Ghaffar Djalal Explained

Ghafar Jalal ol-Saltaneh
Office1:Iranian ambassador to Sweden
Term Start1:1921
Term End1:1922
Successor1:Hassan Arfa
Office2:Iranian ambassador to Egypt
Term Start2:1924 to
Term End2:1928
Successor2:Javad Sinki
Office3:Iranian ambassador to Italy
Term Start3:1928
Term End3:1930
Successor3:Abol Qasem Amid
Office4:Iranian ambassador to the United States
Term Start4:June 12, 1933
Term End4:November 27, 1935
Predecessor4:Yadollah Azodi
Successor4:Hossein Ghods-Nachai
Birth Date:1 January 1882
Nationality:Iranian

Ghaffar Jalal (Persian: غفار جلال علاء, was an Iranian diplomat.

Career

From 1907 to 1920 he was secretary in the Persian Legation in London while his uncle Mehdi Ala al-Saltaneh was Persian minister to the Court of St James's there.

From 1921 to 1922 he was minister in Stockholm.From 1924 to 1928 he was minister in Cairo.From 1928 to 1930 he was minister in Rome.From 1930 to June 12, 1933 he headed the English Section of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs.On June 12, 1933, he was accredited by Franklin D. Roosevelt.[1] On Nowruz 1935, the diplomatic corps in Tehran was informed that the official name of Persia from now on was Iran.

Arrest of the Iranian envoy

On November 27, 1935, after a dispute with the traffic police, he was handcuffed and detained in defiance of his diplomatic immunity.He was on his way back from New York City to Washington, D.C., when his chauffeur exceeded the speed limit within the City limits of Elkton, Maryland, the diplomat was arrested by American police authorities and the resulting arguments and recriminations were reported by the newspapers of both countries.[2] Iranian interests became care of the Turkish legation.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Chief of Protocol, Chronological Listing by Country, Formerly PERSIA;US Department of State 17 June 1933
  2. Book: DeNovo, John A. (John August), 1916-2000 . American interests and policies in the Middle East, 1900-1939 . University of Minnesota Press . 1963 . 9780816662111 . Minneapolis . 307–308 . 233034823.
  3. Robert Michael Burrell, Robert L. Jarman, Iran: 1935-1938, 1997 p. 102; Malcolm Yapp, Paul Preston, Michael Patridge, British documents on foreign affairs: reports and papers from the foreign office confidential print. From 1940 through 1945. Near and the Middle-East. Persia and Afghanistan, January 1940-December 1941, Great Britain. Foreign Office, University Publications of America, 1997 - 664 pp., p. 47https://books.google.com/books?id=YWMOAQAAMAAJ&q=%22newspapers+of+both+countries,+and+relations+between+the+two%22, Wallace Murray, https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1936v03/d426, Cordell Hull, https://www.nytimes.com/1935/12/07/archives/iranian-minister-gets-our-regrets-at-same-time-hull-mildly-warns.html