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Ardeshir Zahedi

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Monarch
  
Mohammad-Reza Pahlavi

Preceded by
  
Amir-Aslan Afshar

Parents
  
Fazlollah Zahedi


Preceded by
  
Name
  
Ardeshir Zahedi

Succeeded by
  
Children
  
Princess Zahra Mahnaz

Ardeshir Zahedi Ardeshir Zahedi Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Spouse
  
Shahnaz Pahlavi (m. 1957–1964)

Books
  
The Memoirs of Ardeshir Zahedi: Love, Marriage, Ambassadorship in the United Sates and the United Kingdom (1955-1966)

Similar People
  
Shahnaz Pahlavi, Fazlollah Zahedi, Fawzia Fuad of Egypt, Ashraf Pahlavi, Khosrow Jahanbani

Prime Minister
  
Amir-Abbas Hoveida

Succeeded by
  

Ardeshir zahedi talk with bbc persian tv part 1


Ardeshir Zahedi (Persian: اردشیر زاهدی‎‎), GCVO, (born 16 October 1928) is a former Iranian diplomat who served as the country's foreign minister and its ambassador to the United States and the United Kingdom during the 1960s and 1970s.

Contents

Ardeshir Zahedi ibexpubcomauthorsArdeshirZahedijpg

Secrets of the iranian revolution interview with ardeshir zahedi switzerland july 2004


Early life

Ardeshir Zahedi 1400 Years Iran Law of Land Iran

Born in Tehran on 16 October 1928, he is the son of General Fazlollah Zahedi, who served as prime minister after the fall of Mohammed Mossadegh. Zahedi received a degree in agriculture from Utah State University in 1950, where he was a member of Kappa Sigma. Seven years later, he married the daughter of the Shah of Iran, Princess Shahnaz Pahlavi; the marriage ended in divorce in 1964.

Political life

Ardeshir Zahedi US tabloid titles Liz Taylor and Ardeshir Zahedi Very Much in Love

Zahedi served as ambassador to the United States from 1960 to 1962 and to the United Kingdom from 1962 to 1966. Under Prime Minister Amir Abbas Hoveida, he served as minister of foreign affairs from 1966 to 1971.

Ardeshir Zahedi pictoryHollywood Star Gregory Peck Greeted by Irans Ambassador

Zahedi again became ambassador to the United States from 1973 until the Iranian Revolution climaxed in January 1979. During his second stint in Washington, he won a reputation for extravagance. In the mid-1970s, Zahedi became known as a companion of the American movie star Elizabeth Taylor, with the two being dubbed "the hottest couple" in Washington D.C., according to the writer Barbara Howar. During the 1977 Hanafi Siege of a federal building in Washington, Zahedi and two other ambassadors from Muslim nations were able to talk the hostage takers into surrendering and releasing 149 hostages.

Over the course of 1978, it was reported in some circles that Zahedi urged the Shah to appease the rioters by making scapegoats of several high-ranking officials, including Amir Abbas Hoveida (then Prime Minister) and SAVAK director Nematollah Nassiri. When the Shah fled Iran in 1979, Zahedi was still serving as ambassador in Washington, but resigned as soon as Khomeini came to power. He started fervent attempts at securing political asylum for the ailing Shah and the Imperial family in Panama, Mexico, Morocco and finally Egypt. He was present at the Shah's death bed and funeral in Cairo in 1980.

Later years

Zahedi is now retired and living in Montreux, Switzerland. He received honorary doctoral degrees of law and humanities from Utah State University, East Texas State University, Kent State University, St. Louis University, University of Texas, Montana State University, Washington College, Westminster College, Harvard University, Chung-Ang University of Seoul, and the College of Political and Social Science of Lima in Peru. In December 1976, in a ceremony held in Washington D.C., Zahedi was awarded the Kappa Sigma Fraternity ‘Man of the Year’ Award. In 2002, he was inducted into to Alumni Hall of Honor of the Utah State University College of Agriculture. He received many awards and honors from nations around the globe for his humanitarian service and record in international affairs.

Views

In an interview in May 2006, Zahedi voiced his support for Iran's Nuclear Program stating it as an "inalienable right of Iran", under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). He told Voice of America that the U.S. approved the start of Iran's $50 billion nuclear program in the 1970s. Two documents in particular, dated 22 April 1975 and 20 April 1976, show that the United States and Iran held negotiations on a nuclear program and the U.S. was willing to help Iran by setting up uranium enrichment and fuel reprocessing facilities.

National honours

  • Order of Humayoun, 1st class (Imperial State of Iran).
  • Foreign honours

  • Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order [GCVO] (United Kingdom).
  • References

    Ardeshir Zahedi Wikipedia