"Operation Delaware," now largely forgotten, was a large military exercise held jointly by the Iranian Army and the U.S. Army in 1964. (Not to be confused with another Operation Delaware, the battle for the A Shau Valley, Vietnam, 1968.) At the time Iran was an American ally in the Middle East. The Shah of Iran was instituting some western-style reforms, and Ayatollah Khomeini had been sent into exile where he would remain until his return to establish the Islamic Republic in 1979.
"In April 1964 a joint military exercise with the United States (Operation Delaware) partially reassured Tehran of Washington's continued interest in the region. Annual military exercises continued with an increased Iranian naval component. In March 1965 the Shah publicly declared that Iran's military would in the future pay special attention to the Gulf. The Gulf was of interest to Iran both for its proximity to the rich oil fields of its southwest and for the oil-rich continental shelf that lay beneath its contested waters." (The Foreign Relations of Iran, Shahram Chubin & Sepehr Zabih, University of California Press, 1974.)
The pictures here were taken by LIFE magazine photographer Francis Miller, and found by Federico Cavedo in the LIFE Archive.
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All in all, this part of Operation Delaware seems to have involved a lot of driving around. Probably it was simply the presence of U.S. forces (and maybe the new Jeeps) that was the main factor in reassuring the Shah of Iran that his western allies would help protect his country's interests in the Persian Gulf area. There's been a lot of water (or oil) under the bridge since then, but maybe some of those Jeeps are still kicking around somewhere in Iran.
Thanks to Federico Cavedo and Luis Mariano Paz for locating the pictures in the LIFE Archive. -- Derek Redmond
See more Operation Delaware photos in a photo album.
See more M606 Military Jeeps on The CJ3B Page.
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