Czechoslovakia and Iran signed a treaty of friendship on 29 October 1930.

On 22 June 1925, the Iranian ambassador to Italy was appointed Iran's diplomatic representative for Czechoslovakia.

In August 1962, the diplomatic status of the Czechoslovak diplomatic mission in Tehran was upgraded to that of embassy.

In September 1963, Alinaghi Alikhani, the Iranian Minister of the Economy, travelled to Czechoslovakia. The first state visit by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and his wife Farah to Czechoslovakia was in May 1967.

During the early 1970s, Czechoslovakia pursued a foreign policy strategy focused on maintaining and deepening its bilateral relations with Iran. While official visits and economic cooperation were generally regarded as successful, there were moments of tension in the bilateral relations during the early 1970s.

See also

  • Czech Republic–Iran relations
  • Iran–Slovakia relations

References

Citations

Sources

  • Jůnová Macková, Adéla (2012). Czechoslovak-Iranian relations 1918-1938. Politics, economy, culture, expatriates and communities (PhD thesis) (in Czech). Univerzita Karlova. hdl:20.500.11956/45179.
  • Nováková, Klára (2014). The Czechoslovakia-Iranian Relationships: Political and cultural relationships between 1953 and 1979 (PhD thesis) (in Czech). Univerzita Karlova. hdl:20.500.11956/62914.
  • Taterová, Eva; Struhárová, Alexandra (2024). "Czechoslovak-Iranian Relations in 1968–1978: Cooperation Across the Cold War Barriers". Asian and African Studies. 33 (1). Slovak Academic Press: 117–139. doi:10.31577/aassav.2024.33.1.05.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is available under the CC BY 4.0 license.

Iran, India stress developing bilateral relations Mehr News Agency

Atomwaffen Iran und Russland sind dem Westen strategisch überlegen WELT

Iran’s New Friends Russia and China WSJ

Improving economic cooperation between Serbia and Iran on the basis of

Czech president promises Israel it will push IAEA to impose fresh