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Who was Mohammad Mosaddeq?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.11
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10.11.112 cards
Who was Mohammad Mosaddeq?
Iran's democratically elected prime minister (1951–1953) who nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company; overthrown in the 1953 coup.
What was Operation Ajax?
The August 1953 CIA/MI6-backed coup that removed Mosaddeq and restored full power to Mohammad-Reza Shah.
What was the White Revolution (1963)?
The Shah's top-down reform programme — land redistribution, women's suffrage, a literacy corps, and industrialization — meant to modernize Iran.
Why did the White Revolution provoke clerical opposition?
Land reform hit clergy-owned estates and women's suffrage clashed with conservative religious views on gender roles.
What was SAVAK?
The Shah's secret police, notorious for surveillance, censorship, and torture of dissidents.
Who was Ruhollah (Ayatollah) Khomeini?
Exiled Shia cleric whose smuggled sermons rallied opposition to the Shah; returned to Iran in February 1979 and became Supreme Leader.
What is velayat-e faqih?
The constitutional principle making the Supreme Leader Iran's highest religious and political authority — the basis of its theocracy.
What happened in Iran on 'Black Friday' (September 1978)?
Troops fired on protesters in Tehran, killing dozens and radicalizing opposition to the Shah.
Outline the sequence from unrest to revolution (1977–1979).
Growing protests (1977–78) → Black Friday (Sept 1978) → general strikes → the Shah flees (Jan 1979) → Khomeini returns (Feb 1979).
What was the US Embassy hostage crisis?
November 1979–January 1981: militant students held 52 Americans hostage in Tehran for 444 days, breaking US–Iran relations.
What were the causes and outcome of the Iran–Iraq War?
Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980 hoping to exploit post-revolutionary chaos; the war lasted until 1988, killing hundreds of thousands with no major territorial change.
Compare the experiences of women before and after 1979.
Losses: compulsory hijab, narrower divorce/custody rights. Gains: rising female literacy and university attendance by the 2000s — a genuinely contested picture.
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When did the Iran–Iraq War begin, and who invaded whom?
22 September 1980 — Iraq (under Saddam Hussein) invaded Iran, aiming to seize the Shatt al-Arab waterway and exploit Iran's post-revolutionary weakness.
Why did Saddam Hussein and Khomeini's Iran both fear each other so much?
Saddam feared Iran's Shia revolution would inspire Iraq's Shia majority to rebel; Khomeini feared Saddam's secular regime would crush the Islamic Revolution before it could spread.
What happened at Halabja in March 1988?
Iraq used chemical weapons (mustard gas and nerve agents) against Kurdish civilians, killing thousands in hours — the first large-scale chemical weapons attack since WWI.
Which powers backed Iraq during the Iran–Iraq War, and why?
The USA (fearing Iranian Islamism), the USSR (Iraq's arms supplier), Gulf states like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (fearing revolution spreading), and France (arms sales) — all wanted Iran contained.
How did the Iran-Contra affair connect to the Iran–Iraq War?
The USA secretly sold arms to Iran (1985–86) despite publicly backing Iraq, showing the war's tangled and often contradictory international involvement.
How did the Iran–Iraq War end?
Iran accepted UN Resolution 598 in August 1988 after renewed Iraqi chemical attacks and exhaustion; the war ended in stalemate with roughly 500,000–1 million combined casualties.
How did Nasser rise to power in Egypt?
After the 1952 Free Officers coup overthrew King Farouk, Nasser outmanoeuvred rivals to become Egypt's leader by 1954, building a one-party authoritarian state.
What was the Aswan High Dam and why does it matter?
A Soviet-funded dam completed in 1970 that controlled Nile flooding and massively expanded irrigation and electricity — a symbol of Nasser's economic modernisation.
What happened during the Suez Crisis of 1956?
Nasser nationalised the Suez Canal; Britain, France and Israel invaded but were forced to withdraw under US and Soviet pressure, turning military defeat into a political triumph for Nasser.
Define Pan-Arabism.
Nasser's vision of uniting Arab states under Egyptian leadership, briefly achieved through the United Arab Republic with Syria (1958–1961).
How did the 1967 Six-Day War affect Nasser's legacy?
Egypt's catastrophic defeat and loss of the Sinai Peninsula badly damaged Nasser's Pan-Arab prestige and military credibility.
Compare Nasser's domestic reforms with his authoritarian methods.
He delivered land reform, free education/healthcare and industrial modernisation, but ruled through a banned opposition, secret police, censorship and persecution of groups like the Muslim Brotherhood.
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What was Anwar Sadat's economic policy called, and what did it do?
Infitah — it opened Egypt's economy to private and foreign investment, reversing Nasser's state-controlled model.
Why did Egypt's 1979 peace treaty with Israel isolate Egypt in the Arab world?
Most Arab states saw it as abandoning the Palestinian cause; Egypt was suspended from the Arab League for a decade.
When and how was Sadat assassinated?
6 October 1981, shot by army officers linked to Islamic Jihad during a military parade marking the 1973 war.
What legal tool let Mubarak suppress opposition for 30 years?
A state of emergency, declared after Sadat's assassination in 1981 and never lifted, allowing arrests and bans on protest without normal legal limits.
What is a 'youth bulge' and why did it matter in Egypt by 2011?
An unusually large share of young adults in a population; roughly 60% of Egyptians were under 30, and about 1 in 4 young people was unemployed.
How did the Tunisian Revolution help trigger Egypt's 2011 uprising?
Tunisia's toppling of President Ben Ali in December 2010–January 2011 proved a long-ruling autocrat could fall, directly inspiring the Tahrir Square protests.
What dates mark Egypt's 2011 revolution, start to Mubarak's resignation?
Protests began 25 January 2011 in Tahrir Square; Mubarak resigned 11 February 2011 after the army refused to fire on protesters.
How did the PLO's arrival in Lebanon (1970–71) help trigger the civil war?
Expelled from Jordan, the PLO based itself in southern Lebanon and Beirut, launching attacks on Israel and destabilising Lebanon's fragile confessional balance.
Compare the roles of Syria and Israel in the Lebanese Civil War.
Syria entered in 1976, occupied Lebanon and shifted its backing between factions to control outcomes; Israel invaded in 1978 and 1982 to destroy PLO bases, besieging Beirut in 1982.
What happened to the US-French-Italian Multinational Force in Lebanon?
Deployed in 1982 to oversee the PLO's withdrawal, it withdrew by early 1984 after October 1983 suicide bombings killed 241 US and 58 French troops in Beirut.
When and why was Hezbollah formed?
Formed around 1982 by Lebanese Shia clerics and fighters with Iranian funding and training, to resist Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon.
What did the 1989 Taif Agreement do, and what was the exception?
Brokered by Saudi Arabia, it rebalanced Lebanese political power between Christians and Muslims and disarmed most militias — except Hezbollah, which kept its weapons over continued Israeli occupation.
Topic 10.11 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Revolution, reform and foreign relations in the Middle East (c.1945–2020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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