1953 IRANIAN COUP D'éTAT


In the '1953 Iranian coup d'état', the administration of U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower orchestrated the overthrow of the democratically-elected administration of Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh and his cabinet from power . The support of the coup was carried out, using widespread bribery [1] in a covert operation by Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). According to a report on the BBC, Britain, motivated by its desire to control Iranian oil fields, contributed to funding for the widespread bribery of Iranian officials, news media and others. The project to overthrow Iran's government was codenamed '''Operation Ajax''' (officially TP-AJAX).[2] The coup re-installed Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in the primary position of power and was motivated by the desire for preserving Western control of Iran's oil infrastructure.[3]In 2000, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, during the administration of President Bill Clinton, admitted that the coup was a "setback for democratic government" in Iran.[4]

Contents
Origins
Background
Early Oil Development
Post-World War I
Post-World War II
1950s
Planning Operation Ajax
Outcome
Repercussions
Cold war
See also
Footnotes
References
External links

Origins


The idea of overthrowing Mossadegh was conceived by the British who asked U.S. President Harry Truman for assistance. He refused. The British raised the idea again to Dwight D. Eisenhower who became president in 1953. The new administration agreed to participate in overthrowing the elected administration.[5]
Mossadegh decided that Iran ought to begin profiting from its own vast oil reserves and took steps to nationalize the oil industry which had previously been controlled by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (later changed to the British Petroleum Company). Britain claimed that Iran was violating the company's legal rights and spearheaded a worldwide boycott of Iran's oil that submerged the regime into financial crisis. The monarchy supported by the U.S. and Britain invited western oil companies back into Iran. The spectre of Operation Ajax
"The crushing of Iran's first democratic government ushered in more than two decades of dictatorship under the Shah, who relied heavily on US aid and arms," Dan De Luce wrote in the Guardian in a review of ''All the Shah's Men'' by Stephen Kinzer a reporter for The New York Times who for the first time revealed details of the coup.

Background


Early Oil Development

During the British imperial period known as The Great Game, Mozzafar al-Din Shah Qajar, the Shah of Iran, sought to partially alleviate debts he owed to Britain by granting a 60-year concession to search for oil to William Knox D'Arcy in May 1901.
D'Arcy struck oil in May 1908 which was the first commercially significant find in the Middle East. Due to financial hardships, controlling interest was sold to Burmah Oil Company who incorporated the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in 1909 to exploit this find.
The company grew slowly until World War I when its strategic importance led the British Government to acquire controlling interest in the company, essentially nationalizing British oil production in Iran for a short period of time, and it became the Royal Navy's chief source of fuel oil in defeating the Central Powers during World War I. During this period, British troops occupied strategic parts of Iran.
Post-World War I

There was growing dissatisfaction within Persia with the oil concession and royalty terms whereby Iran received 16 percent of net profits. This dissatisfaction was exacerbated by British involvement in the Persian Constitutional Revolution as well as the British Empire's use of Iranian routes to invade Russia in an attempt to reverse the October Bolshevik Revolution.
In 1921, a military coup, organized by the British, placed Reza Pahlavi on the throne as Shah of Iran. The new Shah undertook a number of modernization measures, many of which were advantageous not only to the British but the Iranians as well, such as the Persian Corridor railroads for military and other transportation.
In the 1930s, Nazi Germany heavily courted the Shah in order to secure access to oil, for use in their war effort. The Shah terminated the APOC concession. The concession was resettled within a year, covering a reduced area with an increase in the Persian government's share of profits.
In 1935, the Shah insisted that the name Iran be used instead of Persia and, so, APOC became the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC).
In 1941, Britain invaded Iran, exiled the Shah, and secured both Iranian oil production and strategic railways. The British installed Reza's 22 year old son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as Shah of Iran.
Post-World War II

In the constitutional republic of Iran, nationalist leaders were becoming increasingly powerful as they sought to reduce the long-time foreign intervention in their country, including the highly-profitable British oil arrangements.
A particular point of contention was the refusal of the AIOC to allow an audit of the accounts to determine whether the Iranian government received the royalties it was due. Intransigence on the part of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company led the nationalist government to escalate its demands, requiring an equal share in the oil revenues. A final crisis was precipitated when the oil company ceased operations in Iran rather than accepting the Iranian government's interference in its business affairs.
AIOC and the Iranian government resisted nationalist pressure to come to a renewed deal in 1949.
1950s

In March 1951, the pro-western Prime Minister Ali Razmara was assassinated. In April, the Iranian parliament passed a bill to nationalize the oil industry. This was undertaken with the guidance of western-educated Dr. Mohammed Mossadegh, at that time a member of the parliament, who believed that nationalization was the only way to provide prosperity and national sovereignty for the Iranian people. By May, Mossadegh had been elected Prime Minister by the parliament.
The newly state-owned oil company saw a dramatic drop in production as a result of Iranian inexperience and the AIOC-mandated policy that British technicians not work with the newly created National Iranian Oil Company. This resulted in the Abadan Crisis, a situation that was further aggravated by its export markets being closed when the British Navy imposed a blockade around the country in order to force the Iranian state to abandon the effort to nationalize its nation's oil. Oil revenues to the Iranian government were significantly higher than before nationalization, since nationalization, by definition, caused oil profits to be directed into the state's coffers rather than into the hands of foreign oil companies.
The United Kingdom took a case against the nationalization to the International Court of Justice at The Hague on behalf of AIOC, but lost the case. The government of Britain was concerned about its interests in Iran, and laboring under a misconception that Iran's nationalist movement was Soviet-backed. Eventually, Great Britain persuaded U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles that Iran was slowly coming under Soviet influence. This was an effective strategy for the British, since it exploited America's Cold War mindset. U.S. President Harry S. Truman never agreed to the British proposal to oust Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeq. But in 1953, General Dwight Eisenhower became the President of the United States, and the British convinced the new American administration to join them in overthrowing a democratically elected government and re-establishing British control of Iranian oil.

Planning Operation Ajax


As a condition of restoring the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, the U.S. required that the AIOC's oil monopoly lapse. Five major U.S. oil companies, plus Royal Dutch Shell and French Compagnie Française des Pétroles, were designated to operate in the country alongside AIOC after a successful coup.
In planning the operation, the CIA organized a guerrilla force in case the communist Tudeh Party seized power as a result of any chaos created by Operation Ajax. According to formerly "Top Secret" documents released by the National Security Archive, Undersecretary of State Walter Bedell Smith reported that the CIA had reached an agreement with Qashqai tribal leaders in southern Iran to establish a clandestine safe haven from which U.S.-funded guerrillas and intelligence agents could operate.
The leader of Operation Ajax was Kermit Roosevelt, Jr., a senior CIA officer, and grandson of the former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt. While formal leadership was vested in Kermit Roosevelt, the project was designed and executed by Donald Wilber, a career CIA agent and acclaimed author of books on Iran, Afghanistan and Ceylon.
The CIA operation centered around having the increasingly impotent Shah dismiss the powerful Prime Minister Mossadegh and replace him with General Fazlollah Zahedi, a choice agreed on by the British and Americans after careful examination for his likeliness to be anti-Soviet.
The BBC spearheaded Britain's propaganda campaign, broadcasting the code word to start the coup.[1]
Despite the high-level coordination and planning, the coup d'état briefly faltered, and the Shah fled Iran. After a short exile in Italy, however, the Shah was brought back again, this time through follow-up CIA operations, which were successful. Zahedi was installed to succeed Prime Minister Mossadegh. The deposed Mossadegh was arrested, given what some have alleged to have been a show trial, and condemned to death. The Shah commuted this sentence to solitary confinement for three years in a military prison, followed by house arrest for life.
In 2000, the New York Times made partial publication of a leaked CIA document titled, "Clandestine Service History – Overthrow of Premier Mossadeq of Iran – November 1952-August 1953." This document describes the planning and execution conducted by the American and British governments. The New York Times published this critical document with the names censored. The New York Times also limited its publication to scanned image (bitmap) format, rather than machine-readable text. This document was eventually published properly – in text form, and fully unexpurgated. The complete CIA document is now web published. The word 'blowback' appeared for the very first time in this document.

Outcome


On August 19 1953, the Prime Minister, Mohammed Mossadeq, was forced from office and replaced by Zahedi and the Shah was recalled.
The AIOC became the British Petroleum Company (BP) in 1954, and briefly resumed operations in Iran with a forty percent share in a new international consortium. BP continued to operate in Iran until the Islamic Revolution. However, due to a large investment program (funded by the World Bank) outside Iran, the company survived the loss of its Iranian interests at that time. The success of North Sea oil exploration contributed to BP's fortunes and the company recovered swiftly, continuing to be one of the world's foremost oil companies to this day.

Repercussions


Popular discontent with the erosion of Iran's social mores, its sluggish economy, and other developments caused widespread dissatisfaction with the regime of the Shah, leading to the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The occupation of the U.S. embassy also took place during the 1979 revolution, which caused diplomatic relations to be severed between the new Iranian government and the United States. The role that the U.S. embassy had played in the 1953 coup led the revolutionary guards to suspect that it might be used to play a similar role in suppressing the revolution, some revolutionary guards reported.
Jacob G. Hornberger, the founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation, commented that "U.S. officials, not surprisingly, considered the operation one of their greatest foreign policy successes -- until, that is, the enormous convulsion that rocked Iranian society with the violent ouster of the Shah and the installation of a virulently anti-American Islamic regime in 1979."[6] Reportedly, "the coup, in essence, paved the way for the rise to power of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and all the rest that's happened right up to 9/11 and beyond."

Cold war


For the U.S., an important factor to consider was Iran's border with the Soviet Union. A pro-American Iran under the Shah would give the U.S. a double strategic advantage in the ensuing Cold War, as a NATO alliance was already in effect with the government of Turkey, also bordering the USSR.
In addition, even though the appropriation of the companies resulted in Western allegations that Mossadegh was a Communist and suspicions that Iran was in danger of falling under the influences of the neighboring Soviet Union, Mossadegh declined to change course under moderate international pressure.

See also



Asadollah Rashidian

Mohammed Reza Pahlavi

Footnotes


1. How to Overthrow A Government Pt. 1 The 1953 U.S. Coup in Iran March 5, 2004
2. A Very British Coup
3. ''All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror'' (U), , Stephen, Kinzer, Journal of the American Intelligence Professional,
4. "U.S. Comes Clean About The Coup In Iran", CNN, 04-19-2000.
5. [Book review of Stephen Kinzer's ''All the Shah's Men'' by CIA historian David S. Robargehttps://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol48no2/article10.html]
6. ''Washington's wise advice.'' Ralph R. Reiland. 'Pittsburgh Tribune Review' July 30, 2007.

References



All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror, , Stephen, Kinzer, John Wiley & Sons, , ISBN 0-471-26517-9

Shah of Shahs, , Ryszard, Kapuściński, Vintage, , ISBN 0-679-73801-0

External links



The CIA and Iran: What Really Happened?—alternate view by Ardeshir Zahedi

50 Years Later—a look back at the 1953 U.S.-backed coup in Iran

The C.I.A. in Iran—''New York Times'' report based on uncovered CIA documents

The Secret CIA History of the Iran Coup, 1953—Provided by the ''National Security Archive''

Mohammad Mosaddeq and the 1953 Coup in Iran—new book from the ''National Security Archive'' reexamines the coup

How to Overthrow a Government—interview with Steven Kinzer, author of ''All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror''

All The Shah’s Men—interview with Steven Kinzer

Review of ''All the Shah's Men'' by David S. Robarge

A Very Elegant Coup—critique of ''All the Shah’s Men''

The spectre of Operation Ajax by Guardian Unlimited

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