much fun it was to overlay great game.
It was a game.
It's so much fun, and they were good at it and we won. It's just the it drives me a baddie.
Yeah, then the millions of people's lives, and I take some satisfaction that. Connolly in eighteen forty writes his colleague, you have a great game, a noble game before you in eighteen forty two, like the shattered remnants of the army that had marched into the first angle Tic Couple during the First Anglo Afghan War, like flee because you know,
they get massacred, like very badly. So at least a lot of times these guys got shot, but not nearly an often enough cava, that is to be, not nearly often enough.
It's a recurring theme.
A lot of people get shot this story, but not the right ones. Generally, usually some teenagers who got drafted from farms.
So always the kids.
Yeah.
Yeah, Now, before that term was invented, the great Game, the Russians did have one of their own. They called it the Tournament of Shadows, which is objectively cooler, Like that is a cooler name.
That sounds like a fantasy novel that I would probably read.
Yeah, a tournament of shadows. Right, it's a great name for like a prestige TV show, right, that will really disappoint you in maybe like the seventh season, and it's gonna get weird. Yeah. So for the British again, the whole goal of this stupid game is to protect their territory in India. And the whole name of the game for the Russians was for the Tzar, each subsequent zar to prove himself a good ruler. And the main thing you had to do as Tzar to be a good
ruler is expand the borders of the empire. That's why people forget this because of how weak Russia seems entering World War One and is. But through the eighteen hundreds, again fifty five miles a day, the Russian Empire expands over the course of like years. It's crazy how fast this I mean. And you look at the size of the Russian Empire at its maximum extent, it's not that weird.
So the Brits have a hard line of how close they want anyone, any European power to get to the Raj and the Russians feel like we have to expand constantly, and it ultimately Persia winds up standing in between both empires. So in Persia in seventeen eighty five, you're gonna help me with the pronunciation here. I think it's the the Quahar dynasty or Qajar dynasty.
Qaj j Ar.
I think it's Kajar Kajar.
I think it's an actual j I'm going to preface this by apologizing to how many of our actual Iranian listeners you have that my Parsi is only nominally better than Roberts. I mean, it's better, but not as good as yours. And I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I was born in Indiana. You're lucky I speak English much less Farcia. So just so sorry.
Yeah, the Qujar dynasty took power seventeen eighty five, and they are the descendants of Turkomen from Central Asia and aren't seen as authentically Persian by a lot of people, right, Like, authentically they're not seen is belonging in what's called Persia, right because there's a lot of different ethnic groups there. Now, because the first Kajar king doesn't have like a really solid hold on power, he decides he has to put on a show in order to convince everyone he belongs
in the job, right. You know, a lot of people don't think I should be in Tehran at all. I have to really like make everyone believe i'm legitimately like God wants me here, right. And so this first Kujar king is Fathali Shah and he's known his nickname is the super procreant because he has a lot of kids.
But by the way, and just just so it's if it's not obvious, the word shaw translates to like emperor, ruler, king, right, just in case people weren't aware of that. Somebody asked me that question like a few years ago, and I was like, that's what I mean.
So just a case.
And it often in these names it will come as like a last name, but that is his title, right, He's fath Aly Shah, is faf Al is the Shah. Right, Reza Khan will become Resis Shah like when he becomes the Shah.
And he gave the name Paula Vi.
They because it was like the I think it was like the ancient Lang written word Persian.
Yeah, I think it was. Yeah, things like that.
Yeah, and we'll talk about that because that's that's important to this. There's a lot of ethnic groups in Persia at the time, and he's only really the sha is only going to be really interested in one right, and that's kind of a big part of like what occurs in his reign. But so the first Kajar king is known as the super procreant because he's he's fucking constantly. And that's also why the throne of the Shahs of Iran gets its name, because it's called the peacock Throne.
Now for an explanation of why it's called the peacock Throne, I'm going to quote from a Boss Milani, the author of a book called the Sha Here's how they describe it. That superb and barbarous devon of enamel and precious stones, with its airbesque designs wrought of twenty six thousand gyms brought back from India as spoils of war. It uses bright red rubies, deep blue sapphires, and verdant greened emeralds, and is flanked by two golden snakes, each peering from
one side. In the beginning, the peacock Throne was called the sun Throne. Its name was changed because the Shah, who had close to one thousand wives of quote diverse origin had a favorite concubine. This concubine was named Taboo, and that name literally means peacock in Persian. And so this throne the sun throne. They fuck on it the night they get married, and he starts calling it the peacock throne because he has sex with this lady whose
name is peacock on it. That's why it's the peacock throne. Hey, guys, I just want to clarify. This is one explanation I found in one book for why it's called the peacock throne. And this represents like a popular story more than it does kind of the literal truth, because you know, there's peacocks carved into the throne. There's some I think I've heard some other stories as to like why it's called that, right, and Iran is called the peacock Kingdom or Perge is
called the pincock Kingdom at around this time too. This should be viewed as kind of a story that a lot of people told as to why the throne got its name, as opposed to like the absolute reason. Pretty cool name for a story for a throne's name.
Actually, that is pretty.
That is real game of Thrones. E that is very game.
I like it better than the Iron Throne. It's a nicer story than a bunch of swords getting a meltzed together a fun night.
Yeah, the Peacock Throne sounds better. The reality of these thousand women actually being into this guy pretty low, probably not great, so it makes it a little bit less charming for me.
But yeah, yeah, it's a great name.
When you think about Yeah, the relationship dynamics, it's less fun, but yeah, it's probably more comfortable than the Iron Throne.
Way better than the Iron Throne.
You wouldn't want to have sex on the Iron Throne, like you'd get like tetanus pretty badly, I think. I don't think wester Ros has vaccines for that.
And it's really cold, I think to be I think if you were naked, I think it would be really cold. I mean, there are things to hold on to, which is nice.
There's a lot of a lot of grips. That's a good side.
There's a lot of bricks.
Did either of you watch the Night of a Seven Kingdoms Game of Thrones show.
I did.
It's my first time venturing back into the world of west ROAs since the original series.
Do I need to watch it? What's the vibe?
It's fun, it's good. I mean, it's a much lighter I think they kind of read the room and they're like, people don't want so much rape and incest and all that, and they kind of like they tried to mix it up a little bit, a little bit less castration in this one, which is a big plus for me.
I was trying.
We could talk about this for hours. We were talking about the.
Sorry sorry, sorry, my friend, my friends are here, We're going to talk about game of Throws.
I could totally do that for like an hour, because sat speaking, I have a lot of thoughts about it.
But yeah, oh yeah, solidly an hour. So we've got this new king. He's incredibly horny, famously horny, so horny that the throne is named for his horniness, which is again the coolest anyone will be in these episodes.
Sorry, guys.
From there, it's all downhill from the peacock throne getting named. One of fath Ali Shah's most consequent little decisions was that he signs a treaty in eighteen twenty eight that gives a big chunk of Persia away to the Russian Czar in exchange for protection. Persia is not a strong country.
It doesn't really have a functional military. Like the military is kind of capable of keeping like the people from rebelling against the Shah, but it can't defend the country from other countries, right, And a lot of critics complain that this eighteen twenty eight treaty makes Persia a virtual
satrap of the Tzar. Right, basically, Persia's just like a satellite state of the Russian Empire now, and so subsequent rulers in the Shaw's line would veer towards the British whenever they get worried that like the Russians are getting too much power, and part because they're getting criticized by the people, Like the people are pissed that, like you're
giving everything away to the Russians. So they'd be like, well, maybe i'll make friends with the British and then you know, the Russians will have to kind of fight for my affection with the British and maybe we can gain a little more power that way.
Right.
Really, with the Shah and their success, they just are getting bribes from both these sides, right, and they're getting a shitload of bribes from the British, who are gained more and more power over the Persian Court over the course of the eighteen hundreds, basically by being like, hey, those Russians, I don't think they're going to stop at the stuff they got in that treaty. But you know, we've got British guns, and we've got we can send some suppoies over from the colonies, and you know, we
can really keep an eye on your back fellow. You know if you just give us this little bit of some mineral rights here and there, that just build a factory here and then you know, expose these these raw materials. You never regret your dealings with the British Empire. That's kind of what's going on over like the seventy year period.
You like G, we like G.
There's no harms that could come out of this relationship.
Ever, two groups of people who like tea could never hob one another.
You will say.
Actually, fun fact, Iran is known famously for its tea consumption, like an insane amount of tea consumption. But we were the old school coffee like all we used to be all about coffee. I blame the British for becoming a tea country, which is in my mind something I'm not proud of. I want to go back to being a coffee country. I don't want to be a tea country.
He must return.
God, it really bothers me, I know, I know.
No, because because Syria, the Syrians are really like kicking y'all's asses in the coffee department.
Right, Oh, no, we lost our coffee.
Must return, I know. Well, they have hipster coffee shops now in Iran. You can go to Iran. They'll do like the the hipster latte sort of art and stuff.
They have that.
But I mean, we used to it used to be like our thing, one of our things.
Right, yeah. So the situation going on between these British agents and these Russian agents all competing with these various shaws is complicated by the fact that this isn't just a contest for influence between England and Russia. Within the British Empire, there are two sets of competing envoys that are in Persia and are fighting with each other as
well as with the Russians. One set of British envoys are answering to the Foreign Office back in London, and another set are sent by the government of the British Raujian Calcutta and these guys, so they're like representing British India in Persia, and they have this huge office on the Gulf coast in a place called Boucher. And here's Sharen Brysak describing, like the ministry from Calcutta. The Government of India preferred a highly decentralized Persian regime that means weak.
So from the outset, successive residents, including Major supercy Cox and Lieutenant Colonel A. T. Wilson, cultivated ties with nearby Shakedoms. Kurzon, an eventual Viceroy of India, visiting in eighteen eighty nine, spotted the Union jack fluttering from the summit of the residency flag staff and wrote that it was no vain
symbol of British ascendancy. The British resident is to this hour the umpire to whom all parties appeal, having at his command an effective naval force imposed it will he may be entitled the uncrowned King of the Persian Gulf. So basically Kurzon realizes that like, because we've like we're running the show by eighteen eighty nine in Persia outside of the areas the Russians have like literally taken over
by treaty. We are governing the country in all but name, because we have all of the weapons here, right, That's what he's bragging about.
Yeah, so you do.
That to show that really well. And it's weird, like you you like get into that British character. It's not just the voice, it's the you. You can get that entitlement like.
You're channeling, you channel it.
It's yeah, brilliant.
So the Shah benefits from having a close relationship with Great Britain because British naval power is effectively his as long as he does whatever they asked, right. As one such envoy wrote of the Shaw quote, he and his Prime Minister were worried by the Russian threat to Persian independence. They believed or hoped that by giving the British a large economic stake in the country, they would become committed
to defending that independence. Basically, if we make it, if Great Britain feels like we're an important part of their security and economic apparatus, they won't let us get taken
over by the Russians right now. The Russians, meanwhile, are stoking unrest within Persia, often by bribing or otherwise encouraging Shia clergy to preach against foreign involvement, basically to be like, hey, these Brits are taken over your country, guys, and they're heathens, you know, Like aren't you should be angrier about this? Why is the Shaw letting them get away with that?
Right?
So, the Russians are operating a very effective propaganda. Like it's propaganda, but it's also accurate. Great Britain is running things in Persia that is pretty messed up. Now the Russians also want to run things in Persia. They're not any like better people here, really, but like this is how they're choosing to kind of like it's actually kind of similar to what Iran does in Iraq when the
US invades with Shia clergy and like Baghdad. Interestingly enough, where they're they're realizing, like this group of people are particularly unhappy with the foreign power that's occupying the territory. So I'm going to like basically fund them to build support for insurrections and like rebel movements within the country.
Yeah, we learn how to play the Great game.
Learn playing the Great Game. Yeah, yeah right, Unfortunately, Yeah, it's it's never been that great a game and always gets a lot more people killed than anything else. So these like Russian propaganda, like instruments and whatnot within Persia, these attempts to stroke unrest within the clergy succeed in getting the Shot to cancel a number of projects, including a railway project that he'd taken on that was support by British interests. However, they failed to stop a British
agent from creating the Imperial Bank of Persia. In fact, the Russians are so jealous of the British Imperial Bank that they create a bank of their own in Persia, subsidized by the Tsarist state, where the Imperial Bank was actually a functional banking institution that you could trust. That was the upside of it is the British do know how to run a bank that doesn't like go bust
every ten seconds. The Russians are not as good about running like a legitimate bank, and the Russian Bank of Persia its primary purpose is to bribe the Shah's top officials, like it's not a real bank for people to use, it's a bank to issue loans to members of the governments. That they do what the Tzar wants them to do.
So basically, what you've got here is great Britain's holding kind of the whole country hostage by running the bank that the people who have money use, and the Tzar is influencing shit within the country by using the bank that he's created to bribe government officials. So this is what we've got going on here.
This is like where the sort of Archie being courted by Betty I think and Veronica, where they're two people are fighting for Iran is like nice. This is like so far, yeah, not so bad, but I also know that it just it gets worse and worse, So like right now, it's almost kind of cute.
It's gonna get worse than banks. Yeah, it's gonna get a lot worse than banks. So Russia's fortunes in the area EBB and flow on a daily basis, and they depended largely in the attitude of the reigning sha. For example, in eighteen seventy nine, Naser al Din, who's the show at the time, visited Czar Alexander the Second in Russia. Alexander the Second, intent on staging a good show for his neighbor, ensured that the Shaw was wowed by a
mass presentation of Cossacks. The elite cavalry unit who had Cossacks. I mean, they're also like an ethnic group, right, but they primarily known as like a military unit or a series of military units. They'd started out for a long time, had been enemies of the Tsar, right like Cossacks had fought the Tsars for a very there had been a rebellion not all that long ago, and they had been converted over time into the Tsar's red right hand. And we're going to talk a little bit more about that.
But first, my red right hand these sponsors of our podcast, and we're back, yay. So I want to quote from an article and seeing in world news about the evolution of the Cossacks within Russia. During the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries, the Cossacks fought for the Russian crown in regional wars against the Russian people, garnering a reputation as the Tsar's henchmen. Acting on behalf of the Russian Empire, the Cossacks carried out pagrams or massacres of the Jews
in nineteenth century Russia. The Cossacks go from these people who were these like nomadic horse warriors and didn't want to be governed to the government being like, but what if we give you money in exchange for murdering anyone who stands up against the czar? And the Cossacks eventually are fine with this, right, and they do a lot of there's a lot of genocide done by the Cossacks on behalf of the Russian Empire in this period, right,
Like these pegroms are very ugly. There's there's one that kills something like a million people in the eighteen hundreds,
like seven hundred thousand or something like that. Pretty hideous stuff. Now, there had been a Cossack rebellion led by a dude named Pugachev in the late eighteenth century, and in general, any expert on Russian history would have told you that a powerful, autonomous cadra of warriors with zero accountability sometimes rebel against It's not always a good idea for the government right to have like this group of warriors that
you can't really tell what to do. Yes, it seems like idea, right, And the Cossacks had always been a double edged sword, even for the czars. But Naser al Din, the Shah at the time sees all these Russian Cossacks and he's like, these guys look cool as hell. I want some Cossacks. And so he founds his own Persian Cossack legion. This is kind of in the late eighteen or the yeah, the late eighteen hundreds. He founds the Persian Cossack Brigade. I had not known there were Persian Cossacks.
I thought that was just like a because like Cossacks are like from like Ukraine is where a lot of like Cossacks origidate from. So the fact that there's a Persian Cossack brigade is kind of wild.
We think we will take any concept and then we'll take it to an extreme. That's sort of what we do as a people culturally. If you've been to Los Angeles, you'll see that.
Yeah.
But this Kajar dynasty, what's interesting about is I know very little about it other than the way they are presented. The narrative is that they were just an incompetent, ridiculous group of like people who are only interested in, you know, pro creating and spent wasting money on things. And Naser el Din is like the one name I recognize as like the epitome of that that this is the most wasteful, terrible Dinoshras saying something for all the other dynasties that have been around and went on.
And it's important to note that they are this terrible because they're all from the entire time this dynasty exists,
they're not. They're always puppets of two different competing powers, right, Like they're never like from the beginning, any of these For one thing, anyone who might be a decent ruler is not going to be allowed by the Russians or the Brits to do fuck all, right, so they're going to make sure that guy never gets close to power in the first place, because they're orchestrating who is in power, and they're doing that based on their own interest, not what's good for Persia and.
Not time and time again, this is the story. This is how it's laid out from time time thereon.
Yeah, And obviously like these individual shaws and their officials suck too. These are all really corrupt bad people. But they're corrupt bad people who are being bribed by someone, and that is completely dominating the course of politics in Persia during this period of time. And it's not entirely on the regime, right, like these two foreign powers have
a lot to do with it. So the Czar Alexander the Second had had the Shaw over and impressed him with these Cossacks because he wanted something like this to happen. He wants Persia to have a Cossack brigade because the point of having Cossacks is that they're supposed to directly support the ruler, like these are your I've had a rebellion. I need someone to go in and massacre them. That's why you have an elite group of horse guards like
the Cossacks. And so the Shaw is buying these Cossacks thinking like, shit, this will help me anytime there's unrest, I'll be able to have these guys just murder my enemies. And Persia does in fact pay handsomely to equip, train, and maintain a brigade. And this brigade is pretty much, for a lot of this period, the only effective military
unit Persia has, and it's led by Russian officers. Right, the Russians are kind of subsidizing this effort, and they're sending their own military officers who report directly to Russia's Minister of War So if you're Russia, what you've done as soon as the sha Ah starts adopt this idea, starts hiring Cossacks, You've ensured the Shaw's bodyguard unit basically is in controlled by your guys. That's a big win if you're Russia in this period, right.
No, I think this is it's so interesting to learn about this. I'd heard about the Cossack Brigade and yeah, a little bit of the connection to the Polavi family.
But it's a big don't. Yes, I don't.
I don't entirely understand, Like the constant. Is it like the Hessian soldiers that were in America that came over from Germany, Like they're kind of a mercenary force or is it more of like a yes, but it's a formal like oh, what are the bad guys in Dune? The member like the one, they're.
More like kind of more startokar. Well, the because Cossacks are there is like kind of an ethnic group like these are basically these start out as like tribal groups of where Cossacks come from. Is you know how through most of human history you have like your settled civilizations and then these groups of like nomads on horses who periodically take over everything. Right, Well, Cossacks are one of
those groups of people. They just happen to be around at the time that the modern world comes into being, and so they're those guys. But instead of like bows and arrows, they've got like rifles and eventually machine guns. And as a general rule in this period of time, if you're going to brutalize a protest, you're going to use guys on horseback, because horses are really good at breaking up mobs. It's very scary to be charged by a bunch of guys with sabers on horseback. And that's
the real the Russian Cossacks, that's what they do. These are the guys you send in when these villagers are rebelling, kill them, or we've decided we're going to ethnically cleanse this area of this group of people, send in the Cossacks, right and once the Shah gets his Cossacks, that's what they're going to be used for, is brutalizing peasants to scare them away from doing disorder. Right now, they're not
much good for much else. They're supposed to be bodyguards to In eighteen ninety six, Nasa is a assassinated while at a shrine, and his Cossack bodyguards failed to protect him. As a general rule, they're not great at that part of the job.
We don't protect, we hurt.
Oh no, all it cuts tot. Was that a hit people?
We're a more offensive thing, less defense.
Yeah.
But once you've got these guys, you've got this unit of powerful horse guards that are close to the Shah, they're going to remain a powerful force in Persian politics, which by the turn of the century, once the nineteen hundred start going, are in a chaotic place, to say the least. Sharen Breysak describes the country during this time as a playground of Russian and British spies. Tehran is very much the way Berlin is going to be during
the height of the Cold War. Right, It's this city where all like spooks from all over the world are coming and executing plots as part of these different great power games. And neither Russia or Great Britain trusted the local state security forces as far as they could throw them, so they brought in their own troops to protect their
own agents in the country. The Russians brought in their own Cossack guards right, or used Persian Cossack guards which were led by Russians right, whereas British consuls in the country brought sapois in Bengal lancers from India to protect their guys. At the start of the twentieth century, Russia and England had reached an accord which Brysac writes was settled without informing, much less consulting the leaders of Persia. They split the country up into three spheres of influence.
The British control southeast Persia, Russia runs the north, and the Southwest is like a neutral zone where they're both allowed to do like certain things as long as they don't like cross other certain lines. And again no one asks anyone in the Persian government about this. They're not consulted. Their consent does not matter. Russia's chunk of Persia is
most valuable during this period of time. They seem to get off better like the best of this treaty, right, because they get the chunk of Persia with the largest cities, including Tehran. But here's the thing. In nineteen oh one, when this agreement gets kind of inked, neither power is really interested in Persia's oil fields. There's not a lot that's known about them. We'd only really figured out there were oil deposits in southwest Persia in like eighteen ninety two.
That gets discovered thanks to the work of a French archaeologist whose findings are brought to This French guy who's digging for evidence of earlier societies finds oil and he his findings get sent on to the Commissioner General of Persia, so an actual Persian government official, and this says a lot about who was bribing the Commissioner General of Persia. He goes straight to Sir Henry Drummond Wolf, who's a Conservative parliamentarian in London, and he says, hey, we found
oil in our country. I figured i'd go to London first, and Wolf introduces the Persian Commissioner to a guy named William Knox D'Arcy. I assume he's an actual descendant of mister Darcy from Pride and Prejudice.
Much less lovable.
Honestly, he probably is, because William Knox Darcy is a millionaire who's gotten rich speculating on gold in Australia. He sounds like that guy's kid or something.
Still blows my mind. That mister Darcy's also Tom Loan scams from Succession Blows by Subsession.
I don't know that show.
But they're apparently doing a new Pride and Prejudice and it looks like, I.
Know, women love mister Darcy, and I don't entirely understand.
Why I love mister Darcy.
They love that scene where he like she brushes his hand and he like twitches like crazy, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, big scene. So William Darcy gets introduced to the Persian Commissioner, and you know this guy loves speculating, so he decides he's going to branch out in oil speculation as well. In nineteen oh one, he offers the rulers of Iran twenty thousand British pounds and sixteen percent of annual profits
gained from exploding their oil reserves. This draws little initial outrage within Persia, as regular people have a lot bigger fish to fry, right, and nobody's thinking about oil as a huge industry. Yet it's nineteen oh one. The number of people who have like used gasoline for anything is very small. The vast majority it's horses are walking for
most people, right, and trains are a thing obviously. So yeah, you've got this guy Darcy who gets involved and he basically bribes the rulers of Iran with twenty pounds and a chunk of annual profits to exploit as much oil as he can find there. And nobody cares because oil is not worth all that much yet. In fact, Darcy nearly bankrupts himself paying for the deal and trying to build the infrastructure to start taking Persian oil to market
because there's nothing there. Nobody's been digging or ext like, nobody's been drilling or anything. He has to do all of that, like from the ground up. It's very costly and even a very rich dude like Darcy can't bankroll the project on his own, so he partners with a company called Burma Oil, which is, despite the name, based in Glasgow, and Burma Oil has the capital necessary to
make Darcy's rooms reality. So Darcy's now in business with this Glasgow based company, starting to build oil wells and whatnot and drill in Persia. And at the time, this is one of a bunch of innumerable deals by which Persia's natural resources are being sold off for the benefit of foreigners. This is not just happening with oil. Everything valuable in the country is being sold to Russia or Germany, right like, that's the way it's working for everything. So
regular people in the country know they're being fleeced. They are not unaware of that. There's actually a very because the press is starting to become an increasingly significant thing in this period of time, and literacy is fairly high in the cities. Regular people are very aware that they're being robbed by both the British and the Russians, and that their leaders are selling the country out for what
amounts to middling bribes. The current rulers the dynasty had their origins in a tribe of Turkomen warriors who served as the bulk of the Safavid military, and the Qajars had a Russian branch, which, again, because these are Turkubin people, this is all very compplicated ethnic stuff. But the ruling dynasty in Persia at the time are Turkomen, which means they have Russian cousins who are nobility in the Russian Empire, which means the Shahs of Persia are related to the Tsar,
which endears them to the Tsar. Right, they're not directly related to the Czar, but they're directly related to other royals within the Tsar's empire, right, and this so a lot That's part of why a lot of people don't trust them, right, is they're both stooges of the British, and well, you don't you're not really like at least a lot of Persians feel like you're not really Persian. You're more Russian. Unlike, you're much more aligned with the
Russian government. So there's a lot of reasons why people are getting increasingly pissed off at their rulers at this period of time. They're selling off the entire country, and they're doing it as if they're agents of other countries. Right, That's increasingly how this dynasty is seen. As shariir Kia wrote in an article for the National Council of Resistance on Iran or in CRI, the Quajar crisis, influenced by Russia and Britain, had led Iran the financial ruin and
a political crisis. They were weak against foreign influence and oppressive of citizens. So by nineteen oh five people are sick. They are fed up with this shitty ass dynasty and the king is because Nasar had gotten assassinated, and his successor by this point is aging and ill, and there's enough unrest with elites in the capital that they form
a parliament. Right, there's this like national assembly formed in Persia called the Mazles, as the result of a lot of work by a lot of different activists within the country, a lot of differently very brave people who want the government that the people of the country deserve, that will actually functionally govern and modernize the country and won't be taken advantage of as hideously as the Shas regime had.
And the Mazles draft a constitution which was approved regretfully by the Shah right before he died, and the Shaws kind of in this position of like, if I don't approve this, it's it's allow this bit of democracy or have a rebellion, right, That's that's the dire situation he sees himself in. So once this parliament gets going and starts passing a constitution, the Russians are like, well, we can't have this. These guys aren't working for our best interests.
They're working for their own best interest. That's not great. So they immediately set to work pushing their allies in the Shia clergy to sabotage this new experiment and functional self governance. Historian Ruhola Ramazani writes that they quote destroyed
the foundations of this new government twice in about four years. Right, So the Majlis keep trying to install functional parliamentary governments, and these clerics and other agents of the Russians that are working with in Persian society keep sabotaging these efforts because they don't want this to happen.
And this is the same thing. This is the same thing that happens with the National Front later.
Yep.
Yeah, same sort of dynamics they use to play against the second more secular elements, the religious elements. They use them the same exact manner. God, Yes, in such an easy playbook.
It's always so, it's really frustrating when you lay it all out like this. So in nineteen oh eight, Russian interests install a new shaw on the throne Mohammad Ali Shah, and he celebrates his newfound power by imprisoning his own prime minister, who had been semi democratically elected by the Mashli. Per Sheren Brysac's article with a loan underwritten by the Russian Bank and with his own crown jewels of security,
the Shah hired rioters to storm the Mazle's. When the assembly successfully resisted, the Russian Officered Persian Cossack brigade moved rapidly to dissolve parliament and to impose martial law. The Cossacks shelled the parliament building, igniting a blaze that destroyed its records and killed eight people. The Russian commander proclaimed
himself military Governor of Tehran. That's fucking nuts. So the new Shah hires rioters and the parliament fights off the rioters, so they have to blow up the building with our It's fucking nuts. It's insane and obviously very sad.
Yeah, and the the Masli's. I mean, I don't know if you know this, but like, so there are parliaments, because I know that. I always thought they're like a senate or something, but I don't entirely understand they were like the parliamentary force.
It's partly like I don't think any of these are like quite perfect term, but it's like a national assembly type deal, right, Like it's a semi democratic body basically.
Yeah, yeah, okay, but doesn't translate perfectly to senators and senate and that sort of thing.
Not I mean, it's kind of its own like thing. Like I think the word literally means like like a place to sit basically, and it comes out of tribal councils. But yeah, it's like a it's a it's a type of parliament basically, it's that's that's close enough for our purposes. Right, So the Russians have massacred a bunch of people and shelled the parliament building and installed Asian military commander as governor of Tehran, and this is not popular. In fact,
it inspires a mass uprising. And this is one of these beautiful moments where regular people in Tehran and in the areas outside of it are so fucking pissed off at what the Russians have done that all of these different, normally normally opposed political groups unite together in resistance of Russian domination. And there's this mass uprising that pushes the Cossack guards out of the capital, and Muhammad Ali Shah
becomes one of the shortest reigned shaws in history. He is not around much longer now because feudalism is a really bad system at the best of times. He is succeeded by his son, Ahmed, when Ahmed is twelve years old. The reason why this is generally seen as good by the power that's backing this succession, the British, is that Ahmed is too young to rule on his own. That means he needs a regent, and the regent who gets picked to rule in his stead is a very close
friend of British Foreign Secretary Nathan Kurzon. So we have gone from haha. The Russians took over and basically this mass movement forces them out of power and forces the shot to abdicate. But then the guy who takes over is a stooge for the British government again, right, it's this. They can't get out of this, you know.
And in the movie, the regent is played by Ben Kingsley. That's exactly who plays that that character. He's half Indian, half white to my understanding, and he has played an Iranian in like four movies and.
They're never good.
They're never good characters, never No.
So what you've got now is a fucking regent who's running things in Tehran and everybody's tired because they've just thrown the Russians out and the British are kind of come in as the winners, and this this round of blows in the Great Game and shit like this. The fact that Great Britain kind of sits back while Russia commits a bunch of horrible war crimes and then winds up in charge is why England. Part of why they get their reputation being perfidious Albion is everyone's like, how
the fuck did you wind up winning? Wait a second, like we were fighting them, how are how did you win?
What the fuck?
Like?
That's that's that's that's the way the British place stuff per time.
Yeah.
Now, one reason why you had this popular uprising against the Russians and why like the Mazles are able to gain and maintain a degree of power is that regular Persians are fairly well informed about what's happening in their country or starting to be in this period, because especially once the Majlis come like into power, Persia has a
shockingly free press. During this whole period of time, from like the about this point in the story forward up until we get the last dynasty of Shaws, there's like a really vibrant media ecosystem, particularly in Tehran. The first Mazles had put an end to the stifling controlled the erastocracy had exerted on media, and so even when the Persian people lacked the power to stop Great Britain or Russian from doing something, they at least knew that they
were being fucked right. That's an important dimension of the story is that people are not in the dark because there's a pretty good media at the time, which I was also unaware of. So folks are especially aware of the rampant corruption within the Shaws Court. Public opinion of it is so negative that the regent's foreign minister sends men out to find him a disinterested American expert to come to Tehran and fix the Persian economy. Now, that fact alone should give you an idea of the very
different regard Americans were held in during this time. That like foreigners who are meddling in still other foreign countries economic system are like, we need someone reliable, trustworthy and unbiased to fix this economy. Let's find it American. The fact that that's the way things work back then is crazy.
It is wild, But I will say, you know, until the whole nineteen fifty three coup, like the there was a real there was and then afterwards, you know, if you talk to your rank and file Iranian now they do and they have for many years now loved Americans. But before this they used to have a lot of contempt for the British. They used to have a lot contemp for the Russians, and they used to always sort
of know that they are meddling. But there was like a real warm spot for Americans because of the Americans that would come over and help them with the finance stuff. Mcluskey Afrigat's name, But like there's a there's a few, yeah, yeah. So then there was a real like, you know, warmth.
And this guy, this guy isn't bad at his job. I don't think. His name is W. Morgan Schuster. He's a middle aged lawyer who had worked and he'd been like a customs guy after the US had taken Cuba from the Spanish, and he basically rebuilt the tax system for the Philippines after the United States took over the Philippines. H. Schuster is the first American that I'm aware of who has a significant political impact in the Persian government, and
his experience couldn't have been more different. From the Americans who would follow. For one thing, Shuster seems to have been genuinely welcome and desired by many Persians because the economy is completely fucked up right, and he's as popular with like the local people as much as he is hated by European expats living in Tehran, who rightly see his crusade for financial solvency as something that's going to
cut into their graft. Because Shuster actually wants the Iranian people to have a functional economy, and when he realizes they're being robbed blind, he's pissed about it. He's like, well, they're never going to have like you're never going to have a happy country with a good economy if you rob them blind like this. If the goal is for the like the Persia to be a functional country, you're
screwing them. In nineteen eleven, Shuster, who's now the Treasury Secretary, sparks outrage with the Russians when he confiscates the home of the former Shaw's brother, who was a Russian citizen. Shuster was in the right by any rational observation. The exiled Shaw's brother had not been paying taxes for years, but the British and the Russians file formal complaints against this guy with the Mazles, who ignore the complaint to
their peril. The Czar sends his army in and he shells Tehran, killing many pro independence liberals and clergy members. They shell the capital and kill a bunch of people because this guy Shuster takes one dude's house for not paying taxes. The Russian army also shlls Shia holy sites as the British look on but avoid direct intervention themselves. On Christmas Day nineteen eleven, Shuster is forced to leave Persia.
He goes back to the United States and he writes a book called The Strangling of Persia, which is all about how European powers are robbing the country blind and murdering any chance of it having a functional government. Like he's, as far as I can tell, he seems to genuinely be like offended on behalf of the Persian people.
Yeah, and there are I mean, in this whole story of all these terrible people, Like it's there's not a lot of heroes, but there were a couple on the end they were I mean nice guys. Yeah, yeah, there was a couple yeah, yeah, right at the end of the day, most of them couldn't affect things in a positive way. But there were a couple of Americans that did try to do the right thing.
They tried to do the right thing, like the Spike Lee movie. And you know what else is like a Spike Lee movie.
It's these It's probably and you know, I'm a good test taker. I learned that in medical school. Probably the ads and services that are going to be presented in these commercials bingo manga and we're back.
So while all this is going on, and while Persia is both finding itself split between British and Russian influence and fighting for its own autonomy, a boy was born and starts growing into a man. His name was Reza Khan Mirpanji, and he came into the world on March fifteenth, eighteen seventy eight, in a town called Alasht in the province of Mazandaran. His father, Abbasali, was a Persian man and a major in the army. His mother, nush Afarin,
had immigrated from either Georgia or part of Armenia. Both were owned by the Russian Empire at that point, but she's Caucasian like literally from the Caucuses region. We don't know exactly where she's from, because paperwork is in anybody's strong suit. But Reza from the beginning is like an example of how mixed Persia is at this point in time. Right, he is himself mixed, and that's interesting because he is
not going to govern in that way. Res's dad is a war hero, but he's the kind of war hero who dies when his son is eight months old. After this, Nush moves the family to Tehran to live with her brother. When she remarries in eighteen seventy nine, Res is a year old and she abandons him to start a new family and leaves her firstborn son in the care of her uncle. This is not a wildly uncommon thing for a lot of people to do at the time all over the world. I've read a bunch of stories like this,
but it is pretty fucked up, right. She's basically like, I gotta try with a new family kid. Sorry, here's an uncle you know, hopefully he'll take care of you.
Explains a lot.
Yeah, my goodness, it's not great.
Now.
From what little detail we get about his early life, we can conclude that Resa's family saw him as an opportunity to increase their fortunes in little else. In eighteen eighty two, his uncle sent him off to live with a family friend who was a rare Persian officer in the Cossack Brigade. This helped him get entrance to the Cossack Brigade when he's well, not an adult. It's unclear exactly how old Resa is when he joins the military.
I've heard both fourteen and sixteen, and either is really plausible. You can get a hint of why by looking at this nineteen oh nine photo of a unit from the brigade and look at the differing ages of those soldiers, because one of those things much that is clearly in like their fifties, and there's like a nine year old people who look like kids.
Straight up. Boy.
Yeah, that seems to have medals, which is pretty cool. There's a story there.
I'd like to hear.
Nine year old kills has killed a lot of men.
He's seen some things.
He's a hard nine. So Rezzo was illiterate as a young man. He had basically no formal education, and his first job in the Cossacks was as a stable boy. He was, however, tall and handsome and extremely charismatic. He is very good at making the right friends, which assures that he eventually rises to have a cushy job guarding the Dutch console General. He does fight in a couple of wars. He's a good soldier. He's particularly good with the machine gun, and he becomes like his unit's machine gunner.
They call him machine gun Reza. That's his nickname, which is pretty cool.
Tang clan, so right right.
He rose rapidly through the ranks, and by the nineteen teens he's one of the highest dranking officers in the Cossack Brigade.
Shari A.
Kiah writes that he was also quote known for his role as a leader of religious bands and as a community enforcer in religious ceremonies. In her article, Sharen Brysac ads he earned a reputation of being a fireman, someone who was sent to quell disturbances or round up thieves. So basically, this guy's kind of stupid, but he's well liked by his peers, which are the most functional military unit in the country. And he's also he's also kind of like known as being a religious hardliner, like he's
in very good with the clerics. He spends a lot of time like making sure other people are doing the things they're supposed to do, like religiously in his community, so that the clerics like him, and he just generally he's the guy who if people are breaking the rules, he'll kick their asses. Like that's that's who this heavy is, and that's the reputation. He's the heavy, right, he's the tough that you send in r So basically he was cooked up in a lab to become a we Western
back dictator. Right, all that was needed was the proper impetus. And this brings us back to William Darcy and the question of Iran's fast oil reserves. Anglo Persian oil. The company Darcy eventually establishes enjoyed a monopoly on Persian crude oil for years, but it's not until nineteen fourteen that the world gets a good look at just how big a deal this is going to be, because in the lead up to World War One, Great Britain is hungry for any advantage they can get over the rising power
of Imperial Germany. I talked about that at the start of the episode. Right, Germany's building a fleet that can compete with the British Royal Navy, and so Great Britain needs an advantage. This enters into the picture Admiral Sir John Fisher. He was described by the press and in his time as Britain's primary naval oil maniac. This means he was the first admiral with power in Britain to be like, we should switch to oil from coal. Right, that's a good idea to become an oil based navy.
There's benefits to doing this, right. Your ships can go further on oil than they can on coal without needing to refuel. They can go faster. There's a number of like logistical benefits to eventually doing this, but it's a hideous cost. When you're thinking of the whole moving the whole navy over, you're spending a shitload of money. And there's not a lot of oil exploitation yet right either, So Great Britain doesn't necessarily have it on oil to exploit.
Darcy seeks out and befriends the admiral in nineteen oh three at a Bohemian spa where Fisher engaged in his main pleasure outside of being an oil maniac, which was dancing. So Darcy basically is that something or is it legitimately dancing. I think he's just a dancer, and I think Darcy befriends him dancing at this spa saw and they've begun buddies. Yeah, straight buddies.
I'm sure I've been to a lot of spas. Don't remember or anything about dancing, just saying.
A lot of dancing at spas. They were different back then.
So let's be real. That sounds pretty fun, like a spa where you just like relax in the hot tub, dance a dance.
I think that's what dirty dancing is pretty much about.
Right. It's a dance spot, it's a dance spot.
So there's a dirty dancing scenario, right, that's very integral to this story.
And he had the time of his life, Yeah.
At the time of his life, and Darcy's this is Darcy And I'm sorry, who's a person again that he is recording.
His Admiral Fisher.
Yeah, Admiral Fisher, Admiral Fisher, the oil maniac.
Yeah.
And in nineteen oh four, after he and Darcy become friends, Fisher becomes the first Sea Lord, which is a real job in the British military.
Higher oil maniac to sea lord. That's not bad, that's right.
He's the first sea lord. That's crazy. I thought was a job for aquaman.
But okayaking l Ron Hubbard, it's the commander.
Yeah.
So Fisher keeps on talking up this idea, and by nineteen eleven or so, Winston Churchill has come around and Churchill is like, we need to switch the navy over to oil, right, And so Darcy has by nineteen eleven successfully gotten this idea that primarily financially benefits him because he bought access to all of Persia's oil into the halls of British power. In nineteen fourteen, the House of Commons supports a proposal to switch the Navy over to oil.
Per an article in The Fair Observer, the goal was to ensure energy security for Great Britain, where the Royal Navy switched from coal to oil to compete against the fast rising German navy. After World War One broke out, Persia remained neutral but supplied oil to Britain. In fact,
Persian oil arguably led to Allied victory. The conversion of the British fleet to oil gave them advantages over the German fleet powered by a coal greater range and speed and greater refueling and keeping with their imperial tradition, Britain paid a pittance to Persia for oil. So that's fucked It plays a role in their victory. I wouldn't say it led to it because but it's certainly not an
insignificant factor in the efficacy of the British fleet. The fact that they've switched over to oil and again Great Britain is fucking Persia. They're bribing the Shaw. The Persian people are getting very little for their resources.
Again, something real the pattern that will play out many for a long time.
This is fucked up, but the real fuckery is still to come. During the war World War one, Persian territory is a battleground between Ottoman forces and Russian and British forces, right, and Russian and British are on the same side this time, so they go from competing to being on the same side. But they're fighting the Ottomans in parts of Persia right now. The realities of the war massively disrupt agriculture in Persia because farmers are constantating dudes fight over their fields and
shell them so they can't grow as much food. And also all of you have three different armies in the area. They're not growing their own food, they're confiscating it from the people who live there to feed their own soldiers. So people in Persia start to starve in huge numbers, as Zara at A Latti and Majide Imani write in
an article for Third World Quarterly. Ain Old Sultana, a well known o An Iranian chronicler, wrote in a newspaper entry of nineteenth April nineteen seventeen that famine and hunger prevail in all parts of Iran. Muslims and people of all faiths are dying and kum in the center of Iran. Currently fifty die each day. In Hammadan, thirty thousand have registered as destitute and this heart renting description. He further stated that people in Tehron were taking sheep's blood from
the slaughterhouse to feed themselves in their children. In fact, several Iranian newspaper reports in nineteen seventeen to nineteen nineteen highlighted the occupying forces attempts to seize food and grains and block people's access to food. So no one really debates that what happens next is a human engineered or at least a human influenced famine. Right, is this intentional
or is this just a byproduct of armies being armies? Right, there's debate over that, but it's caused by the fact that these foreign forces are in the country right now. There is a huge debate as to who is more
at fault. Given the similarities between the Great Persian Famine and the Bengal Famine of nineteen forty three, a lot of people understand and blame the British From that same paper quote highlighting the role of the occupying powers and the Great Persian Famine, Some scholars have pointed to the issue of oil capitalism during the twentieth century the financial policies adopted by Britain, For instance, their refusal to pay oil revenues to Iran in the middle of the Great
Persian Famine indicates their lack of concern for ron starving people. For the occupying powers, Iran was mainly a strategic military asset. The dominant consequence was a lack of access to food among large parts of the population and what a Martsian called entitlement failure. Thus, besides natural factors, pandemics, sociohistorical context,
and the incapability of the central government. The Great Persian Famine was also caused by the occupying forces that pursued the war at the expense of the lives of many Iranians. And there's a lot of people involved in this catastrophe again, as well as some stuff that is just happening at the time. There's disease which is still related to the war, and there's some environmental concerns. It's important I emphasized that the Russians are also hugely involved here too. At the
early stages of the Russian Civil War. Once that kicks off, various Russian forces start seizing like housing materials, roofing and firewood and other basic supplies for their bases. And these are things that thousands of Persians need to keep their homes habitable. And like one hundred thousand Persians are made effectively homeless just by this. Ten thousand villages are abandoned, largely because Russian forces are seizing everything that makes them habitable.
Ten thousand villages abandoned.
I'm just I've never heard. I'm sure there's a listener right now, some auntie who's going to be yelling at me right now because I didn't know this, But I never I never knew about this.
Oh wait till you hear the scale of this disaster. So British diplomat Herold Dickolson wrote, quote, Persia had been exposed to violations and suffering not endured by any other neutral country and World War One, and it's hard to argue with that point. Eight to ten million people, roughly half the pre war population of Persia perish in the Great Persian Famine.
Wow.
About forty percent of the pre war population die over the course of like World War One up to like nineteen nineteen.
Wow.
As a result of all this, Hey, guys, I just want to let you know, the Great Persian Famine is vastly understudied, and there's a wide range of scholarly disagreement over the death toll. At the time and for a very long time, contemporary reporting suggested two to two and a half million dead was a very reasonable, you know range, But there's also scholars who are arguing with that more
like eight to ten million is very likely. So this is not a kind of thing where because of sort of the paucity of the scholarship on this at the moment, I don't feel comfortable saying like one is definitely right. I do kind of tend just on other because of other famines i've read about, to lean towards the larger numbers, but we don't really know perfectly. I did not realize the scale of this. We don't talk about this because it's a very complicated famine. It's not as simple as
just Russia or Great Britain starved iron. There were a lot of factors, including some environmental ones and aspects of local government. But like Russia and Great Britain and the Ottomans play huge role in why eight to ten million, half a fucking Persian nearly starves to death and nobody talks about it anymore.
It's not yeah, wow.
I have to say, I really appreciate this is a total This is the kind of thing I'm supposed to say at the end when we're off air. But I really appreciate how you synthesize all this information. This is not easy.
There's so many.
It's a lot of stuff.
I know I've left stuff out, and obviously, like we're only going up to like nineteen forty one, but like this is like when we're we're looking at the hideous, the heinous death toll of US actions already in Iran. It's also important to just like know like this is the latest in a long string of of just like the horrific human concept quinses to imperialists fucking around in
that part of the world. It's all bad stuff. So it is not until nineteen twenty one that Britain and Russia fully withdraw their forces from Persia, given that the Tsarisk or largely given that the Tsarisk government had collapsed by this point, leading to civil war in Russia throughout most of the worst of the famine. Educated Persians blame the British for it, because they saw the British as being the controlling power in their lives. And there's an element,
a sizeable degree to which this is fair. The British, for their own part, are less concerned with Persia for its own sake and more worried about something else, which is that the Bolsheviks are now in charge of a lot of Russia. They're fighting a civil war for control of what had been the Russian Empire, and it sure does look like Persia might become communists too, and that is going to tee up Part two. Gom it well, how do you feeling.
I can't wait. I want to hear it now.
Oh well, you'll hear it in the second. You'll hear it, yes a minute, but first let's hear your pluggables.
So my podcast is called The House of Pod. It is a medical science podcast. It is a look at the world of science and health through an approachable manner.
We've tried to make.
Things as fun and as less scary, if if that's a word that I can use. Them do a terrible job explaining my show. You think after five years of doing this, I'd be much better at it. I'm not. But the show is actually fun. If you like this show, you're gonna like the podcast The House of Pod because we also take a look at medical grifters, and we look at all kinds of different medical malarchy that's out there, try and present you the science in a way that
is I think honest and nuanced and clear. So I think you will enjoy it. You should listen to it, and you will hear some episodes with both of these lovely people on that podcast, The House of Pod.
You can find it anywhere you find podcasts.
All right, excellent, Well, listen to the House of Pod. And you know, do something nice in your own house or not. I don't control your life, neither do you? Probably wall did any of us? Are we all just flocks them floating through cosmic debris?
Yes, goodbye, maybe, but I'm definitely in control here bye. Behind the Bastards is a production of cool Zone Media. For more from cool Zone Media, visit our website Coolzonemedia dot com, or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Full video episodes that Behind the Bastards are now streaming on Netflix, dropping every Tuesday and Thursday. Kit remind me on Netflix
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