Iran and Turkey have been intertwined with the United States in a special historical significance since World War II as the American influence empire reached its zenith during this tie period. Author Stephan Kinzer examines this special relationship and how our meddling into these two countries affairs caused revolutions and determined a new course of the history of these two partners of the cold war. The history of Iran and Turkey is covered in the early twentieth century and how leaders of these two countries almost saw their lands divided up by victorious allies following World War I. Both countries realized they needed to adapt.
Mustafa Kemel fought a coalition of European allies and the Greeks before they agreed to not divide the Turks homeland and give large chunks to Greeks, Armenians, and the Kurds and a whole chapter is devoted to the secular traditions that Kemal outlined for the new Turkish republic. It didn't hurt that the Turks won one of the major campaigns by the British during the Great War as Turks were basically fighting for their very existence. Kinzer covers own quickly these two countries modernized and this often meant becoming more corrupt and less democratic institutions than the Western countries they were trying to imitate. The legacy of the repression by the Shah of Iran against reformers would lead to the Islamic revolution and a new force in the region as the groundwork was laid with the American and British coup over the elected government of Mossadegh and his nationalizing of assets and oil.
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