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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Protests In Yemen Show Little Sign of Stopping.

HISTORY IN THE NEWS:






History never dies. It is reborn every minute of every day.

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DEDICATED TO THE ORIGINS OF CONTEMPORARY EVENTS AROUND THE WORLD.

TAG:  Mass protests are relatively recent in Sana'a while  south Yemen with its traditions of resistance to British colonialism, socialist rule and finally separatism from the north, has the larger tration of protest.


IN THE NEWS:  HARD CORE STUDENT PROTESTORS CONTINUE TO CLASH WITH POLICE AND GOVERNMENT-BACKED PROTEST GROUPS IN SANA'A DESPITE SIGNS OF A RIFT BETWEEN THE STUDENTS AND MORE TRADITIONAL OPPOSITION GROUPS. PRESIDENT SALEH'S MINOR CONCESSIONS, INCLUDING STEPPING DOWN FROM THE PRESIDENCY IN 2013, SEEM TO HAVE CONVINCED THE MORE CONSERVATIVE PROTESTORS TO TAKE A MORE GRADUAL TRACK, WHILE THE STUDENTS CONTINUE TO DEMAND MR. SALEH'S IMMEDIATE RESIGNATION IN THE FACE OF ARRESTS AND REPRESSION. MEANWHILE, IN THE SOUTHERN PORT CITY OF TAIZ, THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS PROTEST, DEMANDING MR. SALEH RESIGN IMMEDIATELY
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WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:  Popular protest is relatively new in Yemen, though in the South, which once a British colony, there is an older tradtion of dissent beginning with reaction against colonialism and occupation. In Yemen proper, a violent referendum took place in 2001 as a result of which President Saleh was re-elected with expanded powers while his General People's Congress continued to dominate the south. In August, 2007, fire arms were banned for citizens along with demonstrations without a permit. In April, 2008, there were clashes in south Yemen between govenrment troops and demonstrators protesting job descimintion against the south. In November of that year, police opened fire with tear gas on protestors in Sana'a demanding electoral reform. 

In the mid-19th century, the British colonized South Yemen. The core of the Yemeni state remains North Yemen which, because of its remoteness and fierce tribal culture, won autonomy from the Ottomans and was left independent after the Ottomona defeat in 1918 at the end of World War I. South Yemen, meanwhile, mounted a tribal resistance against Britain which became a Marxist resistance, winning independence in the 1960s. After Russian subsidies to  South Yemen ended with the fall of the Soviet Union, the South was forced to accept union with the North in 1990. Though the entire country is rugged and difficult to rule, the greatest resistance comes from the south with its history of tribal as well as Marxist rebellions against British colonialism, making a perfect environment for Al Qaeda.


IN THE NEWS: North and South Yemen, though unified today, were essentially different regions with different interests dating back to the 19th century with the tribal kingdom of North Yemen and  British-controlled tribal South Yemen with its colony of Aden. Aden and South Yemen, after all, commanded the straits between the Red Sea and the Indian ocean, a vital link between Britain and her Indian and Asian colonies.

In October, 1972 an agreement was signed to form a unified Yemen with the capital at Sana'a governing on combined principles of Islam and socialism. But restive Saudi tribes and other elements made the union all but impossible. The remainder of the 1970s witnessed continuous instability with Major Iryani deposed in the North and two succeeding presidents, Ghashmi and Hamdo assassinated in plots engineered by the South. Promise arose in the North with Ali Abdallah Saleh who backed the idea of a democratic People's Constituent Assembly and to counteract the destabilizing and regressive force of the tribes, he reached out to the West and Saudi Arabia. In a final evolution toward Communism in South Yemen, the NLF was replaced by the Yemen Socialist Party which mirrored the Communist Party of the USSR.The North, meanwhile, mixed conservative tribal politics with socialism as if trying to mediate between the Communist South and and conservative Saudi Arabia to the north.



 By the early 1980s, Yemen's isolationism kept it an archaic society in some respects little different from the 9th century beginnings of the Rasshid dynasty. About half the rural, highland population was made up of Shia Muslims living in the mountain hinterlands who accepted the relgious and political authority of the imam. The remainder, living in the coastal lowlands, are Shafi'ite Sunnis. In the late 1980s, unity loomed closer as the Soviet Union cut off support for South Yemen.

Yemen's final unification takes place in 1990, two years after Saleh's re-election. The newly united Yemen flexes its muscles by refusing to enter the 1991 Gulf War. But despite a coalition government, there's no easy union between the feudal culture of the North and the new Socialist structures of the South. Ominously, each retains separate broadcasting facilities and armed forces. 


In 1998- unified, fragile and fraying around the edges with tribal disorders, its centre wrought with perennial tensions between north and south, Yemen forges closer ties and holds joint military exercises with the United States. As part of the deal Aden is made available for the refueling of US warships.

A consequence, in the year 2000, is the bombing of the warship the USS Cole killing 17 sailors.  Washington blames the Islamic Army of Aden Abyan, the Yemen branch of Al Qaeda and Yemen joins the US in the hunt for the culprits. Four Yemenis confess to the operation, claiming it was done in solidarity with the Palestinians. After a violent referendum in 2001, Saleh is re-elected with expanded powers while his General People's Congress continues to dominate the south.

In November, 2001, two months after 9/11, President Saleh visits Pesident Bush in Washington declaring he will join Bush's War on Terror.

Amid renewed fighting with the Al Houthi rebels and violent demonsrtrations in the south, tourism, oil exploration by foreigners and foreign service postings proved highly dangerous. Tourists and Ukrainian oil company employees die at the hands of suicide bombers and tribesmen while foreign embassy personnel are threatened. It culminates in 2008  with assault by insurgents on the US embassy in Sana'a in which 8 insurgents are killed. In October, Saleh begins a round-up of Islamist militants.

 In November 2008, Saleh faces internal problems with five wounded when police open fire on demonstrators demanding electoral reform.

 The December 2009 attempted airline bombing by the "underwear bomber" inside the U.S. is soon traced to an Al Qaeda group in Yemen. Saleh expresses a willingness to begin talks with Al Qaeda provided they renounce violence. After the convoy of British envoy Tim Torlot comes under attack, Sana'a holds Al Qaeda responsible.


RELEVANT DATES FOR ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTS IN YEMEN:


Aden a British Colony.

1839- Aden becomes part of the British Empire; the port is needed to secure the passage to India.

1918- with the defeat of the Ottomans, north Yemen becomes independent under the rule of the Imam Yahya Hamid al Din with British support. Yahya centralizes government in return for giving Sharia law to the tribes.

British Grip on South Yemen is Loosened.

1962- July 25- delegates at London conference on Aden agree to its merger with the South Arabian Federation of the Sheikhdoms in the Aden territories. Riots erupt because the SAF is controlled by conservative Sheikhs.

-Republic of Yemen in the north renews claims to all of southern Yemen and border skirmishes erupt with the British. Leftist NLF Republicans supported by the UAR oppse the Biritsh and the conservative Sheikhs.


South Yemen becomes independent inder the National Liberation Front.

1967- under negotiations wth the NLF in South Yemen, Britain begins to withdraw from all of South Arabia.
1968 -in South Yemen, far left prevails and begins to impose Communism in two out of six states despite moderate central government.



North Yemen More Stable under President Saleh.

1978-Ali Abdallah Saleh is new president of North Yemen. Backs the People's Constituent Assembly. He looks for help from Saudi Arabia and the West despite hostility from tribal leaders which slowed progress within the country.

Unification of Yemen.

1990- Yemen is united under Presdent Saleh. Former president of South Yemen, al Beidh becomes vice president.


Collapse of Unified Yemen.

1993-August- Vice President Ali Salim Al Beidh takes refuge in Aden claiming that the south is being neglected and northernerns are persecuting southerners.

Saleh Re-unifies Yemen by Force.

1994- July - North Yemeni government forces occupy Aden, force secessionist leaders out of the country and re-unify the country.

Sept 28- new constitution establishes Islamic Law as legal basis of country. Saleh elected to a 5 year term as president.


Al Qaeda Bombs USS Cole; 9/11 and Increased Presidential Powers.

2000- US war ship the USS Cole damaged in terrorist attack killing 17 sailors. US blames Al Qaeda franchise the Isamic Army of Aden Abyan. Yemen cooperates fully with US to track down culprits.

2001- February- violent referendum shows support for increases President Saleh's powers and term limit. The north continues to dominate the south through the General People's Congress.
2001- November- President Saleh visits Washington and tells Bush that Yemen will join the fight against terror.



Yemen Cracks down on Al Qaeda.

-US and Yemen agree that mountain homeland of the Bin Ladens is a prime region for terror training camps.

2002- Feb. Yemen expels over 100 Islamic scholars, many of them English and French nationals in a a move against Al Qaeda suspects.

2004-2007 Islamist Shia al Houthi Insurgency in North and problems in South.

2004- June-August: Government troops battle Shia Islamist leader and cleric Hussein al Houthi in north Yemen. Hundreds killed.
2008- April- clashes in south with govenrment troops in demonstrations against job descimintion against south Yemen.


Sept- attack on US embassy in Sana'a kills 8 including asaillants. Six arrested.

Oct.- Saleh announces arrest of Islamist militants.

Al Qaeda Merger
2009- Jan-March- the Yemeni and Saudi affiliates of Al Qaeda merge into Al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula.



Underwear Airline Bomber Trained in Yemen under Al Qaeda.

Dec. -Al Qaeda claims responsibility for the Christmas attack on a US airliner by
the 'underwear bomber.' Sana'a asks for the West's support in the war on terror.

Wikileaks Reaveals US Forces Operating Inside Yemen.
Oct- government troops under US pressure fighting Al Qaeda in difficult, rugged terrain of South Yemen, particularly in the Abyan region.
Dec. Wikileaks: Yemen Allowed US Airstrikes against Al Qaeda.


 
Al Qaeda Stronghold Yemen Borders Saudi Arabia

CONTENTS: SCROLL DOWN FOR:   

RELEVANT DATES  DISTANT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS
RECENT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS.
DISTANT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS.
REMOTE BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS
 
CROSS-CENTURY SUMMARY

TIMELINE FOR THE HISTORY OF YEMEN

RECENT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS :

After the attacks of 9/11, Washington and Yemen are particularly concerned that  the Bin Laden family's mountain homelands in Yemen would host trainig camps for Al Qaeda. In February 2002, Yemen expels 100 Islamnic scholars while a supertanker sustains heav damage in a bombing reminiscent of the attack on the USS Cole.

10 suspects in the bombing of the USS Cole escape in 2003. In a major embarrassment for Yemen, only two have been recaptured by 2004.


Summer 2004 brings an entirely new development with a Shia insurgency led by a cleric, Hussein al Houthi in north. ( Yemen is muslim with a little more than half  the populationSunni with the remainder Shia.) Yemen. Hundreds are killed in combat with government troops. After Al Houthi  himself is killed, his Shia followers offer to lay down their arms in return for a pardon and in 2006, 600 of the rebels are given amnesty. After Saleh's re-election, January 2007 sees renewed fighting between the government and followers of al Houthi's successor, Abdul Malik Al Houthi, who accepts a ceasefire in June.


Amid renewed fighting with the Al Houthi rebels and violent demonsrtrations in the south, tourism, oil exploration by foreigners and foreign service postings proved highly dangerous. Tourists and Ukrainian oil company employees die at the hands of suicide bombers and tribesmen while foreign embassy personnel are threatened. It culminates in 2008  with assault by insurgents on the US embassy in Sana'a in which 8 insurgents are killed. In October, Saleh begins a round-up of Islamist militants.

Government troops clash with Al Houthi rebels in August, 2009, displacing thousands in the northern border region.

 In November, Saleh faces internal problems with five wounded when police open fire on demonstrators demanding electoral reform.

Foreigners once again are the target as eight visitors go missing before the bodies of three are discovered.

Saudi Arabia becomes embroiled in the Shia border insurgency as Saudi Arabia recaptures territory from Al Houthi rebels clashing with Saudi troops in October-November 2009. The rebels accuse the Saudis of supporting the Yemen government in Sana'a.

The December 2009 attempted airline bombing by the "underwear bomber" inside the U.S. is soon traced to an Al Qaeda group in Yemen. Saleh expresses a willingness to begin talks with Al Qaeda provided they renounce violence. After the convoy of British envoy Tim Torlot comes under attack, Sana'a holds Al Qaeda responsible.

In February, 2010 Sana'a signs a cease-fire with Al-Houthi rebels and in March the Shia insurgency, under government pressure, releases 178 prisoners.


DISTANT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS:  North and South Yemen, though unified today, were essentially different regions with different interests dating back to the 19th century with the tribal kingdom of North Yemen and  British-controlled tribal South Yemen with its colony of Aden. Aden and South Yemen, after all, commanded the straits between the Red Sea and the Indian ocean, a vital link between Britain and her Indian and Asian colonies.

This was the situation on the eve of World War One when North Yemen, under the Imam Hamid Yaya al Din, secured relative autonomy under Ottoman rule as a condition for siding with Turkey upon the outreak of hostilities. The Ottomans reinforced their position in Yemen with an elite bigade staffed by German officers. Fears that the latter would be used against the local tribes helped spark the Arab Revolt. In the wake of the Allied defeat of  Turkey, Al Din ruled an independent north Yemen while the British controlled North Yemen's ports including Hodeiba, loosely supervised the tribal south and adminstered Aden directly from the colonial office in India. When British- backed tribes lost the Asir coastal region to the Saudis, the Imam intervened and took back the ports and divided Asir with Saudi Arabia.


Yahya's medieval rule and monopoly on trade and nepotism alienated the merchants of merchants of Aden along with the considerable labour force. 


Though North Yemen and Saudi Arabia remained rivals for control of the Arabian peninsula in the 1930s, the European powers sought to establish hegemony in the region and kept a wary eye on Imam al Din. A border war ensued between the Saudis and Al  Din, ultimately without issue. After securing control over North Yemen by giving Sharia law to the tribes, Al Din attempted to expand his state into a Greater Yemen but his efforts were blocked by the British. Britain continued to repulse Yemeni incursions into Aden using the Royal Air Force. In the 1934, meanwhile, Britain consolidated her rule of South Yemen from Aden by signing a 40 year treaty with Sana'a, the capital. Saudi Arabia, made territorial incursions on North Yemen only to be stopped abruptly by French, British and Italian warships. In the end, North Yemen lost half its territory.

In 1937 Britain tightened its srategic grip on the region by making Aden a Crown Colony ruled directly from London and formally  adminstering the southern tribal areas as a protectorate. North Yemen, accepted support from Italy's Mussolini during  World War Two and became a member of the  Arab league in 1945.

Tensions escalated between north and south in 1948 when Imam Yahya al Din was assassinated by the reform-minded landowner Abdullah al-Wazir. The late iman's son Imam Ahmad Yahya al Din immediately overthrew Wazir and ascended the throne determined to unite north and south in a Greater Yemen. Once again, the British put a stop to North Yemeni expansion and the kingdom fell backward into feudalism. Until 1962, North Yemen, or Yemen proper, remained a theocracy with government ministers married into the royal family and the tribal areas controlled by seizing hostages which were then imprisoned in the capital.

The festering divide between North and South took on regional proportions as Egypt's Nasser and King Saud of Saudi Arabia signed a tripartite pact with North Yemen's King Ahmad. Having secured Egyptian backing,  Yemen attempted to calm its more progressive classes with a dose of Arab nationalism and opposition to the British in Aden by forming a federation with the United Arab Republic. The result brought about gains in the tribal south as part of the army of the Sultanate of Lahej, citing British oppression, defected to the federation in hopes of creating a larger southern bloc to be united in a non-British Southern Arabian League and, once again, isolating the British in Aden. In 1957-59 a brief war broke out between the North and the British. Britain decided to place a military base in Aden in 1958. Publicly, before the UN, Yemen laid claim to Aden. In 1959 Britain retaliated by offering to form a federation of southern sultanates in return for future independence.


Neither tribal north nor British colonial south had the power or the regional backing to attain their designs against the other. Britain knew she was facing the loss of everything in the South except for Aden. Things were no better for King Ahmad in the North as his union with the United Arab Republics disintegrated and he had a falling out with Nasser who found the king far too reactionary. At the Aden Conference of 1962, the British solution was to join the conservative southern sheikdoms with Aden in a single federation of South Arabia much to the fury of a growing secular political left.


The south was now a tinder box with a leftist National Liberation Front violently opposing the British and the conservative tribal Sheiks; and North Yemen sparking border skirmishes in hopes of taking advantage of a divided South. In the North, modernizing elements in the army and among the merchant class plotted to seize control. But it was the North that exploded in civil war when, upon the flight of King Ahmad, General Salel took control in September, 1962, at the head of a coup d'etat. The Middle East itself was nearly split as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and  Yemen's Zaidi border tribes backed escaped members of the fallen monarchy while urban Yemen, the Sunni hill tribes, Syria. Egypt and the United Arab Reublics backed the Republicans. The United States meanwhile, sent observers to Saudi Arabia, fearing instablity in the oil fields.


The civil war continued. President Salel reached out for help, getting training and technical support from Egypt and forming agreements with Moscow and Peking. The large number of Egyptians living in Yemen prompted the formation of pro- and anti-Nasser factions. With all local powers wanting Britain out of South Yemen, the contenders for independence, the leftist National Liberation Front (NLF) and the nationalist Front for the Liberation of South Yemen (FLOSY) become locked in civil war as well.

Salel, looking to profit from chaos in the South, attempted to regain territories lost in the civil war only to fnd himself deprived of crucial support from Nasser who withdrew ignominiously and was now embroiled in the 1967 war with Israel. A royalist coup against Salel fizzled. Compromises were reached with Sunnis, tribes and royalists. But it was not enough. Bereft of Nasser, his major backer, Salel was overthrown in a military coup by Major Abdul Rahmen al Iryani.


In the South, 1967 saw a sea change with a new military regime; and  a victorious NFL in the south ready to negotiate the withdrawal from Britain. But South Yemen's NLF soon split with a Marxist wing pushing for a radicalized program. Though the south, with an urban proletariat in Aden and a congeries of tribal groups, was not properly unified, the Marxists began, in 1968, by imposing Communism on two out of six districts. FLOSY meanwhile, having been ousted by the NFL, had found asylum in North Yemen whence it began launching attacks across the border with backing from Saudi Arabia and local Sheikhs. The NFL then split between Nasserites and Radicals.


A fragile Republican North Yemen subsisted in  1970 with the South consolidating one-party rule by a Marxist council. The council repressed dissident groups and renamed the new state the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen. (PDRY). In 1972 the exiled tribal leaders had been invited by Aden to a meeting in the south where 65 of their Sheiks were apparently assassinated. Border clashes resulted ending with a peace being brokered by the Arab League. In October an agreement was signed to form a unified Yemen with the capital at Sana'a governing on combined principles of Islam and socialism. But restive Saudi tribes and other elements made the union all but impossible. The remainder of the 1970s witnessed continuous instability with major Iryani deposed in the North and two succeeding presidents, Ghashmi and Hamdo assassinated in plots engineered by the South. Promise arose in the North with Ali Abdallah Saleh who backed the idea of a democratic People's Constituent Assembly and to counteract the destabilizing and regressive force of the tribes, he reached out to the West and Saudi Arabia. In a final evolution toward Communism in South Yemen, the NLF was replaced by the Yemen Socialist Party which mirrored the Communist Party of the USSR.The North, meanwhile, mixed conservative tribal politics with socialism as if trying to mediate between the Communist South and and conservative Saudi Arabia to the north.

The spectre of North-South unity re-emerged in 1979, sparking border clashes. Meanwhile, Ali Nasser Muhammed rose to rule South Yemen in a military coup. Across the border, Saleh set up a General People's Congress and signed a propsective unity agreement with South Yemen. As oil production in North Yemen increased in 1984, President Saleh sought contacts with leftists in the South. Two years later the South's president Ali Nasser Mohammed fled the country after an assassination attempt and and Ali Salim Beidh rose to take the presidency. Unity loomed closer as the Soviet Union cut off support for South Yemen.


By the early 1980s, Yemen's isolationism still kept it an archaic society in some respects little different from the 9th century beginnings of the Rasshid dynasty. About half the rural, highland population was made up of Shia living in the mountain hinterlands who accepted the relgious and political authority of the imam. The remainder, living in the coastal lowlands, are Shafi'ite Sunnis.

Yemen's final unification takes place in 1990, two years after Saleh's re-election. The newly united Yemen flexes its muscles by refusing to enter the 1991 Gulf War. But despite a coalition government, there's no easy union between the feudal culture of the North and the new Socialist structures of the South. Ominously, each retains separate broadcasting facilities and armed forces. 
   
Amid mutual recrimination the presidents of North and South- Saleh and Beidh, drift apart with the South claiming political persecution and discimination and by 1994 the two armies face one another across the border. In the end, Beidh is ousted, Saleh declares Yemen one and independent and makes secession illegal. He is instantly challenged from the South by President Bakr al Attas who declares indepndence for South Yemen. In the fall, Saleh unifies the country with armed force and establishes Islamic law before his re-election to a five-year term.


In 1998- unified, fragile and fraying around the edges with tribal disorders, its centre wrought with perennial tensions between north and south, Yemen forges closer ties and holds joint military exercises with the United States. As part of the deal Aden is made available for the refueling of US warships.

A consequence, in the year 2000, is the bombing of the warship the USS Cole killing 17 sailors.  Washington blames the Islamic Army of Aden Abyan, the Yemen branch of Al Qaeda and Yemen joins the US in the hunt for the culprits. Four Yemenis confess to the operation, claiming it was done in solidarity with the Palestinians. After a violent referendum in 2001, Saleh is re-elected with expanded powers while his General People's Congress continues to dominate the south.

In November, 2001, two months after 9/11, President Saleh visits Pesident Bush in Washington declaring he will join Bush's War on Terror.


REMOTE BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS:

In the 9th century BC, the Minean people of south Yemen control a wide-ranging trade network covering most of north Africa and Yemen itself forms the southern heartland of  an advanced civilization in the Arabian peninsula.  Myth makes Yemen the homeland of the Queen of Sheba. The feudal Sabians supplant the Mineans only to be supplanted in  turn by the Himyarites. By 200 BC, the Himyarites are losing control of the Indian Ocean trade to the Mediterranean. Still, they repulse a Roman legion in 24 BC. The third to the seventh centuries AD witness a general waning of the Yemeni trading states.


In 525 AD, the growing strength of the Himyarite Jewish population results in the persecution of Christians. Meanwhile, the Himyarties recover their trading power, controlling commerce in frankincense, myrrh and rare woods between India, China, Africa, the Middle East and Europe. With Byzantine encouragement, Christian Abyssinia in 530 invades the Himyarite Kingdom; the invaders succeed, but fail to capture Mecca. Five years later, Abyssinian control of the Himyartie kingdom falls to the Persian Sassinids under Chosroes I

Islam arrives in Yemen around 650. In the eighth century, the region becomes Shia after Zaid, the great grandson of Ali secedes from the Omayyads in a succession dispute in 740.  Yemen is then ruled by the Zaidi Imam Ali Kasim al-Rassi. By 1000 Yemen is part of the Caliphate of Egypt. Once again the Jews of Yemen appear in the record, this time because of Muslim persecution. In the Middle Ages, the region maintains its commercial prominence with the trade in alum for dying textiles.

After the Ottoman occupation of Yemen in 1517, the British make trading contact, with posts in Aden and regions inland for strategic protection of her maritime commerce with India. But the moutains wall off the hinterland and local rule prevails as the Ottomans are expelled in the 17th century and the Sultanate of Lahej continues rules the south around Aden. Yemen remains a difficult prize. In 1798 the  British attempt and fail to occupy Perim Island off the coast of Aden in a bid to head off Napoleon's threat to the route to India. The Wahhabis of Saudi Arabia attack North Yemen on a campaign of conversion but are unable to make headway. In 1818 Ibrahim of Egypt drives them out on behalf of the Ottomans and restores the Zaidi Imam in exhannge for a subsidy to Constantinople. The Ottomans garrison the main Yemeni ports.

The British succeed in capturing Aden in 1839, making the Sultan of Lahej into a vassal. The new colony of Aden, now protecting Britain's sea route to India, is administered from Bombay.

In 1849, intractable North Yemen, meanwhile, rebels against reoccupation by the Ottomans.To the south, Aden is further tied to European interests when it becomes a feuling station with the opening of the Suez canal in 1869.  The north, under the Imam Yahya Hamid al Din, however, enters the 20th century in 1900 under Ottoman suzerainty. In 1911, on the eve of Wolrd War One,  the Iman leads a rebellion against the Ottomans and obtains joint rule with Constantinople.

CROSS-CENTURY SUMMARY:

TIMELINE FOR THE HISTORY OF YEMEN:


for modern dates, thanks to: 
http://www.criticalthreats.org/yemen/aqap-and-suspected-aqap-attacks-yemen-tracker-2010

Ancient Yemen

800-200 BC- Mineans, a tribe of south Yemen, send camel caravans to memphis, Egypt and to the Atlantic cooast of Africa.

750 BC- advanced civilizations in southern Arabia. The Yemen region forms the cultural heartland of Arabia.

-Sabeans absorb the Mineans and set up a system of feudal aristocracy that resists the rise of any centralized authority.

-Sabeans absorbed by the Himyarites.


The Himyarites

-200 BC (circa) Himyarites lose control of the major Mediterranean trade route to India after it is diverted to Egypt.

-24 BC- Himyarites repulse a legion under Aelius Gallus at the behest of Julius Caesar.

200-600- waning of the urbanized Yemenite trading states.

525 AD- Judaism gains strength in the Himyarite kingdom resulting in the persecution of Christians.

-Himyarites control the trade route in frankinsense, myhhr and rare woods between Europe, Africa, the Mideast and India and China.

530- Byzantium encourages Christian Abyssinia to invade the Himyarites. Abyssynian governor Abraha conquers the Himyarites and invades the Arabian heartland but fails to capture Mecca.

575- Abyssinia loses Arabia to the Persian Sassinids under Chosroes I.


The Arrival of Islam.

650- (circa) Yemen falls under rule of Islam.

1000- Yemen ruled by caliphs of Egypt.

1165- beginning of Muslim persecution of Jews in Saydi Yemen.

1250 (circa)- Yemen is an important source of alum for the dying of textiles.


The Ottomans and the Arrival of British Trading Interests.

1517 - the Ottomans occupy Yemen

-Britain using Aden and hinterland for trading and strategic outposts in the India sea trade.

1650 (circa) Ottomans expelled from Yemen.

-Aden ruled by the Sultanate of Lahej.

1798 (crica) -British attempt but fail to take strategic Perim island off the coast of Aden in the Red Sea to ward off Napoleon's ambitions in India.

1839- British seize Aden and make the Sultan of Lahej into a vassal.


Aden a British Colony.

1839- Aden becomes part of the British Empire; the port is needed to secure the passage to India.

-Aden ruled from India by the Presidency of Bombay.

1869- Aden becomes a refueling station at the opening of the Suez Canal.

1849- the Ottomans re-occupy north Yemen only to face revolt.


Hamid Al Din Rules North Yemen.

1900- North Yemen under Ottoman suzerainty, ruled by Yahya Hamid al Din (1869-1948)

1911- al Din rebels against Ottomans and gains greater powers.

1914-18- Ottoman Turks attacking Birtish garrisons in Aden. In north, al Din supports Ottomans.

1916- arrival of German offficers in command of Ottoman troops in Yemen helps set off the Arab rebellion.


North Yemen Independent After World War One.

1918- with the defeat of the Ottomans, north Yemen becomes independent under the rule of the Imam Yahya Hamid al Din with British support. Yahya centralizes government in return for giving Sharia law to the tribes.

1925- Imam Yahya occupies Hodeida port from the Asir region in bid to re-establish Greater Yemen. But Britain stops any further expansion.

1926- Sept. 22- treaty between Italy and the Imam of Yemen- in which Italy hopes to gain access to the east and west coasts lf the Red Sea.

-border disputes between Saudi Arabia and Yemen.


British Rule in South Yemen.

1927- Britain rules Aden directly as opposed to the surrounding protectorate.

1932- Aden governed directly from colonial British India.


Treaty Between Brtiain and North Yemen.

1934- Feb 11- 40 year treaty between Britain and Sana'a.

-North Yemen and Saudi Arabia go to war over the Asir region. Saudi Arabia, after seizing Hodeida is stopped from further expansion by British, French and Italian warship.s

May-June- Britain brokers a peace which leaves North Yemen independent but with half its territory.

1936- April 2- North Yemen joins treaty of non-aggression between Saudi Arabia and Iraq.


British Rule of South Yemen.

1937- Aden becomes a Crown Colony of the Britain and the surrounding territory formally becomes a British protectorate, ruled directly by a British governor.

-despite Birtish development and progress, frequent anti-British riots.

1937- Oct 15- renewal of Italy-Yemen treaty for 25 years. Imam of Yemen tries to maintain independence from Arabia, Britain and Italy.

1945- North Yemen a charter member of the Arab League.


British South Yemen made up of 23 Sultanates.

1947- British establish an advisory council in Aden. Tading city of 100,000, majority Arab. The Aden protectorate stretches along the south, approximating what would be South Yemen with eastern and western protectorates, 23 Arab sultanates, emirates, sheikhdoms and minor tribal units...British authority through all the entities is irregular, secured by individual treaties. Majority of the 80,000 are Bedouin tribesmen. All policed by Arab troops under British officers.
Most privielged principality i Lahej.

1947- Sept. 30- North Yemen admitted to UN.


North Yemen's Yahya al Din Assassinated. Heir dreams of Greater Yemen.

1948- Imam Yahya is assassinated but his son Ahmad ibn Yahya succeeds him and preserves feudalsim. He will rule intil 1962.

1948-1962- Yemen becomes isolated and backward.

-British stop Imam Ahmad of North Yemen from attemting to recreate Greater Yemen.

1956- April 21- Nasser, King Saud, and Imam Ahmad sign a 5-year tripartite military pact under Egyptian command.

-Moscow sending miltary aid to Syria, Egypt and Yemen.


North Yemen Begins to make gains in South Yemen.

1958- March 8- in Damascus, Ibn Ahmad, and his son the Crown Prince Said al-Badr join Nasser in forming a loose federation of North Yemen with the UAR to be called the United Federation of Arab States.

-June- one third of the army of the Aden Sultanate of Lahej defects to North Yemen due to sultan's compaints about British domination. Britain appeals for hel from Egypt's Nasser.


Beginning of anti-British National Consciousness in South Yemen.

-Lahej forms the Southern Arabian League to oppose Britain and form a south Arabian state including Aden and its territories which would then join Yemen in the United Arab States.

1959- Feb 11- Britain brokers a federation of the 6 Arab emirates of the south, including south Yemen but not Aden, in return for future independence.

-Aden is Britain's last secure possession in the Middle East.

1961- UAR ends federation with North Yemen. Ibn Ahmad turns against Egypt's Nasser.

British Grip on South Yemen is Loosened.

1962- July 25- delegates at London conference on Aden agree to its merger with the South Arabian Federation of the Sheikhdoms in the Aden territories. Riots erupt because the SAF is controlled by conservative Sheikhs.

-Republic of Yemen renews claims to all of southern Yemen and border skirmishes erupt with the British. Leftist NLF Republicans supported by the UAR oppse the Biritsh and the conservative Sheikhs.


Civil War in NorthYemen falls along Cold War Lines.

1962- Sept 19- upon the death of Ahmad, latter is succeded by his son Muhammad Al-Badr but the army takes control under General Abdullah al-Sallal in a coup dètat, forming the Yemen Arab Repubpic (YAR). In a civil war the royalists take refuge in Saudi Arabia and are backed by the Zaidi tribes in the north, Saudi Arabia and Jordan and the republicans by the Sunni Sahfei hill tribes of the south, the United Arab Republic, Syria and Nasser`s Egypt. Royalists receive arms from British South Africa. The Republicans are armed by th Soviet Union.

-Royalists try to rouse the tribes against the rebels.

-Nov 6- Saudi Arabia claims that UAR planes bombed Saudi territory while assisting the rebels.

-Nov 11- UAR and Yemeni Republic announce military defence treaty.

-US exerts pressure to prevent the fighting from destabilizing Saudi Arabia and other oil producers in the region.

1963- Mar 2- UN rep Ralph J Bunche in Yemen to observe involvement of Saudi Arabia and the UAR in the civil war.

-Aden joins the South Arabian Federation of Arab Emirates.

-June 7- UN persuades UAR and Saudia Arabia to help broker a peace in North Yemen Civil War.

1964- March 3- Saudi Arabia and the UAR officially urge independence for South Yemen.

March 24- North Yemen President al-Salel visitis Moscow and obtains a treaty and aid from Soviet Union.

March 28- Britain sends planes to bomb a Yemeni fort after Yemenis launch an attack on Federation of South Arabia.

-June 15- North Yemen signs friendship treaty with China.


Civil War in Territories of South Yemen

-after a civil war in South Yemen between the northern-influenced National Liberation Front (NLF) and the Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen (FLOSY), the NLF is victorious by 1967.

1967- Salel tries to rgain territory North Yemen lost in civil war but fails due to Egypt being tied up in war with Israel.


North Yemen's President Salel overthrown after losing support of Egypt.

-November- Salel, deprived of Egyptian support is overthrown by officers led by Abdul Rahman al Iryani.


South Yemen becomes independent inder the National Liberation Front.

1967- under negotiations wth the NLF in South Yemen, Britain begins to withdraw from all of South Arabia.

-under the NLF South Yemen established as The People's Republic of Yemen (PDRY), including South Arabia and the port of Aden. But much impoverished after the departure of the British.

-but soon the NLF is split between thouse who want a traditional socialist government and radicals who want a Marxist party organization and state control.

-South Yemen is never properly unified.


Far Left Rules South Yemen.

1968 -in South Yemen, far left prevails and begins to impose Communism in two out of six states despite moderate central government.

-border attacks by FLOSY on South Yemen from the north, with support from Saudis and local Sheikhs.

-attempts are made to impose Communism on South Yemen through cooperatives and central planning with assistance from USSR. In return, USSR gets a naval base in Yemen.

1969- leftist leader in South Yemen turns power over to a radical left guerrilla council.

1970- North Yemen ruled by fragile republican coalition.

-South Yemen renamed The People's Democratic Republic of Yemen. (PDRY)

1971. South Yemen represses dissidents as rebel groups form against the government.

1972- border clashes between the YAR of North Yemen and the PDRY. Arab League brokers a ceasefire.


Instability in North Yemen.

1974- military coup deposing Iryani places North Yemen under command of Hussein al Ghashmi.

1977- President Ibrahim Hamdo assassinated.

1978- President Gashmi assassinated.


North Yemen More Stable under President Saleh.

1978-Ali Abdallah Saleh is new president of North Yemen. Backs the People's Constituent Assembly. He looks for help from Saudi Arabia and the West despite hostility from tribal leaders which slowed progress within the country.

-in South Yemen the NLF is replaced by rhe Yemen Socialist Party modeled on the
Communist Party of the USSR.

1979- new efforts to unite north and south Yemen spark new fighting.

1980- Al Nasser Muhammed takes control of South Yemen in a coup.

1981- Saleh sets up 1,000 member General People's Congress.

-Saleh signs a unity agreement with South Yemen.

1982- thousands killed in earthquake.

1984- oil production increases rappidly in North Yemen.

-Saleh accepts economic support from Saudi Arabia while forging links with leftists in South Yemen.


Coup in South Yemen.

1986- President Ali Nasser Mohammed flees the country after attempted assassination. New government sentences him to death for treason. Ali Salim al Beidh is president of South Yemen.

-Moscow cuts its aid to South Yemen, spurring the latter to unity talks with North.

-brief civil war followed by unity talks.

1988- Saleh re-elected in North Yemen.


Unification of Yemen.

1990- Yemen is united under Presdent Saleh. Former president of South Yemen, al Beidh becomes vice president.

1991- Yemen opposes the US-led Gulf War.

1993- April -ruling parties of the former north and south form a coalition government. But little attempt is made to unify the tribal and feudal north with the south and the socialist stuctures imposed on it. North and South maintain separate armies and separate broadcasting.

-elections- YSP of al Beidh accuses Saleh of co-opting the YIG party to gain power.


Collapse of Unified Yemen.

-August- Vice President Ali Salim Al Beidh takes refuge in Aden claiming that the south is being neglected and northernerns are persecuting southerners.

1994- May- Northern and southern armies, which never integrated, face one another on the border threatening war.

May - Saleh imposes state of emegency and dismisses Al Beid after government deadlock and increasing violence.

May 21- Saleh declares the independence and unity of Yemen, declares secession illegal

-Bakr al-Attas declares South Yemen independent.


Saleh Re-unifies Yemen by Force.

July - North Yemeni government forces occupy Aden, force secessionist leaders out of the country and re-unify the country.

Sept 28- new constitution establishes Islamic Law as legal basis of country. Saleh elected to a 5 year term as president.

1995- Yemen and Eritrea fight over disputed island territory.

-border disputes between North Yemen and Saudi Arabia aggravated by discovery of oil in the area.

-Yemen fails to control outlying tribal regions.


Yemen Strengthens Ties with United States.

1998- Nov- in strenghening its ties with the US, Yemen has joint military exerces with US.

1999- north-south border disputes resolved with a 40 km demilitarized zone.

-Yemen aggrees to let US Navy use Aden for refueling.


Al Qaeda Bombs USS Cole.

2000- US war ship the USS Cole damaged in terrorist attack killing 17 sailors. US blames Al Qaeda franchise the Isamic Army of Aden Abyan. Yemen cooperates fully with US to track down culprits.

Oct- Four Yemenis confess to carrying out bomb attack at the British Embassy; say they did so in solidarity with the Palestinians.

2001- February- violent referendum shows support for increases presidental powers and term limit. The north continues to dominate the south through the General People's Congress.

2001- November- President Saleh visits Washington and tells Bush that Yemen will join the fight against terror.


Yemen Cracks down on Al Qaeda.

-US and Yemen agree that mountain homeland of the Bin Ladens is a prime region for terror training camps.

2002- Feb. Yemen expels over 100 Islamic scholars, many of them English and French nationals in a a move against Al Qaeda suspects.

Oct. -the supertanker Limburg is heavily damaged off the coast of Yemen in attack. Al Qaeda is suspected.

2003- April- 10 chief suspects in bombing of SS Cole escape from prison in Aden.

2004- two of the SS Cole suspects are re-captured.


Islamist Shia al Houthi Insurgency in north.

June-August: Government troops battle Shia Islamist leader and cleric Hussein al Houthi in north Yemen. Hundreds killed.

August- court sentences 15 men in bombing of the Limburg and other terror attacks.

Sept. -Government troops claim to have killed rebel cleric Al Houthi in the north.

Sept 29- 2004- A Yemeni court senteces two Al Qaeda operatives, Al-Bashiri and Al Badawi to death for the attack on the USS Cole. Four others get prison sentences.

March-April- insurgent followers of Al Houthi renew attacks on government forces.

May- rebel leader of Al Houthi's Shia movement offers to lay down arms in return for pardon amid continued fighting.

2006- 600 followers of slain Shia rebel cleric Al Houthi are given amnesty.

Sept- Saleh wins another term as president.


Sucessor to al Houthi Resumes Shia Insurgency.

2007- January-March- government fighting against Shia Al Houthi rebels in north.

June- successor Abdul Malik al Houthi accepts ceasefire.

July- convoy hit by suicide bomber killing 8 Yemenis and 2 Spaniards in Marib province.

Aug. Fire arms banned for citizens in Yemen along with demonstrations without a permit.

-November- tribesmen attack troops guarding a Ukrainian oil company leaving 16 dead in Shabwa Province.

2008- January- more fighting between followers of Shia rebel cleric Abdul Malik Al Houthi and government forces.

March-April- widespread attacks against foreign targets and installations in Yemen. US embassy evacuates personnel.

April- clashes in south with govenrment troops in demonstrations against job descimintion against south Yemen.

Sept- attack on US embassy in Sana'a kills 8 including asaillants. Six arrested.

Oct.- Saleh announces arrest of Islamist militants.

Nov.- police fire on demonsrrators demanding electoral reform. Five injured.


 Formation of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Penminsula (AQAP)

2009- Jan-March- the Yemeni and Saudi affiliates of Al Qaeda merge into Al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula. AQAP formed from a merger of al Qaeda's Yemeni and Saudi branches. The Saudi group had been effectively suppressed by the Saudi government, forcing its members to seek sanctuary in Yemen. It is believed to have several hundred members.


Feb. -government Announces release of five Al Qaeda suspects on condition of good behaviour.

2009- June- 9 foreigners abducted in the northern Saada region; bodies of three discovered.

Aug.- government launches offensive against Shia insurgency in northern Saada region, dsiplacing thousands.

Oct.- Shia rebels in Saada on the northern border clash with Saudi security forces. Rebels claim the Saudis are cooperating with the government in Sana'a

Nov. -Saudi Arabia recaptures territory lost from Shia rebels in border region.

Underwear Airline Bomber Trained in Yemen under Al Qaeda.

Dec. -Al Qaeda claims responsibility for the Christmas attack on a US airliner by
the 'underwear bomber.' Sana'a asks for the West's support in the war on terror.


Dec 25- Umar Farouk Abdulmatallab, the "Underwear Bomber", arrested for attempting to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253. He had been trained in Yemen by 'Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsuala."

2010- President Saleh says he will open talks with Al Qaeda militants provided they renounce violence.


Ceasefire with al Houthi Shia Rebels.

2010- Feb.- cease-fire signed with northern Shia Houthi rebels.

March- Houthi rebels release 178 captives after government accuses them of failing to abide by terms of ceasefire.


2010- June 19- Four al Qaeda gunmen dressed in women’s clothing attacked an intelligence headquarters in Aden and freed several suspected al Qaeda militants. On June 21 Yemen announced the arrest of the attack’s mastermind. Security forces investigating the attack made several arrests on June 25 in Aden during house-to-house searches. On July 11, AQAP claimed that its Martyr Jamil al Anbari Brigade carried out the attack. An AQAP statement stated the attack killed 24 officers and soldiers, deviating from the government’s report of 11 killed. AQAP also denied that the government had captured those responsible for the attack



Sept- government military offensivce forces thousands to flee south Shawba separatist militants.


Oct- government troops under US pressure fighting Al Qaeda in difficult, rugged terrain of South Yemen, particularly in the Abyan region.

Bombs Found on US-Bound Yemen Cargo Plane; Yemen Allows US Air Strikes.

2010 October - Global terror alert after packages containing explosives originating in Yemen are intercepted on cargo planes bound for the US.

2010- Dec. Wikileaks: Yemen Allowed US Airstrikes against Al Qaeda.

2010 December - Yemen says 3,000 soldiers killed in recent outbreak of fighting involving Houthi rebels.

 US State Department Concerned about Al Qaeda in Yemen.

2011 January - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visits to express "urgent concern" at al-Qaeda activities in Yemen.

-Tunisian street protests which unseat President Ben Ali appear to encourage similar demonstrations in other countries, including Yemen.  President Saleh pledges not to extend his presidency in 2013 or to hand over to his son.

2011- Feb 25- More than 180,000 pro­test­ers take to the cap­it­al, Sana, in the largest pro-demo­cracy demon­stra­tions in Ye­men’s his­tory. More than 150,000 con­vened in oth­er cit­ies and provinces across Ye­men, ac­cord­ing to loc­al news re­ports.

 Arab Spring Protests Spread to Yemen.

2011- March 2- The pres­id­ent and op­pos­i­tion lead­ers make tent­at­ive plans for re­form, in­clud­ing the pro­vi­sion that Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh will step down by the end of the year.

2011 March - Pro-reform demonstrations continue. Police snipers open fire on pro-democracy camp in Sanaa, killing more than 50 people. Senior military figures including key general, Ali Mohsen al-Ahmar, declare their backing for protest movement. Several ministers and other senior regime figures also defect to protesters. President Saleh says unrest risks plunging country into civil war. State of emergency is imposed.

2011- March 29- In Ye­men’s tri­bal north­ern and south­ern ter­rit­or­ies, in­sur­gents take over six of 18 provinces.

2011 April - Unrest and violent government response continue. President Saleh vows to remain in office.

2011- April 23- Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh agrees to an in­ter­na­tion­ally ne­go­ti­ated plan to step down with­in 30 days in ex­change for crim­in­al im­munity in the deadly crack­down on protests.

2011- May 12- Ye­meni se­cur­ity forces and anti-gov­ern­ment pro­test­ers clash vi­ol­ently, as Per­sian Gulf and U.S. of­fi­cials press for a deal that would al­low long­time Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh to leave of­fice with im­munity.

2011- May 22- Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh re­fuses to sign the ac­cord for him to step down with im­munity, and a re­gion­al coun­cil says it is ceas­ing ef­forts for a deal.

2011 May - Dozens die in clashes between troops and tribal fighters in Sanaa. Airport shuts and thousands flee the city.

 President Saleh Injured in Rocket Attack.

2011 June - President Saleh is injured in a rocket attack and is flown to Saudi Arabia.
British and French forces prepare to evacuate foreigners in the event of a civil war.
 
 2011- June 12- Des­pite their tenacity and de­sire to fash­ion a new or­der, pro­test­ers face a threat that it is the con­test between Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh’s fam­ily and a rival clan that will de­cide what change, if any, comes to Ye­men

 2011- Aug 15: AQAP bombed an al Houthi meeting in a government administration complex in al Matama in al Jawf governorate. AQAP claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement issued on September 12. The statement noted that the suicide bomber was Abu Bakr Muhammad al Najda and claimed that the attack killed over one hundred al Houthis


-Pro­test­ers have been strug­gling for months to over­throw Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh. But unity and or­der are in short sup­ply.

 US Assassinates Al Qaeda Preacher Awlaki

Sept- US-born al-Qaeda leader Anwar al-Awlaki is assassinated by US forces.

Sept 18- Se­cur­ity forces open fire on tens of thou­sands of demon­strat­ors in Ye­men’s cap­it­al, Sana, killing at least 26 pro­test­ers in one of the blood­i­est days of the 9-month-old re­bel­lion against Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh.

2011- Sept 23- Nearly four months after he was severely wounded in an as­sas­sin­a­tion at­tempt, Pres­id­ent Ali Ab­dul­lah Saleh makes a sur­prise re­turn to Ye­men.

2011 October - Yemeni human rights activist Tawakul Karman wins Nobel Peace Prize, together with Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Leymah Gbowee of Liberia.

UN Security Council passes resolution condemning violence, calls for transfer of power.

President Saleh Agrees to Leave Office Under Pressure from UN.

2011 November - President Saleh agrees to hand over power to his deputy, Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, who takes office at uncontested presidential elections in February.

2011- Dec 13- Yemeni security forces arrested six “well-known” al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) operatives in Yemen; among the operatives was high-value target and leader of AQAP in al Jawf governorate, Musaed al Barbari. A stockpile of weapons and “training manuals” were found in his possession. The suspects, including Barbari, Mohamed Hussein Musayyib, Mohammad Abdulkadir Ahmed al Shihri, Nader Ahmad Mohamed al Qubati, Mohamed Muthana Ali al Amari, and Abdul Munaim Hamid Ali Abu Ghanem, had been planning attacks targeting high-ranking security officials, foreign embassies, and government buildings in Yemen. Also, the suspects had been “actively recruiting fighters” to join Ansar al Sharia militants fighting in Abyan and Shabwah governorates. Separately, three fugitives who escaped from al Mansoura Central Security prison in Aden on December 11 were captured

Unity Government Under President Mansour Hadi

Unity government - including a prime minister from the opposition - is formed.

2012 January - President Saleh leaves country. Parliament grants him full immunity in the face of objections from thousands of street protesters.


2012 February - Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi inaugurated as president after uncontested elections.

AQAP Kills 128 Yemeni soldiers in Abyan. 

 2012- March 4- MARCH 4, 2012: AQAP militants stormed an army base in Kod, south of Abyan’s capital, Zinjibar, and then fighting spread to other military posts in the area. The attack began with coordinated SVBIEDs at military posts at Zinjibar’s southern and western entrances, which killed at least seven Yemeni soldiers and wounded 12 others. Overall, over 185 Yemeni soldiers were killed in the assaults. Additionally, over 70 were taken captive by AQAP, and then paraded through the streets of Jaar

2012- March 28- Abdullah al Khaldi, the deputy counsel at the Saudi consulate in Aden, was kidnapped on his way to work. The Saudi Interior Ministry announced in April that they believed AQAP had kidnapped him and was holding him captive. Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman Major General Mansour al Turki stated that Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Sana’a received a phone call from former Guantanamo detainee Mishaal Mohammed Rasheed al Shadoukhi, wanted by Saudi Arabia, claiming responsibility for the kidnapping and providing a list of demands. Shadoukhi demanded a number of AQAP-affiliated members be released from Saudi jails, including several women, and a ransom be paid. 

2012- April 1: AQAP militants attacked an army base near Shibam in Hadramawt governorate, killing seven Yemeni soldiers while they slep

 International Donors Pledge to Aid Yemen.

2012 May - International donors pledge more than $4bn in aid to Yemen to help improve infrastructure and security. Aid agencies warn that Yemen is on the brink of food crisis. The government is thought to have asked for some $10bn.

An al-Qaeda leader Fahd al-Quso in Yemen wanted over the 2000 bombing of the US warship USS Cole is killed in an unmanned drone attack.

 2012- May 21: AQAP claims responsibility for a suicide bombing at a rehearsal for a military parade in Sana’a, Yemen’s capital, killed over 90 people. The blast occurred in al Sab’een Square, near the presidential palace, and may have targeted Yemen’s Minister of Defense, Major General Mohammed Nasser Ahmed. The bomber was disguised as a soldier.

May-June: The army launches an offensive against AQAP in the province of Abyane. More than 560 people die in the fighting.

 Yemen Captures Al Qaeda Strongholds.

2012 June - The army recaptures three al-Qaeda strongholds in the south - Shuqra, Zinjibar and Jaar.

2012 September - Defence Minister Muhammad Nasir Ahmad survives car bomb attack in Sanaa that kills 11 people, a day after local al-Qaeda deputy head Said al-Shihri is reportedly dead in the south.

2012 November - A Saudi diplomat and his bodyguard are shot dead in Sanaa. Security officials say the assailants, who opened fire on the diplomat's convoy, were dressed in police uniforms.

2013- - July 17: AQAP confirms the death in a US drone strike of deputy leader Saeed al-Shehri.

2013- August 4: Security is beefed up around western embassies in Sana, and some close following warnings by Washington of an imminent attack.




Monday, February 14, 2011

MIDDLE EAST UNREST REACHES IRAN AS POLICE MEET PROTESTS

HISTORY IN THE NEWS:



History never dies. It is reborn every minute of every day.

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DEDICATED TO THE ORIGINS OF CONTEMPORARY EVENTS AROUND THE WORLD.


TAG:  There have been mass popular protests in Iran ever since nationalist movements began to protest British and Iranian colonialism in Persia around 1900.

IN THE NEWS:  THE AGITATION THAT HAS GRIPPED TUNISIA, ALGERIA, EGYPT AND YEMEN SPREADS TO IRAN AS DEMONSTRATORS MASS IN TEHERAN AND OTHER CITIES TOTALLING MORE THAN 20,000 BEFORE BEING PUSHED BACK BY RIOT POLICE. THE IRANIAN LEADERSHIP, WHILE SUPPORTING THE RIOTS ABROAD AS A REBELLION AGAINST WESTERN-BACKED DESPOTS DID NOT EXPECT THAT THE SAME CURRENT WOULD TURN AGAINST THEM. DECLINING TO SHOW THE RESTRAINT EXERCISED IN EGYPT, ITANIAN AURTHORITIES RESPONDED WITH BEATINGS AND MASS ARRESTS. WHILE THE LEADERSHIP PRE-EMPTED ALL PRESS REPORTS, NEWS OF THE DEMONSRATIONS GOT OUT THROUGH FACEBOOK, TWITTER AND OPPOSITION WEB SITES.


First Nationalist Movement in Iran.
1905- nationalist revolution begins in Persia.
1906- Mozaffar al-Din Shah concedes a constitution under pressure from constitutionalists and with the encouragement of the British ambassador. This limits concessions to foreign companies.
First Glimmer of Constitutional Democracy and Opposition to Britain.
1907- Constitutional revolution under Shah Muzzafar al Din Qajar provides an elected assembly (Majlis)
1920- internal opposition to the Anglo-Persian agreement results in Persia turning toward the the U.S. (which was increasingly interested in Persian oil). The U.S. responds by objecting to the unfairness of the British monopoly on Persian oil and negotiations are commenced for for Amercan insyead of British aid, development and advisers.
British Put Shah Pahlavi in Power.
1921- a British-backed coup by an officer, Reza Pahlavi overthrows the government of Fathullah Gillani. . Pahlavi gets the Majlis to depose the Qajar dynasty and make him Shah.
Popular Protest at US  and BritishMeddling.

1944- US Adviser Millspaugh excites popular protest by attempting to fire the head of the Iranian National Bank. Millspaugh resigns, most of his attempts at reform having failed.
-popular sentiment rises against the British interests and presence in Iran.
Mossedeq Atttempts Nationalist Revolution over Oil. 
1951- - Prime Minister Mohammed Mussadiq, a nationalist, nationalizes the Anglo-Iranian oil company.
-at the UN, Mossadiq insists on Iran’s right to ownership of its oi
1953- after a struggle with Mossadiq over control of the Defense Ministry, an attempt by the Shah to dismiss Mossadiq is protested by nationalist riots, the Shah leaves Iran.
-however, the army remains in support of the Shah.
The CIA has Mossadeq Overthrown.
-the CIA, especially aware of the Shah as an asset against Communism, works with Monarchist officers bringing about the overthrow and arrest of Mossadiq and the return of the Shah. Mossadiq is sentenced to two years in prison.
First Protests Against the Shah.
1970- protests build against the Shah’s regime.
1977- a protest movement begins under the guidance of Ruholla Khomeini from exile in Najaf.

The 1978 Popular Revolution.
1978- an alliance of Marxists and radical Shia clerics overthrows the Pahlavi regime.
-anti-monarchist Shapur Bakhtiar becomes Prime Minister but the clergy mistrust him.
The 1979 Clerical Revolution.
1979- April- after several attempts at a Monarchist coup are made, Iran is proclaimed an Islamic republic under the Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini.
1989- Khomeini dies. After a power struggle, another cleric, Hashemi Rafsanjani becomes speaker of the Majlis and Ayatollah Khamenei replaces Khomeini.
Rasfanjani's Liberal Political Reforms.
1997- Rafsanjani is defeated in elections by Muhammed Khatemi, a relative liberal. He brings liberal reforms to the political system.
1999- Under Khatemi, Iran holds its first elections.
Reformers Win a Majority.
2000- reformers win a majority in the Majlis.
Reform Candidates Barred froim Running.
2008- parliamentary elections return a 2/3 majority of conservatives, with many reform candidates barred from running. Moderate conservatives embarrassed by Ahmedinejad also win seats.
2009 Mass Protests of Rigged Election.
2009- after the June 12 presidential election, opposition candidates Ali Hosseini and others lead mass protests againsts Ahmadinejad's claim of victory in a mssively rigged election. Security forces kill 3o and arrest 1,000. Iran blames the west, particularly Britain, for provoking the arrest.
August- Senior opposition figures are put on trial, allleged to have fomented unrest during the election protests. But Khamenei declares there is no proof they were motivated by foreign powers.
Protests Continue Despite Repression.
-with protestors increasingly breaking protest bans, opposition demonstrations are held on the 30th anniversary of the mass hostage-taking at the US Embassy.
December - Death of influential dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hoseyn Ali Montazeri triggers further clashes between opposition supporters and security forces. At least 8 people die in what is the worst violence since the contested presidential election.
2010- January - Iran executes two men arrested during the period of unrest that followed the disputed presidential election of June 2009. It also puts 16 people on trial over the Ashura Day opposition protests in December, when eight people were killed.

Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi says the opposition will continue its peaceful struggle against the government.
-the government warns against further protests.
2011- -February 14- Iranian demonstrations break out in wave of unrest spreading from Tunisia and Egypt, throughout the Middle East.
RECENT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS. On March 23, 15 British sailors were seized by the Iranian coastguard on grounds that they had crossed into Iranian waters in the Persian Gulf. Britain claimed evidence to the contrary, showing that they were seized from Iraqi waters where Britain as the right to patrol. A diplomatic row erupted and Iran was suspected of retaliation against a new round of UN sanctions for its nuclear program and against the American detension of 5 Iranian Revolutionary Guard operatives in northern Iraq. In a series of Iranian television spots, each of the British sailors made a statement that they were being well treated and were guilty of crossing into Iranian waters. London pointed out that the declarations appeared staged and delivered under pressure.Since Mahmoud Ahmedinejad won the presidency in 2005, he has used his relatively powerless postion to assert a radical anti-western position with loud and strident rhetoric. Though it's believed quieter sectors of the government with greater authority are a little more reasonable, the president has set the tone for Iran's international position on its support of Iraqi Shia, Iranian nuclear capabality and the western and American presence in the Middle east.

In August of 2005, Iran resumed converting uranium at Isfahan, insisting it was for peaceful purposes. But the IAEA declared that Iran was violating the Non-proliferation treaty. In January, 2006, Iran further dug in its heels by breaking seals placed on equipment by the IAEA on the Natanz nuclear power plant. After further violations, on July 31, the UN Security Council demanded that Iran suspend its nuclear activities. After Iran ignored an August 31 deadline, the UN approved the imposition of sanctions on December 23.
In February-March, 2007 after further Iranian intransigence over its uranium enrichment the international committee took further measures. It is now suspected that Iran had in fact lost a game of brinksmanship in the nuclear negotiations and may have seized the British sailors as a distraction, if not to save face. A further humiliation may have been the American capture of 5 Iranian Revolutionary Guard members.

In the long view, it is interesting to note how the Brtish rule of Iraq, where it put down a Shia-led uprising in 1920, along with one-time British naval supremacy in the Persian Gulf and along Iran's south coast, seem to foreshadow this year's run-in between British and Iranian naval patrols.

Iran extended its defiance to the international community in April, 2007, announcing a massive expansion of its nuclear program with the IAEA estimating that Iran could make a nuclear explosive in three to eight years. Despite Iran's grudging assent to some nuclear inspections, the United States responded by tightening sanctions in October. But American intelligence sent a coontradictory message that Iran's nuclear weapons development had been overestimated.

The new year, 2008, saw a visit to Iraq by Ahmadinejad where he signed agreements to help rebuild the shattered country. The clerics in Terhan, meanwhile, kept a firm grip on power with a 2/3 majority of conservatives returned in parliamentary elections with many reform candidates disqualified from running. In the spring, the UN tightened sanctions on Iran while the IAEA insisted Iran was concealing parts of its nuclear program. Throughout the summer, Iran defied incentives and sanctions from Europe and the United States as it pressed ahead with what many believe is a nuclear weapons program.


A false warming in relations ensued in November as Ahmedinejad congratulated Barak Obama's election as US President. Indeed, in March, 2009 Supreme Leader Khamenei accused Obama of continuing the old Bush policy toward Teheran. However, there might have been a faint gesture to the contrary when Iran released US-Iranian journalist Roxana Sabiri, recently imprisoned for spying.


In June, Ahmadinejad's presidential election victory was met with mass demonstrations protesting widespread fraud. Security forces killed 30 and detained over 1,000 amid international protest while the government blamed the West, especially Britainm for fomenting the the mass street gatherings. Leading opposition candidate Ali Hosseini periodically led the demonstrators. As Ahmadinejad swore in his new cabinet in August, a large number of opposition figures were publicly put on trial for organizing the protests.


In September 2009, the focus turned to construction of a uranium plant in Qom which the regime insisted was for peaceful purposes while it tested missiles that could reach US installations in the Persian Gulf as well as Israel. In November, Mohammed El Baredei pressured Iran to accept an offer by western nations to help it enriich uranium abroad. In Teheran, meanwhile, thousands broke a ban on demonstrations by gathering to protest the 30th anniversary of the hostage-taking at the US embassy during the Iranian Revolution.


The end of the year sees the death of the Grand Ayatollah Montazzeri, an important reformist member of Iran's clergy. Demonstrations commemorating the Grand Ayatollah are again met with  violence by the government with eight killed. The crackdown continues in January 2010 with two arrrested in the June demonstrations put to death and others from the continuing demonsrtrations at the end of 2009 put on trial. A prominent physics professor is mysteriously murdered in a bomb blast, with opposition groups claiming he had supported one of their candidates in the June elections.

In February 2010, Iran attempts to show good intentions, claiming it is ready to send unranium abroad for enrichment for non-military purposes and Washington asks Iranian officials to match their words with actions. However tensions continue as the US claims to have evidence that Iran is sending arms to the Taliban and Iran announces another successful series of missile tests. In May Teheran follows through with its February commitment ageeing to ship uranium to Turkey or Brazil for enrichment but US officials remain skeptical that it will prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. In June words are backed up by force as the UN Security Council brings down a fourth round of sanctions agains Iran, tightening the arms embargo and financial restrictions.

The focus shifts to human rights in July 2010 with international protest as an Iranian court sentences a woman charged with adultery and murder to death by stoning. Later in the month Brazil offers her asylum.

Iran claims significant progress in it nuclear program in August as its Bushehr nuclear plant is loaded with fuel, with Russia agreeing to provide more fuel in theory bringing the program closer to weapons capability. In September Washington, after perceiving that Iran's nuclear fuel swap and with Turkey and the latter's financial assistance are helping Iran to avoid sanctions, orders Turkey to desist with a threat to cancel a major arms deal.


DISTANT BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS. It was the weakness of the Qajar Shahs that opened the way for direct British intervention in Persia. In the mid-nineteenth century the Qajars' heavy borrowing from European powers and the consequent debts encouraged those powers, especially Britain, to take direct control of the matter. The point of etnry was the southern coastline where Britain had naval supremacy.
Britain's grand strategy at the time was to protect its colony in India from southward Russian exppansion. To this end Britain had to counter Russia in Afghanistan as well as in Persia. As Russia took more terriory along Persia's northern border, extending its influence into Persia itself, the British replied, in 1892, by giving Persia a loan it couldn;t refuse and then seizing the customs duties in southern Persian seaports as collateral,

In 1907, Britain and Russia agreed to respective zones of influencewithin Persia, Russia claiming the northern half of the country and Britain the southeast, adjacent to its Indian colony of Balluchistan.

The discovery of oil in the years 1900 to 1910 only intensified British and Russian competition for influence in Persia but the prospect of domestically generated wealth also ignited a strong current of Persian nationalism which burns to this day. With British support, the new constitionalist movement pressured Mossafar al-Din Shah to create a national assembly, which, however, foundered in 1907, in part, due to Russian subversion.
The only thing to survive, it seemed, was the British-dominated Anglo Persian Oil company. With the first World War British supremacy was complete, the Russian revolution having led to the withdrawal of Russian influence in Persia. Now, Britian's Viceroy of India, Lord Curzon, saw Persia as the final link in the chain of British colonial power from India to Iraq, to the Mediterranean.
In 1919, a failing Persian ecomomy made it easy for Britain to make Persia a formal British Protectorate. Events today, involving the UN and Iraq were foreshadowed when Persia bridled at the severe resitriction of its influence in peace settlements at the end of the war. Tehran was further threatened when neighbouring Iraq became a British League of nations mandate. And in 1920, the Brtisih in Iraq violently suppressed a Sha-led rebellion in Iraq's south- a region seen by Iran's Shia majority as a sister in spirit.

When, in 1921, the British backed a coup, deposing the Shah in favour of an army officer, Reza Phalavi, they got more than they bargained for. Cleverly, the Reza Pahlavi made himself the new Shah, seized on Iran's new oil-fueled nationalism by renegotiating all foreign oil contracts, incuding that with Anglo-Persian Oil, in Persia's favour. He made a cult celebrating ancient Persian rulers, histpory and symbols as the spiritual basis for the modern state and empowered his country by playing off foreign rivals, against one another. Finally, he renamed Persia Iran, in memory of its founding Aryan people. In 1925, he made Iran once and for all independent. In 1951 Britian was still an influential power in Iran when am ultra-nationist president, Mohammed Mossadiq, challenged the outside world by nationalzing Iran's oil production once and for all.

The dream of a new Iran died when the British and the CIA worked in concert to protect their oil interests by staging a coup, removing Mossadiq from power and then backing the young Shah Pahlavi, son of Reza, as their tool. When he was overthrown in 1979 and Iran fell under the iron rule of a clerical, Shia theocracy, British and all other foreign influence inside the country came to an end.

When the British returned to the region in 2003 by taking part in the American invasion of neighbouring Iraq and occupying Iraq's Shia south , it could only bring back bad memories of the British-led repression of a Shia-led revolt there in 1920.- And the patrolling of British ships in the Persian Gulf could only recall Britain's naval supremacy in Persian waters in the 19th century.


REMOTE BACKGROUND TO THE EVENTS. The British were able to build on commercial links with Persia ever since the establishment of a British overland trade route in 1561. In the second half of the eighteenth century, Britain further established factories in Persia at Bushire and at Basra, respectively on the east side and at the head of the Persian Gulf (not far from where the British sailors were seised by Iran in 2007) British attention was more forcefully turned to Persia in 1798 by Napoleon's Egyptian campaign by which the French hoped to challenge British dominance in India and the Indian ocean. Britian's first step in protecting India was to induce Persia to attack Afghanistan which was trying to establish its own empire in the region.

In the same year, Persia's modern histroy began with the rise to power of the Qajar Shahs whose long decline would, for more than a century, be accompanied by the increasing influence of foreign powers, particularly Britain. In 1800, Britian ratified an alliance with Persia by which Persia and India were assured mutual protection from outside powers such as Russia and France. This, of course was more to English than Persian advantage. In 1806, France responded to the British initiative by signing an agreement with Persia and sending a mission to train the Persian army. In 1814, at the wane of the Napoleonic wars, the victorious Brtisih responded in turn by signing an Anglo-Persian pact which forced Persia to abolish any treaties with European powers hostile to Britain.

Britain further flexed its muscles in the region by controlling neighbouring Afghanistan and when the Persians asserted a historic claim to the east Persian city of Herat, Britain stopped them, retaking it on behalf of the Afghans. British resolve around Persia increased after Russia seized control of the Caspian Sea and regions to the east and to the west in Persia's northern marches.

Persia was finally and effectively hemmed in on the east when she tried again to seize Herat in 1856. The British declared war, forcing Persia to recognize Afghan indepence in 1857. Heavy borrowing by the Qajar Shahs further weakened Persia, leaving it increasingly to the mercy of British and Russian territorial ambitions. Russia, after all, was looking for a southeen Port and Britain wanted both Afghanistan and Persia as buffers to protect her Indian colony from Russian expansion. By poviding loans and development, Brtiain gained further control over Persia The discovery of oil in Persia, which hadn't the means to exploit it, put an end to any vestige of autonomy. But if foreign, mostly British, interests won concessions on Persian oil, the new resource also sparked intense nationalism. With nationalism came pressures for parliamentary government, granted by the Shah in 1907.

CROSS-CENTURY SUMMARY: The history of Iran can be seen, if figuratively, as a series of successive movements of liberation, each with a claim to Iranian, or 'Aryan' identity on the Iranian plateau: an identity defended from misrule from within and from ambitons without: an identity seen to be dinstinct from the Graeco-Romans and Arabs to the west, the peoples of India to the East and the Mongols and Turks to the north. Hence, we have the Medes rescuing the peoples of the plateau from the Assyrians, the Achaeminids releasing Iran from the Medes, the Parthians rescuing it from the Achaeminids, the Achaeminids crumbling before the Greek Seleucids, the native Parthians throwing out the Seleucids and then holding back the Roman Empire for four centuries. Pressures from within and without caused the Parthian rule to collapse and be replaced, again from within, by the Sassanids. Pressure by Byzantium and by Islamic conquest from Arabia ended Sassinid rule and Iran is further subjected to domination by the Mongols and Turks in the 13th and 14th centuries. In the 16th century a Persian, if Islamic revival was brought about by the Safavids whose adoption of Shiism in the face of a Sunni majority in the Islamic world, would contribute to the revivial of an Iranian exceptionalism. Safavid rule is seen to represent the apogee of Persian culture. It ended in the early eighteenth century when it was supplanted by an Afghan dynasty. The late eighteenth century saw a brief revival under the Zands. The Qajars who succeeded them were the last traditional Persian dynasty.
The weakness of the Qajars throughout the 19th and early 20th century led to Persia's subjugation by foreign territorial and colonial interests. It seems inevitable that Iran would sooner or later attempt to rescue and to defend an ancient sense of identity dating back to the expulsion of the Assyrians by the Medes from the Iranian plateau. The assertion and revivial of 'Iran' arrrived rather paradoxically with a British-backed coup overthrowing the Qajars. The new Shah Pahlavi turned on his colonialist allies and created a new Iranian nationalism which recalaimed its pre-Islamic history. The discovery of oil and its gradual nationalization gave economic power to a reborn Iranian identity. With history and oil wealth being recovered, the replacement of the Pahalvi dynasty with a Shia revolution restored the religious component.
Meanwhile, Israeli, American and British foreign policy and the Anglo-American occupation of Iraq have only served to strengthen the Iranian revivial and to encourage Iran's intransigence in its pursuit of neculear dominance in the region.



TIMELINE OF IRANIAN HISTORY:
THE ARYANS
2000 BC- Indo Iranians migrate from southern Russia. Median and Iranian tribes settle on the Iranian plateau.
2000- 750 BC- Iranian tribes and city states.
THE MEDIANS
650 BC- the Median clan provides the Iranians with independence from the Assyrians.
650-559 BC- The Median Empire.
CYRUS THE GREAT.- THE ACHAEMINIDS.
559 BC- Cyrus the Great leads a Persian revolt against the Medes.
500-330 BC- the Persian Achaeminid Empire expands from Iran to Egypt.
546 BC –The Persians take Anatolia.
530-522- BC Cambyses, son of Cyrus takes Egypt, Libya and part of Nubia.
521-486- BC- Darius the Great extends the empire as far as the Aegean and Macedonia; and in the east as far as the Indus. He developes a sophisticated Imperial administration based on the Assyrian model.
513 BC- Darius the Great fails to defeat the Scythians.
THE GREEK-PERSIAN WARS.
512- Darius the Great takes Thrace.
490- Darius the Great invades Greece. He is defeated at Marathon.
480- Darius the Great’s army is defeated at Thermopylae; his navy is destroyed at Salamis.
404-343 BC- Egypt is independent from Persia.
ALEXANDER AND THE SELEUCIDS
323-330 BC- conquest of the Persian Empire by Alexander of Macedon.
312-63 BC- the Seleucid Empire covers most of the Middle East, save for Egypt.
PARTHIA
248 BC- the Parthians revolt and take Iran back from the Greek Seleucids.
248 BC- 224 AD- the Parthians maintain an empire in Iran.
171-138 BC- Mithridates I of Iran.
53 BC - Parthia defeats Rome at the Battle of Carrhae.
216-277 AD- Mani founds the Manichaean belief in Iran.
THE SASSINIDS
224- 651 AD- Sassanid Empire in Iran.
239-272- Emperor of Iran- Shapur I.
259- Shapur defeats the Romans, captures Valerian.
440-552- Hephthalite Huns penetrate Iran and India.
531-579- Khosrow I Anusharvan, Sassanid emperor of Iran.
591-628- Khosrow II Parviz, Sassanid emperor of Iran.
614-616- Sassanids conquer Syria, Jerusalem and Egypt.
627- Dastagird, the Sassanid city of palaces is sacked by the Byzantines.
ISLAM
636-651- the Muslim Arab conquest of Persia.
819-1062- Persia ruled by the Sunni Saminids, winning favour with the Abassids because of Shia Buyid rule of Baghdad.
-the Saminids restore elements of pre-Islamic Iranian culture, creating a sense of Persian nationalism.
1020- Mahmud of Ghazni, an East Afghanistan Turkic warlord and mercenary for the Abbasid Muslims, secedes to form his own dynasty.
1000, circa-- the Turks invade, making several states in Iran.
THE MONGOLS
1225- Mongol conquest of Iran.
1335- the rule of the Ilkhanid Mongols collapses in Iran.
-mid-1300s- extreme instability in Iran and Iraq
TAMERLANE
1381-1387- Persia conquered by Tamerlane.
1405-1506- a dwlindling empire of Tamurlane's successors in eastern Iran.

1405-47- Tamerlane's son, Shah Rukh rules from Herat.

THE SAFAVIDS
1501-1524- Shah Ismail founds the Iranian Safavid dynasty and establishes Shiism as the relgion of Persia.
1514- the Seljuk Turk Selim the Great defeats the Persians at Caldiran.
1524- Persiams conquer Baghdad.
1561- English begin overland trade with Persia.
1588-1629- Shah Abbas I- Safavid emperor of Iran.
-Abbas hires two Englaishmen to reorganize tribal fighters into a national army.
-Abbas takes Baghdad back from the Ottomans and recovers Armenian territories.
-Abbas starts a Persian revivial. Culture flourishes. He makes Shiism the state reglion- ends religious tolerance. Poer is given to the clergy.
-Shah Abbas drives the Portugeuse from the Pesian Gulf and begins trade with Great Britain.
1629- death fo Shah Abbas.
1638 -Persia fights religious wars with the Ottoman Turks who take baghdad.
1722- thr Afghans ovethrow the weak Shah Hussein.
THE AFSHARS
1736- Nadir Shah expels the Afghans and establishes the Afshar dynasty.
1738- Nadir Shah invades and loots India.
THE ZANDS
1750-1794- the Zand Dynasty of Karim Khan- the capital is moved to Shiraz where a spectacular building program follows.
-peace and prosperity under the Zand dynasty.
1763- British establish a factory at Bushire
1770- British establish a factory at Basra
THE QAJARS
1794- the tyrant Aga Muhammad Khan.overthrows the Zands and establishes the Qajar Dynasty.
1797- Khan is assassinated.
1794-1925- the Qajar dynasty is a period of decline in which Persia sowly loses territory as Russia along with European nations exercise increasing influence.
1797-1834- Under Fath Ali Shah Persia is forced to give up the Causacus to Russia.
1798- The Brtish, to protect India, induce Persia to attack Afghanistan.
1798- Napoleon’s campaign in Egypt, intended to open a trade route to the Indian Ocean and the east- gets the attention of the British.
1800-Governor of Bombay sends an Indian messenger and British enviy, Sir John Malcom to the Shah. A Persian-British treaty is signed assuring the mutual protection of India and Persia.
1804- Persia at war with Russia.
1806- Napoleon sends a diplomatic mission to Iran, worrying the British. As a result, France sends a mission to train the Persian army.
1814- Formal Anglo-Persian treaty. Persia must cancel all treaties with European powers hostile to Britain.
-Herat is taken by the Afghans. After Persia tries to reclaim the city, the British intervene on behalf of Afghainistan.
1826-1828- Russo-Persian war. The Russian fleet wins control of the Caspian.
1856- Persians take Herat. Britain declares war on Persia.
1857- Persia is forced by the British to recognize Afghan independence.
-Britain and Russia start to compete over Persia; Britain is also concerned to protect its Indian possessions with Persia and Afghanistan as buffers against Russia.
-Russia takes Tiflis and Tashkent, west of Caspian.
-heavy borrowing from European powers by the Qajar Shahs leads to indebtedness and foreign intervention.
-Britain sees the opportunity of colonizing Persia from its southern coastline.
-1864- British complete the Persian section of the Britain-India telegraph line.
1864- Russia moves into Turkestan and takes Tashkent, east of Caspian..
1892- Britain gives Persia a loan, seizing its customs duties in the port cities as collateral.
1896- assassination of Nasiruddin Shah.
THE DISCOVERY OF OIL AND THE ARRIVAL OF EUROPE
1900-1910- the discovery of oil in Persia results in intense rivalry between Russia and Great Britain.
1901- New Zeander WK D’Arcy gets an oil concession in Iran.
1905- nationalist revolution begins in Persia.
1906- Mozaffar al-Din Shah concedes a constitution under pressure from constitutionalists and with the encouragement of the British ambassador. This limits concessions to foreign companies.
1907- the Anglo-Russian agreement divides Persia into northern Russian, neutral center and British southern spheres of influence. Islamic traditionalists launch violent protests.
1907- Constitutional revolution under Shah Muzzafar al Din Qajar provides an elected assembly (Majlis)
1909- the Russians crush Persia’s constitutionalist movement.
-Anglo-Persian Oil Company founded.
1911- The constitution fails along with the assembly.
1914- World War I- Turkish, Russian and British troops operate in Persia against German influence- despite Persian neutrality.
-Winston Churchill, Lord of the Admiralty, buys 55 per cent of the Anglo Persian oil company.
1917- Russian influence in Persia lapses with the Russian Revolution. Britain withdraws her troops but struggles to maintain a presence.
THE BRITISH PROTECTORATE
-collapse of the Ottoman Empire leaves Britain the dominant power in the region.
-Persians angry that Persia is not given room to state its case in peace negotiations at the end of the WW I.
-Persia is threatened when Iraq becomes a British League of Nations mandate.
-Lord Curzon sees in Persia an opportunity to link British influence from India to Iraq.
1919- British subsidies support the collapsed Iranian economy. In that year Iran becomes a British protectorate under the Anglo-Persian agreement which the majlis refuses to ratify. The agreement includes British officers and advisers for the Persian army and government, a large loan to pay for them, and British development of transport and communications.
-the U.S. and France fear that the Anglo-Persian Agreement will curtail opportunities for those countries inside Persia, giving the British a monopoly. Lord Curzon says the presence of American advisers would have to be approved by Britain. Hence, US advisers in the region supported the aims of Persian nationalism.
-1920- internal opposition to the Anglo-Persian agreement results in Persia turning toward the the U.S. (which was increasingly interested in Persian oil). The U.S. responds by objecting to the unfairness of the British monopoly on Persian oil and negotiations are commenced for for Amercan insyead of British aid, development and advisers.
-however, the US does not favour displacing Britain outright, since it sees the British as a bulwark against Russia and Communism.
1921- a British-backed coup by an officer, Reza Pahlavi overthrows the government of Fathullah Gillani. . Pahlavi gets the Majlis to depose the Qajar dynasty and make him Shah.
-Pahlavi exploits Bolshevik fear of the British to get Russia to withdraw completely. He then drives out British and Russian-supported separatist movements.
-Reza Shah Pahlavi creates a strong, centralized government, renegotiates oil concessions given to the Anglo-Persian Oil Company and reforms the economy, getting more control over foreign companies and making them pay more in taxes and royalties. He plays Germany off against Britian and Russia.
-the Shah also makes a public cult of Iran’s ancient Achaemenid, Sassinid and Parthian history.
PAHLAVI, INDEPENDENCE, REVIVIAL
1925- Iran becomes independent from Britain and Russia.
1928- Reza Shah sets up the Bank of Iran to oppose the British Imperial Bank.
1933- Shah Pahlavi changes the name of Perisa to Iran, derived from “Aryan”.
-Pahlavi cancels the concession of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
-Pahliavi’s independence policy is ratified by the League of Nations.
-Iran’s gradual modenization begins to be decried by the Shia clergy.
1941- Opposed to Iran’s neutrality in the war with Germany, Britain and Russia occupy Iran and depose Pahlavi in favour of his son, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. US, Russian and British advisers all try to influence Iranian policy toward respective national ends.
-US military advisers arrive and US army units help transport military equipment on the Trans-Iranian railroad.
-US advisers are accepted in all key financial departments of government. US adviser Millspaugh was made director general of finances, for November 1942 and May, 1943. The Full Powers law gave him financial control that was almost absolute. He favoured private enterprise over government corporations.
1942-43- US advisers more or less run the Iranian army. Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf reorganizes internal security along American lines.
1944- US Adviser Millspaugh excites popular protest by attempting to fire the head of the Iranian National Bank. Millspaugh resigns, most of his attempts at reform having failed.
-popular sentiment rises against the British interests and presence in Iran.
THE U.S. AND POST-WAR DEVELOPMENT.
-theUS takes the lead in stabilizing Iran.
1948- Iran puts forward a 7-year economic plan heavily influenced by Max W. Thornburg, a US oil executive and adviser, whose Overseas Consultants Inc. is instrumental in drafting it. There are no recommendations for land reform or political or social reform, only technological advance. State ownership is blamed for all social and economic ills.
-the 7-year economic plan is passed by the majlis.
-1951- the 7-Year Economic Plan fails; its government administrators are universally blamed for failures of implementation. Overseas Consultants' contract is terminated. The existing social status quo will remain the basis for all Washington's future US planning for Iran's economy.
PRIME MINISTER MUSSADIQ
-1951- March- Britain negotiates for a high share of oil royalties, US ambassador Henry Grady backs Iranian nationalists, since the US doesn't want to see Britain getting a competitive deal on Iranian oil. However, the US will come to side with Britain in seeing nationalist Prime Minister Mussadiq as a fanatic.
1951- Mossadiq travels to the US to ask the Truman administration for a loan. Washington refuses his request, having now swung round to join the British in opposing nationalization of Iranian oil.
- Prime Minister Mohammed Mussadiq, a nationalist, nationalizes the Anglo-Iranian oil company.
- Britain protests, stopping oil exports. The Majlis votes Mussadiq emergency powers.
-the US supports British attempts to arrange a world-wide boycott of Iranian oil.
-the British and the Americans fear a non-Communist nationalist movement as an even greater danger than Iranian Communism.
-rumours are rife of a British invasion.
-at the UN, Mossadiq insists on Iran’s right to ownership of its oil
-US President Truman sends an envoy to Mossadiq but doesn't get any compromise on the nationalization of Iranian oil.
-US, Great Britain and other western nations begin to boycott Iran.
1953- after a struggle with Mossadiq over control of the Defense Ministry, an attempt by the Shah to dismiss Mossadiq is protested by nationalist riots, the Shah leaves Iran.
-however, the army remains in support of the Shah.
-June, 1953- under pressure of international isolation, Mossadiq's coalition crumbles.
PRO-WESTERN CIA COUP: AN END TO MOSSADIQ
-the British engineer a plan for Mossadiq's removal. It is simplified in the US by Kermit Roosevelt who then passes it on to Allen Dulles of the CIA. When it is approved by Eisenhower, Roosevelt goes to Iran to put the plan into operation through local contacts.
-the CIA, especially aware of the Shah as an asset against Communism, works with Monarchist officers bringing about the overthrows and arrest of Mossadiq and the return of the Shah. Mossadiq is sentenced to two years in prison.
-the CIA helps to organize mass, paid demonstrations to welcome back the Shah.
-the United States immediately supplies a$45 million emergency loan.
-with the deterioration of relations with Britain, Iran becomes more and more of a US client state. Traditionalist clergy and the poor are increasingly wary of modernization and US influence.
-the US has replaced Britain as the main foreign power in Iran.
1954- the Shah offers oil concessions to an international consortium which includes the US and Britain. Of the American members, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Standard Oil of California, the Gulf Oil Coroporation, the Texas Oil Company and Socony-Mobil each get 8 per cent. These five, later gave up 1 per cent each to US 'independents'. The total is a US investment of 40%.
-Iran joins the Baghdad Pact which links Iran, Pakistan, Turkey and Britain.
1950s- Iran, with US help launches its own nuclear program.
1960- the U.S. has become a net importer of oil.
1963- land reform reduces the power of the landlords.
PAHLAVI’S TYRANNY
-repressing the secular and clerical opposition and the landed aristocracy, the Shah sets up a police state to pave the way for capitalism. The oil cartel of the 1970s makes Iran wealthy.
-with police repression, only clerical networks remain active. Meanwhile mass urban migration creates a stratun of urban power.
THE REGIME CRUMBLES
1970- protests build against the Shah’s regime.
-U.S. oil production peaks and begins to decline.
-1972- the US accepts Shah Reza Phalavi as the main local power protecting the Persian gulf and agrees to sell Iran any non-nuclear weapons. The US already has colonies of technical advisers in Iran.
1972-73- the Shah is alert to arguments of ecologists that the US was using up the world's oil reserves oil too fast because oil is under priced. He is also aware that raw materials and commodities such as farm products are rising in price. The Shah therefore works on leaders of other oil-exporting Middle-Eastern countries to slow the production of oil thus rising the price. Opposition to the state of Israel provides additional incentive.
1975- Iran is the single largest purchaser of military equipment from the US.
-although Iraq appears to be moving toward becoming a regional, if not a world power, it is in fact heavily dependent on the US.
-the Carter administration, although critical of Iran on human rights still prefers the Shah to any truly popular government as a bulwark against the Soviet Union
1977- a protest movement begins under the guidance of Ruholla Khomeini from exile in Najaf.
1978- The US State Department of Human Rights, with its aggressive critique of Iran, undermines the Shah's authority.
-the heavy presence of foreign advisors and technicians and Iran's own technological backwardness lead many to feel that it is becoming an instrument of the United States. Many workers and merchants forced out by competition of technologically sophisticated state industries.
1978- an alliance of Marxists and radical Shia clerics overthrows the Pahlavi regime.
-anti-monarchist Shapur Bakhtiar becomes Prime Minister but the clergy mistrust him.
1979- January- the Shah goes into exile.
-attempts to set up a constitutional government fail.
-Prime Minister Bakhtiar is replaced by Mehdi Bazargan.
1979- April- after several attempts at a Monarchist coup are made, Iran is proclaimed an Islamic republic under the Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini.
-the US recognizes the Khomeini regime- but is blamed for supporting the Shah. Mass denunciations of the US follow. But the regime simultaneously denounces the Soviet Union.
-US diplomats in Tehran try to form links with the new regime but are rebuffed.
-Iran suspends its nuclear energy program.
-the Khomeini regime begins to give support to the Afghan Mujehadeen.
KHOMEINI
1979-81- after the Shah is given asylum and medical treatment in the United States, US embassy personnel are held hostage by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards for over a year. The government fully endorses the hostage-taking.
-as the hostage-taking is universally condemned in a vote at the UN, it becomes clear that Iran is standing in complete defiance of a three-century tradition in international relations of the immunity of diplomats. Iran is no longer playing by rules and agreements taken for granted in the West.
-the US retaliates with sanctions against Iran and the freezing of Iranian assets in the US.
-Iran resumes its nuclear energy program with less help from the US and more from other countries.
-November- the Revolutionary Council of clerics forces out Bazargan and ousts most of the Revolutionary coalition.
1980- US President Carter declares the Persian Gulf region to be an area vital to US interests.
1981- On the day Ronald Reagan is elected president, the Iranians release the US embassy hostages.
THE IRAN-IRAQ WAR
1980- Saddam Hussein of Iraq tries to seize the Shatt al Arab waterway from Tehran, setting off the Iran-Iraq war.
-under US President Reagan, Washington supports Iraq against Iran with massive weapons shipments.
-the war only strengthens the hold of Khomeini and his government over the country.
-1982- repudiating dependence on western commercial goods, Iran reduces imports and embarks on a program of self-sufficiency.
1986- the US sells weapons to Iran and funnels the proceeds to the Contras in Nicaragua, setting off the Iran-Contra scandal.
1987-88- then US retaliates against Iranian attacks on US shipping in the Persian gulf, sinking several Iranian ships.
1988 -realizing that Iran cannot fight Iraq much longer, Khomeini agrees to a ceasefire.
1988- the Iran-Iraq war ends with the loss of one million Iranian lives.
TENTATIVE REFORM
1989- Khomeini dies. After a power struggle, another cleric, Hashemi Rafsanjani becomes speaker of the Majlis and Ayatollah Khamenei replaces Khomeini.
1991- During the US invasion of Iraq in the First Gulf War, Iran gives refugee to 1.5 million Iraqi Kurds and Shia.
1992-97- Clinton critical of Iran's hostility to the peace process with Israel and the Palestinians; Iranian support of organizations deemed terrorist in the Middle East, and the Iranian nuclear weapons program.
1993- Rafsanjani’s attempt at the creation of a mixed economy and low oil prices weaken the country’s economy.
May-US President Clinton announces policy of 'dual containment' which includes partial economic sanctions on Iraq and Iran.
1995- April- US president Clinton imposes a total embargo of US business dealings with Iran.
1997- Rafsanjani is defeated in elections by Muhammed Khatemi, a relative liberal. He brings liberal reforms to the political system.
1998- January- President Khatami, in an interview on CNN calls for a "a dialogue of civilizations" and expresses admiration for US political traditions. But findamental differences of policy remain unchanged.
1999- Under Khatemi, Iran holds its first elections.
2000- reformers win a majority in the Majlis.
IRAN AND 9/11
2001- Khatami and Khamenei condemn the 9/11 on the US attacks for killing innocent civilians.
-November 2001- Iran stays officially neutral in the US invasion of Afghanistan but provides
covert assistance in expelling the Taliban from Kabul and in instating Hamid Karzai as president.
-December- Bonn Conference on the reconstruction of Afghanistan- Tehran supports alll US initiatives in Afghanistan.
2002- January- -US President George Bush lists Iran with North Korea and Iraq in the “Axis of Evil.”
Sept- Russia starts building a nuclear reactor at Bushehr despite US protests.
2003- March- the US invades Iraq. Though mistrustful of the US at first, Iraq’s two largest Shia parties, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq and Al Dawa, both backed by Iran, come to represent the Shia of Iraq.
Sept- the IAEA asks that Iran prove it’s not developing a nuclear weapons program.
2004- April-September- radical, nationalist Shia militia leader, Moqtada al Sadr launches two rebellions, with Iranian support, against the US occupation.
2004- June- the IAEA criticizes Iran for its failure to cooperate with inspections.
November- the European Union gets Iran to agree to a deal to suspend its nuclear enrichment program.
-2004-2006- through charities and Revolutionary Guard Units, allowed to act semi-independently, Iran spreads influence among Iraq’s Shia majority.
2005- Mahmoud Ahmedinejad wins the presidency, defeating Hashemi Rafsanjani.
August- Iran resumes converting uranium at Isfahan, insisting it’s for peaceful purposes. But the IAEA syas that Iran is violating the Non-proliferation treaty.
2006- January- at its Natanz nuclear plant, Iran breaks seals placed on equipment by the IAEA.
February- As Iran resumes nuclear enrichment at Natanz, the IAEA votes to report the violations to the UN Security Council.
April- Iran claims to be enriching Uranium at natanz.
July 31- the UN Scurity Council demands that Iran suspend its nuclear activities.
Aug. 31- the deadline set by the Security Council for Iran to stop its uranium enrichment activities.
Dec 23- the UN security council approves the impostion of sanctions on Iran in nuclear.
Technology and trade. Iran continues enriching uranium.
Iranian Seizure of British Seamen.
2007- March 23- 15 British sailors are seized by the Iranian coastguard on grounds that they had crossed into Iranian waters. Britain claims evidence to the contrary, that they were seized from Iraqi waters. A diplomatic row erupts with the Iran suspected of retaliating against a new round of UN sanctions for its nuclear program and against the American detension of 5 Iranian Guard operatives in northern Iraq.

Iran Continues Uranian Enrichment.
April- Ahmedinejad announces increased, industrial scale of uranium production. IAEA says that Iran has 1,300 centrifuges.
May- IAEA declares that Iran woould need only 3-8 years to produce a nuclear weapon.
June- amid fears of UN sanctions Iran rations gasoline, sparking protests.
July- Iran agrees to allow IAEA inspectors to visit its Arak nuclear plant.
October- US announces its toughest snactions on Iran in 30 years.
December- A US intelligence report produces a reduced evaluation of the nuclear threat posed by Iran.
2008- February- Iran launches a rocket, announcing its own space program.
March- Agemdinejad visits Iraq, demand the withdrawal of foreign troops and signs some copperation agreements with Baghdad, vowing to help reuild the country.
Many Opposition Candidates Barred from Parliamentary Elections.
-parliamentary elections return a 2/3 majority of conservatives, with many reform candidates barred from running. Moderate conservatives embarrassed by Ahmedinejad also win seats.
-UN Security Council tightens sanctions on Iran.
May- IAEA says Iran is witholding information on its nuclear program. Former nuclear negotiator Ali Larigani is elected speaker of the parliament.
Iran Presses Ahead with Uranium Enrichment and Space Technology
June- Javier Solana, EU foreign minister offers Iran trade benefits, which Tehran warns it will refuse if they involve restrictions on the refinement of uranium.
July- Iran tests a long-range missile than can hit targets as far as Irael.
August- Iran lets pass and informal deadline to halt its nuclear program or forego incentives offered by western nations,
Iran tests a rocket which it says can launch a satellite.
November- Minister Ali Kordan is dismissed by parliament after admitting a degree received from Oxford was fake, embarrassing Ahmadinejad.
Iran Extends Guarded Congratulations upon Obama's Election as US President.
Ahmadinejad surprises everyone by congratulating Barak Obama on his election as US president. Obama offers unconditional discussions of Iran's nuclear program.
December- Iran closes a human rights office headed by nobel peace prize winner Shirin Abadi, saying it is an illegal political organization.
2009- February- On the 30th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, Ahmadinejad claims he would welcome open and respectful talks with the US.

Khamenei Contradicts Ahmadinejad's Welcome to Obama
March- Ayatollah Khameini tells anti-US rally that Obama is merely prolonging the old Bush policy.
April- Roxana Sabiri, an Iranian-American journalist is sentenced by and Iranian court to 8 years for spying.
May- a US State Department report states that Iran is the world's foremost exporter of terrorism. Iran dismisses the finding.
-after international pressure, Roxana Sabiri is freed by Iran.
Protestors Shot Demonstrating against massive fraud in Ahmadinejad's Election Victory.
2009- after the June 12 presidential election, opposition candidates Ali Hosseini and others lead mass protests againsts Ahmadinejad's claim of victory in a mssively rigged election. Security forces kill 3o and arrest 1,000. Iran blames the west, particularly Britain, for provoking the arrest.
July- under pressure from Supreme Leader Khamenei, Ahmadinejad fires his first vice president, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie.
August- Ahmadinejad is sworn in as president and forms his cabinet which includes a number of women- the first since 1979.
Opposition Members put on Public Trial for Abetting Election Fraud Protests.
Senior opposition figures are put on trial, allleged to have fomented unrest during the election protests. But Khamenei declares there is no proof they were motivated by foreign powers.
September- Iran concedes it is building a plant for enriching uranium near Qom but claims it is for peaceful purposes.
Iran tests long and medium ranges that could hit Israel or US bases in the Persian Gulf.
October 2009- Five UN Security Council members plus Germany offer to help Iran enrich its uranium abroad.
November- IAEA head Mohammed El Baredei recommends that Iran accept the five-nation offer on uranium.

Further occasions provide pretext for mass demonstations.
-with protestors increasingly breaking protest bans, opposition demonstrations are held on the 30th anniversary of the mass hostage-taking at the US Embassy.

2009 December - Death of influential dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hoseyn Ali Montazeri triggers further clashes between opposition supporters and security forces. At least 8 people die in what is the worst violence since the contested presidential election.

2010 January - Iran executes two men arrested during the period of unrest that followed the disputed presidential election of June 2009. It also puts 16 people on trial over the Ashura Day opposition protests in December, when eight people were killed.
 Iranian physics professor Masoud Ali-Mohammadi is killed in a bomb attack in Tehran. No group claims responsibility. The government accuses the US and Israel of his death, while Iranian opposition groups say Mr Mohammadi supported one of their candidates in last year's presidential election.

Iran finally agrees to ship uraniumfor enrichment abroad.
2010 February - Iran says it is ready to send enriched uranium abroad for further enrichment under a deal agreed with the West. The US calls on Tehran to match its words with actions.
Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi says the opposition will continue its peaceful struggle against the government.
-the government warns against further protests.
April 2- A US official says that Iran is shipping arms to the Taliban.
April 25- Iran announces that it has tested five new missoiles.

Iran arranges to ship Uranium to Turkey. Deal Sparks new Sanctions.
2010 May - Iran reaches a deal to send uranium abroad for enrichment after mediation talks with Turkey and Brazil; Western states respond with scepticism, saying the agreement will not stop Iran from continuing to enrich uranium.
2010 June - UN Security Council votes in favour of a fourth round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme, including tighter financial curbs and an expanded arms embargo.

Woman sentenced to death by Stoning.
July 5- international outcry as a woman convicted of adultery and murder is sentenced to be stoned to death. On July 8, the government upholds the death sentence by denies she will die by stoning.
July 15- two suicide bombrings reported in southeastern Iran in front of the city's main mosque.
July 23-31- amid rallies for the woman under sentence of death by stoning, Brazil offers her asylum.
2010 August - In what Tehran describes as a milestone in its drive to produce nuclear energy, engineers begin loading fuel into the Bushehr nuclear power plant.
-Russia agrees to fuel the Iranian nuclear reactor, bringing it closer to weapons capability.

US warns Turkey Against Nuclear fuel swap with Iran
2010- September 6- the US warns Turkey that it must cancel a controversial nuclear fuel swap along with financial assistance to Iran, both intended to help Iran evade international sanctions- otherwise Turkey will lose a valuable arms deal with the US.
-8 senior Iranian officials receive tough sanctions from the US for human rights abuses.
October- sentence commuted for former British embassy employee jailed in 2000.
December- Geneva nuclear talks between Iran and leadign nations end in agreement to hold another round in Istanbul in january.
-Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki fired by President Ahmedinejad. The minister seems to have been an opponent within the leadership.
2011-  January - Iran now possesses technology needed to make fuel plates and rods for nuclear reactors according to nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi.
-January -Iran's IAEA envoy, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, reports that his country supports a nuclear deal agreed with Brazil and Turkey-after Iran and six main powers meet in Istanbul, the talks having ended without progress.
2011 February - First mass opposition demonstrations in a year amid a wave of unrest rippling across the Middle East and North Africa.
Iran sends two warships through Suez Canal for first time since the Islamic Revolution, in what Israel describes as an act of provocation.
Leadership rift 2011 April - Rare public row between Supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei and President Ahmadinejad over the resignation of Intelligence Minister Heidar Moslehi.
2011 May - Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation says the generating unit at the Bushehr nuclear power plant has begun operating at a low level.
2011 August - Two US citizens arrested on the Iran-Iraq border in 2009 are found guilty of spying and sentenced to eight years in prison.
2011 September - Iran announces that the Bushehr nuclear power station has been connected to the national grid.
2011 October - The US accuses Iran of being behind an alleged plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to Washington. Tehran rejects the charges as part of an American propaganda campaign.
2011 November - A report by the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA says Iran is carrying out research that can only be used to develop a nuclear bomb trigger. Iran rejects the findings as politically motivated.
2011 November/December - Protesters attack the British embassy in Tehran after London imposes tighter economic sanctions. Britain evacuates its diplomatic staff and expels all Iranian diplomats, but ties are not severed.
Oil sanctions and Straits stand-off
2012 January - US imposes sanctions on Iran's central bank, the main clearing-house for its oil export profits. Iranian threatens to block the transport of oil through the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran begins enriching uranium at its undergound Fordo plant, in what the US terms a "further escalation" in the nuclear row. The European Union imposes an oil embargo on Iran over its nuclear programme.
2012 February - International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors leave Iran after being denied access to the Parchin site, south of Tehran.
US, British and French warships pass unhindered through the Strait of Hormuz.
2012 March-May - Supporters of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei beat those of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in parliamentary polls boycotted by pro-reform groups.
2012 May - UN nuclear inspectors find traces of uranium enriched at 27% at Iran's Fordo nuclear site, a day after Iran and world powers hold inconclusive talks on Iran's nuclear programme in Baghdad.
2012 June - US exempts seven major customers - India, South Korea, Malaysia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Taiwan and Turkey - from economic sanctions in return for their cutting imports of Iranian oil.
2012 July - European Union boycott of Iranian oil exports comes into effect.
2012 September - International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) quarterly report says Iran doubles production capacity at Fordo nuclear site and "significantly hampered" IAEA ability to inspect Parchin military site.
Canada breaks off diplomatic relations over Iran's nuclear programme and support for the Assad government in Syria.
2012 October - Iran's rial currency falls to a new record low against the US dollar, having lost about losing 80% of its value since 2011 because of international sanctions. Riot police attack about 100 currency traders outside the Central Bank.
EU countries announce further sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme, focusing on banks, trade and crucial gas imports.
2012 November - Leaked IAEA report says Iran is ready to double output at the Fordo underground uranium enrichment facility. Iran has 2,784 centrifuges there, and numbers operating could soon be increased from 700 to 1,400, the UN watchdog says.
2013 January - Iran tells IAEA it plans to upgrade uranium enrichment centrifuges at its Natanz plant, allowing it to refine uranium at a faster rate.
Iran arrests 11 journalists accused of co-operating with foreign Persian-language media organisations as part of a clampdown against the BBC and Voice of America in particular.
2013 February - Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismisses US offer of one-to-one talks on Tehran's nuclear programme.
2013 April - Iran says it has begun operations at two uranium mines and a uranium ore-processing plant, furthering its capacity to produce nuclear material. This comes a few days after talks with the West in Kazakhstan fail to make progress.