Career
During the early 1940s, Maleki had been one of 53 left-wing intellectuals who had been imprisoned by Reza Shah. The group played a significant role in organizing labor unrest and pushing for improved wages and living conditions for the working class of Iran, particularly those working in the oil fields of Khuzestan (then under the control of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company or AIOC). But the party was widely believed to be taking its orders from Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and because of this, many Iranians regarded them as traitors.
In time, Maleki came to believe that the Tudeh Party was a proxy force of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics and for this reason he broke off from the group and began to denounce them.
In contrast to the Tudeh Party, Maleki argued that Iran should be independent of both the West (ie Great Britain) and East (Soviet Union). However in 1952, Maleki broke with Baghai over the latter"s decision to turn against the government of Doctor Mohammad Mossadegh, who was at this time the prime minister and leader of Iran.
Premier Mossadegh had led the movement to nationalize the oil industry (bringing it under the control of the National Iranian Oil Company or NIOC) in 1951. Since that time, he had taken measures to democratize Iran and bring about modest reforms in administrative areas, in the military and in the conduct of elections.
However, Baghai argued that Mossadegh was showing excessive tolerance towards the communists and that his policies were too collectivistic in nature.
Because of this, the Toilers Party split into two factions, with one side joining with Baghai in opposing Mossadegh and the other joining with Khalil Maleki in his support for Mossadegh"s policies. On 19 August 1953, the pro-Shah elements in the Iranian military replaced Mossadegh with an autocratic monarchy led by the reigning king, Mohammad Reza Shah. Khalil Maleki, along with other nationalists, strongly opposed the new, despotic and pro-West regime and he continued his political activity throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Maleki was a Marxist, and, as noted, a former Communist.
He was one of the first, if not the first, world Communist leader to reject Stalin"s leadership after World World War World War II Third Force party offices prominently displayed a picture of Jawaharlal Nehru, with whom Maleki identified politically. Maleki hoped for peaceful change through elections in Iran, but the Shah"s repression in the late 1960s doomed those hopes.