Black Hand (Zorasan)

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Black Hand
اليد السوداء
al-Yad as-Sawdāʾ
FoundersUnknown
Mustafa al-Kharadji (suspected)
Leaders1953-1969 (unknown)
Ezatollah Ashtari (1969-1977)
Abdul-Nazir Jadid (1977-1979)
Dates of operation11 April 1953 - 30 October 1979
MotivesUnification of Zorasan
Overthrow of pro-Euclean Badawiyan governments
HeadquartersUnknown
Active regionsZorasan, Tsabara
IdeologySattarism
Pan-Zorasanism
Anti-colonialism
Allies Union of Khazestan and Pardaran
OpponentsKexri Republic (1953-1964)
North Khazestan (1953-1968)
Emirate of Irvadistan (1953-1968)
Confederation of Riyadha (1953-1973)
Irvadi People's Republic (1968-1979)

The Black Hand (Badawiyan: اليد السوداء; al-Yad as-Sawdāʾ), officially known as the Black Hand of National Redemption (اليد السوداء للخلاص الوطني; al-Yad as-Sawdāʾ lil-Khalās al-Wataniyy) was a militant Sattarist and Pan-Zorasanist group established in 1953, until its dissolution in 1979. The Black Hand played a prominent role during Zorasani unification, being responsible for numerous major terror attacks, assassinations and other operations against the Badawiyan governments opposing the unification of Zorasan.

Origins

Information on the Black Hand has been difficult to obtain due to the restrictions on freedom of information in Zorasan. However, in the post-unification period of the early 1980s, hundreds of individuals came out to the national Zorasani press to claim they were members of the Black Hand. Among the most reliable sources are those that belong to the Heroes of Husaybah, a group of armed gunmen who prevented a public mass execution by firing squad in the southeastern Khazi city of Husaybah. The leader of the group, Malik al-Majid told Ettehad newspaper in 1983 that after saving the Husaybah condemned, he and his comrades formed the Popular Resistance of Khazestan in early 1950. The PRK rapidly grew in Abassiya to boast over 3,000 members, though only a "vanguard core" were armed with guns of various types, the remaining number were tasked with civil disobedience in the ultimate aim of overthrowing the Khazi monarchy. The PRK would go on to stage hit and run attacks against government personnel in Abassiya and its surrounding environs, gaining notoriety nationally by 1951. The same year, representatives from the Khazi Revolutionary Resistance Command met with the PRK to discuss cooperation against the monarchy. Al-Majid explained that the PRK immediately accepted the KRRC's proposal, knowing that doing so they could secure supplies from neighbouring Pardaran. So impressed by the PRK, that the KRRC leader, Mustafa al-Kharadji once seizing power in wake of the Khazi Revolution, asked Al-Majid to form a "special actions group" that would operate behind enemy lines to destabilise the remaining monarchies. Between 1952 and 1953, Al-Majid and his 3,000 supporters were trained in militant action, and educated in the nature of their mission. The training according to al-Majid took place in various training facilities in Pardaran, far from the Zorasani-Badawiyan states to the east.

Al-Majid's testimony to Ettehad was corroborated by numerous individuals, including several veteran KRRC officials who would go on to serve in the government of the Union of Khazestan and Pardaran. When asked to confirm Al-Majid's story, the Zorasani government refused to be drawn into debates or discussions of the Black Hand, repeating the same line that it was an independent popular force comprised of "revolutionaries dedicated to the ideal of Zorasan."

History

Early stages (1953-1960)

Terror campaign (1960-1968)

Deactivation and lull (1968-1972)

Irvadistan attacks and war (1972-1979)

Dissolution

Organisation

Leadership

Pardarian connection

List of major attacks

Kexri conflict

Legacy