Iranian Revolution Analysis

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“The Iranian Revolution” by Veronica Majerol is about the relationship between the U.S and Iran. Although Iran and America were strong allies, they still went into a battle, which began with an Iran revolution and 66 Americans being taken hostage. The king of Iran in 1941 made a lot of changes to Iran’s economics, and gave peasants land and gave some rights to women which in America’s eyes took a good toll on Iran. However to the Middle-class in Iran didn’t think the same, they were getting tired of “regime’s repressiveness” and wanted more freedom in politics. To top the middle class anger, the role America played in the westernization created even more frustration. Some Iranians thought that America was being a threat to their culture.A group of Iranian students protested on the streets about the …show more content…

the protest was led by Khomeini. These once so peaceful protest turned into violence when police shot 20 protestors. When the king and his wife fled Iran in 1979 Khomeini became the “supreme leader”. He made a new constitution and laid power on small secret group called Mullahs. Mullahs and Khomeini took away some rights for women and made them wear head coverings. Whoever didn’t like the new constitution was tortured. President Carter in 1979 let the king of Iran into the U.S for a cancer treatment, a month after the king was let into the country, thousands of Iranian students stored the embassy in US and took and held 66 Americans hostage. Iranians ran through streets screaming and burning American flags. A standoff lasted 14 months and killed eight servicemen from America. Soon President Ronald Reagan came into control, the hostages were held for 444 days, and however they weren’t released until Reagan took an oath in 1981. Shortly after the hostages were released Khomeini died in 1989. Today America and Iran are on the same side about

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