Mahmoud Baharmast

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Nativename
محمود بهارمست
Died1977 (aged 7778)
Tehran, Pahlavi Iran
AllegianceQajar Iran Qajar Iran (1923–1925)
Pahlavi Iran Pahlavi Iran (1925–1953)
Mahmoud Baharmast
Native name
محمود بهارمست
Born1899
Died1977 (aged 7778)
Tehran, Pahlavi Iran
AllegianceQajar Iran Qajar Iran (1923–1925)
Pahlavi Iran Pahlavi Iran (1925–1953)
Service years1923–1953
Rank Major general
CommandsChief of the Joint Staff
Commander of the War University
Commander of the Officers' Academy
Head of the Army's Seniority Department
Head of the Artillery Department
Chief of Staff of the First Division
Alma materFontainebleau Military Academy

Mahmoud Baharmast (1899–1977) was an Iranian major general who served as the Chief of the Joint Staff of the Imperial Army in Iran in the period 1952–1953.

Baharmast was born in 1899 in Tehran.[1] He graduated from Dar al-Fonun, St. Louis School, Tehran, and Mushir al-Dawla School.[1] He joined the Iranian army.[1] In 1923 he was sent to Europe by the Ministry of War to continue his studies and graduated from the Fontainebleau Military Academy, France, specializing in artillery.[1]

Career and activities

Following his return to Iran Baharmast worked at different units of the army and in 1942 he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general.[1] Then he was first appointed head of the artillery unit of the army and then head of the general administration.[1] His next post was the commander of the military academy and of the war academy.[1] Then he was promoted to the rank of major general.[1]

Baharmast was appointed Chief of the Joint Staff of the Iranian Army in October 1952 and succeeded Morteza Yazdanpanah in the post.[2] Baharmast's term ended in March 1953,[3] and he was replaced by Taghi Riahi in the post.[4][5]

While in office Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh accused military officers, including Baharmast, of not listening to his orders but to the orders of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.[5] Before the coup d'état in 1953 US officials approached Baharmast and other military officers who had pro-American and anti-Communist stance to eliminate the pro-Soviet and pro-Mosaddegh tendencies in the Iranian army.[6]

Later years and death

References

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