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This Week in World War I, November 15-21, 1914

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  • This Week in World War I, November 15-21, 1914

    Huffington Post
    Nov 16 2014

    This Week in World War I, November 15-21, 1914

    Joseph V. Micallef , CEO & Senior Producer, Allegro Media Group. Has
    written extensively and produced dozens of programs on military
    history and world affairs.


    The War in Persia

    In 1914 Persia was an independent kingdom under the Qajar dynasty.
    Control of Persia had been a subject of intense competition between
    Russia and Great Britain when they had waged their "Great Game" for
    power and influence in central Asia. The Anglo-Russian Convention of
    1907 had divided Persia into two spheres of influence. Russia held
    sway in the north and Great Britain in the south. The discovery of oil
    by the Anglo-Persian oil company a year later in Khuzestan,
    underscored its importance to the British Empire.

    Officially, Persia was neutral during World War I. Its location at the
    juncture of the Ottoman, Russian and British-Indian Empires, however,
    made it the subject of intense competition between the Allies and the
    Central Powers for influence there. The German and Ottoman Empires'
    strategy was to cut Russia off from the oil resources around the
    Caspian Sea.

    More importantly, Enver Pasha, the Ottoman War Minister, believed that
    if Russia could be forced out of northern Persia, it would open the
    door to Ottoman influence among the Turkic people of central Asia.
    Moreover, with German assistance he hoped to ignite an uprising
    against British interests in Persia and eventually an invasion of
    British India by a locally organized Muslim army.

    Most of the Persian military forces consisted of tribal based militias
    under the control of their local chiefs. These militias had little
    allegiance to the Central government and would often switch sides
    between the Allies and the Central Powers.

    British forces were relatively light and consisted of a number of
    Indian Army units stationed in the south. In addition, the British in
    1916 organized the South Persia Rifles, a Persian military force of
    approximately 11,000 men under the command of British officers, to
    deal with local tribal insurrections being created by German agents.
    Russia had a Persian Cossack Brigade and a small contingent of the
    Russian Caucasus Army stationed in northern Persia.


    Russian Persian Cossack Brigade

    In 1914 when war broke out, Enver Pasha instructed the 1st and 5th
    Turkish Expeditionary Force to invade Persia and proceed through
    Tabriz to Dagestan in the north and ignite a general rebellion against
    Russian control leading to the expulsion of Russian forces from the
    shores of the Caspian Sea. The original incursion was aborted when
    Ottoman troops were rerouted to the Russian Third Army in the
    Caucasus. Additional incursions by Ottoman Forces were repulsed by a
    combination of Russian troops and associated Armenian volunteers
    serving in association with the Russian Army.

    Northern Persia soon became an ancillary theater to the broader
    conflict in the Caucasus and Russian forces began to move south
    towards Tehran. They were opposed by a combination of local tribal
    militias allied with Turkish troops that had intervened into Persia.

    In response to the Turkish and Russian incursions into Persia, Great
    Britain began moving its forces northward, ostensibly to support the
    Russian advance and meet the Turkish incursion, but also to insure
    that its interests in Persia were protected.

    The collapse of Russian forces following the Russian revolution
    resulted in Turkish forces gaining control over northern Persia.
    Armenian battalions, supplied by the British, opposed the Turkish
    forces. In the meantime, British forces occupied the rest of Persia.

    Following the cessation of hostilities with the Ottomans, British
    Forces occupied northern Persia as well and organized, financed and
    armed additional Armenian units in order to ostensibly contain
    Bolshevik influence.

    Immediately following the war, Great Britain attempted to create a
    protectorate over Persia and expand its control over the Persian Oil
    fields. In 1921, it assisted in a coup that brought Reza Kahn, an
    officer in the Persian Cossack Brigade, as Shah of the new Pahlavi
    dynasty. That dynasty would dominate Persia and then Iran's politics
    for the next half century.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-v-micallef/this-week-in-world-war-i_b_5974830.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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