SAVAK
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SAVAK (Persian: ساواک, short for سازمان اطلاعات و امنیت کشور Sazeman-e Ettela'at va Amniyat-e Keshvar, National Intelligence and Security Organization) was the domestic security and intelligence service of Iran from 1957 to 1979. Its headquarters were in Tehran. At its peak, the organization had as many as 60,000 agents serving in its ranks. It has been estimated that by the time the agency was finally dismantled in 1979 with the Iranian Revolution, as many as one third of all Iranian men had some sort of connection to SAVAK by way of being informants or actual agents.[1]
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[edit] History
SAVAK was founded in 1957 to strengthen the Shah's regime by placing political opponents under surveillance and repress dissident movements. SAVAK had the power to censor the media, screen applicants for government jobs, "and according to reliable Western source [2], use all means necessary, including torture, to hunt down dissidents." [3]
According to a book published in Iran after the revolution, reputedly written by Hussein Fardust, a high level SAVAK official, SAVAK was created with the help of American and Israeli advisers who modelled the agency on the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).[4]
After 1963, the Shah expanded his security organizations, including SAVAK which grew to over 5300 full-time agents and a large but unknown number of part-time informers.[5]
The agency's first director, General Teymur Bakhtiar, was dismissed in 1961 and later became a political dissident. In 1970 he was assassinated by SAVAK agents, disguised to look like an accident.
Hassan Pakravan, director of Savak from 1961-1965, had an almost benevolent reputation, for example, dining with the Ayatollah Khomeini while Khomeini was under house arrest on a weekly basis, and later intervened to prevent Khomeini's execution, on the grounds it would "anger the common people of Iran".[6] After the Iranian Revolution, however, Pakravan was among the first of the Shah's officials to be executed.
Pakravan was replaced in 1965 by General Nematollah Nassiri, a close associate of the Shah, and the service was reorganized and became increasingly active in the face of rising Shia and Communist militancy and political unrest.
A turning point in SAVAK's reputation for ruthless brutality was an attack on a gendarmerie post in the Caspian village of Siahkal by a small band of armed Marxists in February 1971. According to Iranian political historian Ervand Abrahamian, after this attack SAVAK interrogators were sent abroad for `scientific training to prevent unwanted deaths from `brute force.` .... Despite the new `scientific` methods, the torture of choice remained the traditional bastinado used to beat soles of the feet. Its "primary goal was to locate arms caches, safe houses and accomplices ..." [7]
Abrahamian estimates that SAVAK (and other police and military) killed 368 guerillas between 1971-1977 and executed something less than 100 political prisoners between 1971 and 1979 - the most violent era of the SAVAK's existence. [8]
One well known writer was arrested, tortured for months, and finally placed before television cameras to `confess` that his works paid too much attention to social problems and not enough to the great achievements of the White Revolution. .... By the end of 1975, twenty-two prominent poets, novelist, professors, theater directors, and film makers were in jail for criticizing the regime. And many others had been physically attacked for refusing to cooperate with the authorities. [9]
By 1976, this repression was softened considerably thanks to publicity and scrutiny by "numerous international organizations and foreign newspapers." In 1976, Jimmy Carter was elected President of the United States and he "raised the issue of human rights in Iran as well as in the Soviet Union. Overnight prison conditions changed. Inmates dubbed this the dawn of `jimmykrasy.` .... " [10]
After the Islamic Revolution former directors Pakravan and Nassiri were tried by inadequate Revolutionary 'Courts' and executed by the Revolutionary Guard.
[edit] Operations
During the height of its power, SAVAK had virtually unlimited powers of arrest and detention. It operated its own detention centers, like Evin Prison. In addition to domestic security the service's tasks extended to the surveillance of Iranians abroad, notably in the United States, France, and the United Kingdom, and especially students on government stipends. The agency also closely collaborated with the American CIA by sending their agents to an air force base in New York to share and discuss interrogation tactics.[11]
SAVAK agents often carried out operations against each other.[citation needed] Teymur Bakhtiar was assassinated by SAVAK agents in 1970, and Mansur Rafizadeh, SAVAK's United States director during the 1970s, reported that General Nassiri's phone was tapped. Mansur Rafizadeh later published his life as a SAVAK man and detailed the human rights violations of the Shah in his book Witness: From the Shah to the Secret Arms Deal : An Insider's Account of U.S. Involvement in Iran.
According to Polish author Ryszard Kapuściński, SAVAK was responsible for
- Censorship of press, books and films.[12]
- Interrogation and often torture of prisoners
- Surveillance of political opponents.
[edit] Post-Revolution and Fardost
- Further information: Human rights in Islamic Republic of Iran
Hossein Fardoust, a former classmate of the Shah, was a deputy director of SAVAK until he was appointed head of the Imperial Inspectorate, also known as the Special Intelligence Bureau, to watch over high-level government officials, including SAVAK directors. Fardust later is rumoured to have become director of SAVAMA, the post-revolution incarnation of the original SAVAK organization.
SAVAK was closed down shortly before the end of the monarchy and the gain of power by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in February 1979. Following the departure of the Shah in January 1979, SAVAK's 3,000+ central staff and its agents were targeted for reprisals; almost all of them that were in Iran at the time of the Iranian Revolution were hunted down and executed, only a few who were on missions outside of Iran managed to survive.[citation needed]
SAVAK has been replaced by the SAVAMA, Sazman-e Ettela'at va Amniat-e Melli-e Iran, later renamed the Ministry of Intelligence. The latter is also referred to as VEVAK, Vezarat-e Ettela'at va Amniat-e Keshvar, though Iranians and the Iranian press never employ this term, using instead the official Ministry title.[citation needed]
According to some sources, the new organization is structurally identical to the old one and retains many of the same people, but there is no reliable proof of these allegations.[citation needed]
Many books have since been published about the pre-revolution status of Iran politicians, based on the documents found in SAVAK's offices.
[edit] SAVAK Directors
- Teymur Bakhtiar (1957-1961)
- Hassan Pakravan (1961-1965)
- Nematollah Nassiri (1965-1978)
- Nasser Moghadam (1978-1979)
[edit] See also
- Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
- Ministry of Intelligence and National Security of Iran
- Iranian Revolution
- Human rights in Islamic Republic of Iran
[edit] References
- ^ Fisk, Robert. The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East. New York: Alfred Knopf, 2006, p. 99. ISBN 1-84115-007-X.
- ^ New York Times 21 September 1972
- ^ Iran Between Two Revolutions by Ervand Abrahamian, p.437
- ^ Fardust, Hussein and Ali Akbar Dareini. The Rise and Fall of the Pahlavi Dynasty: Memoirs of Former General Hussein. Bangalore, India: Motilal Banarsidass, 1999, 217. ISBN 8-1208-1642-0
- ^ Iran Between Two Revolutions by Ervand Abrahamian, p.437
- ^ Harvard Iranian Oral History Project: transcript of interview with Fatemeh Pakravan conducted by Dr. Habib Ladjevardi 3 March 1983]
- ^ Abrahamian, Ervand, Tortured Confessions by Ervand Abrahamian, University of California Press, 1999 p.106
- ^ Abrahamian, Ervand, Tortured Confessions, University of California Press, 1999 p.103, 169
- ^ Iran Between Two Revolutions by Ervand Abrahamian, p.442-3
- ^ Abrahamian, Ervand, Tortured Confessions by Ervand Abrahamian, University of California Press, 1999 p.119
- ^ Fisk. Great War for Civilisation, p. 112
- ^ Kapuściński, Ryszard, Shah of Shahs, pp. 46, 50, 76
[edit] External links
- Ministry of Intelligence and Security VEVAK - Iran Intelligence Agencies at website of Federation of American Scientists
| Directors of Ministry of Intelligence of Iran |
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(1957–1979) |

