Parviz Sabeti
{{BLP sources|date=December 2023|reason=Biography section heavily relies on a single source 'Ahmad Farasati' without context or providing additional links}}
{{Short description|Iranian lawyer, SAVAK deputy (born 1936)}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| name = Parviz Sabeti
| image = Parviz_Sabeti.jpg
| order = SAVAK Director, Third General Directorate
| monarch = Mohammad-Reza Shah
| predecessor = Lieutenant General Nasser Moghaddam
| successor = Brigadier General Ali Tabatabai
| order2 = Civilian Adjutant to the Royal Court
| order3 = National Security Advisor to Prime Minister
| primeminister3 = Amir-Abbas Hoveyda
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=y|1936|3|25}}
| birth_place = Sang-e Sar, Semnan province, Imperial State of Iran
| children = Pardis Sabeti
| termstart = 1973
| termend = October 31, 1978
| termstart2 = 1969
| termend2 = October 31, 1978
| termstart3 = November 1964
| termend3 = August 1978
}}
Parviz Sabeti ({{langx|fa|پرویز ثابتی}}; born March 25, 1936, in Sang-e Sar) is an Iranian lawyer, former SAVAK top deputy under the regime of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Born in Sang-e Sar, Semnan Province. Sabeti received a law degree from the University of Tehran and joined the SAVAK, Iran's intelligence agency in Shah's regime, in 1957, and quickly rose to become the acting director of the SAVAK's so-called third division, the Division of Surveillance and Pursuit, and later became its director.
He has been called one of the most powerful men in the last two decades of the Pahlavi dynasty.Milani, Abbas. Eminent persians. [https://books.google.com/books?id=ixU33FaG_dgC&q=sabeti&pg=PA284 Parviz Sabeti.] Syracuse University Press, 2008. Historian Abbas Milani describes him as "like a character from a le Carré novel" and says that "As his fame and reputation grew, his name and face disappeared from the public domain."
Biography
Parviz Sabeti was born in 1936 into a Baháʼí Faith family.{{cite journal|author=Mina Yazdani|title=Towards a History of Iran's Baha'i Community During the Reign of Mohammad Reza Shah, 1941-1979|journal=Iran Namag|date=Spring 2017|volume=2|issue=1|page=86
|url=https://encompass.eku.edu/fs_research/75/}} However, his father lost his right to be part of the Baháʼí community, and Parviz Sabeti never became a practicing Baháʼí. He graduated from the Law School of the University of Tehran. He was initially hired as a judge in the Ministry of Justice. Having shown a keen interest in public policy and politics, he was recruited into the SAVAK, which was part of the Prime Minister's office, in 1959. This was a time when a new policy of introducing civilians into an organization staffed by primarily ex-military rank and file was introduced. Initially, he worked as a political analyst in the department of internal security and very soon became the head of political analysis where he was in charge of preparing and writing daily, periodical and special reports which went ultimately via the chain of command to the Shah of Iran.Ahmad Farasati {{Incomplete short citation|date=December 2023}}
Although Sabeti was philosophically against Marxism and radical Islam, he believed that arresting and prosecuting members of such groups should not be the only course of action. The cycle of actions and reactions of dissent, revolt, then crackdown would continue until the government, through substantial reforms, attempted to remove the roots of dissatisfactions and create more room for the participation of people in the political system.
At the height of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi’s power, the Shah threatened to court-martial Sabeti because he wrote a critical report of one of the Shah’s close friends, according to Sabeti in 2004 during a telephone call with historian Abbas Milani.{{Cite book |last=Milani |first=Abbas |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8V1UhqWhKRwC&pg=PA19-IA1 |title=The Shah |date=2011-01-04 |publisher=Macmillan + ORM |isbn=978-0-230-11562-0 |pages=4 |language=en}} Impressions by the Shah towards Parviz Sabeti had changed by the late 1970s when Sabeti, as the de facto security advisor to the Prime Minister and spokesman for the government, provided a long and impressive TV interview exposing the plots by the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein against Iran, with the collusion of internal enemies of the Shah. He continued to provide two more such interviews exposing the tactics of two major opposition groups, one Communist and one Islamic-Marxist.
None of this undid however the fact that he was the only civilian leader to have reached a leadership position at SAVAK, with the inevitable friction with the more hard-line, one dimensional attitude of those with a military background. One example being his differences with General Nassiri who was chief of SAVAK and deputy Prime Minister for 14 years. Nassiri who was a loyal soldier for the Shah, very often had clashes with Sabeti.
Sabeti and his family fled Iran after the Islamic Revolution in 1979 and settled in Florida where he become an real estate developer.{{Cite news |last=Farda |first=RFE/RL's Radio |title=Iranian Exiles Sue Ex-Shah's 'Chief Torturer' In U.S. Court |url=https://www.rferl.org/a/iran-lawsuit-savak-chief-torture-shah/33329325.html |access-date=2025-04-17 |work=RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty |language=en}} Pardis Sabeti, a Harvard biology professor, and Time Magazine's Persons of the Year in 2014, is his daughter.[http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Pardis-Sabeti-the-Rollerblading-Rock-Star-Scientist-of-Harvard-179988881.html Pardis Sabeti, the Rollerblading Rock Star Scientist of Harvard.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131014131120/http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Pardis-Sabeti-the-Rollerblading-Rock-Star-Scientist-of-Harvard-179988881.html |date=2013-10-14 }} The recipient of the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for natural sciences blazed a new view of how to treat infectious diseases via genetics. By Seth Mnookin. Smithsonian Magazine, December 2012
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Commons-inline}}
{{SAVAK}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sabeti, Parviz}}
Category:People from Semnan province
Category:University of Tehran alumni
Category:Iranian emigrants to the United States
Category:Exiles of the Iranian Revolution in the United States