Home
Entertainment
Videos
Audios
Classic
Cinema
Watan Photos
Fun Stuff
E-cards
Talk & Chat
Games

|

MOHAMMAD
ZAHIR SHAH, 1933-73
Zahir Shah, Nadir Shan's son and successor, became
Afghanistan's final king. For his first thirty years on the throne, he
accepted the tutelage of powerful advisers in the royal family, first his
uncles, later his cousin, Mohammad Daoud Khan. And only in the last decade
of his sovereignty did Zahir Shah rule as well as reign unencumbered.
Zahir Shah and His Uncles, 1933-53
Three
of the four Musahiban brothers survived Nadir Shah's death, and went on to
exercise decisive influence over decision making during Zahir Shah's first
twenty years of reign. The eldest, Muhammad Hashim, who had been prime
minister under the previous king, retained that post until replaced by his
youngest brother, Shah Mahmud in 1946.
Hashim
put into effect the policies already orchestrated by his brothers. Internal
objectives of the new Afghan government focused on strengthening the army and
shoring up the economy, including transport and communications. Both goals
required foreign assistance. Preferring not to involve the Soviet Union or
Britain, Hashim turned to Germany. By 1935 German experts and businessmen had
set up factories and hydroelectric projects at the invitation of the Afghan
government. Smaller amounts of aid were also forthcoming from Japan and Italy.
Afghanistan
joined the League of Nations in 1934, the same year the United States
officially recognized Afghanistan. The conclusion of the Treaty of Saadabad
with Iran, Iraq, and Turkey in 1937 reinforced Afghanistan's regional ties to
neighboring Islamic States.
After
the outbreak of World War II, the king proclaimed Afghan neutrality on August
17, 1940, but the Allies were unhappy with the presence of a large group of
German nondiplomatic personnel. In October British and Soviet governments
demanded that Afghanistan expel all nondiplomatic personnel from the Axis
nations. Although the Afghan government considered this demand insulting and
illegitimate, it appeared to heed the example of Iran; Britain and the Soviet
Union occupied Iran in August 1941 after the government ignored a similar
demand. Afghanistan ordered nondiplomatic personnel from all belligerents to
leave, and a loya jirgah called by the king supported his policy of absolute
neutrality. As the war progressed, it provided larger markets for Afghan
agricultural produce (especially in India).
Shortly
before the end of the war, Shah Mahmud replaced his older brother as prime
minister, ushering in a period of great change in both internal and external
policies. Among other things, he presided over the inauguration of the Helmand
Valley Project, a cooperative irrigation venture drawing Afghanistan into a
closer relationship with the United States, which financed much of the work,
He also oversaw the opening of relations with the newly created state of
Pakistan, which inherited the Pashtuns from the formerly British-ruled side of
the Durand Line. The Pashtuns (or Pakhtuns) sought an independent or
semi-independent statehood, that would include the Pashto (or Pakhtu) speakers
within Pakistan. This issue would have a resounding impact on Afghan politics,
as would Shah Mahmud's political liberalization of the country.
See Also:
Ghaznavi |
Ahmad Shah
and the Durrani Empire | Amanullah Khan |
Hamid Karzai
|