Mohammad Mosaddegh (1882-1967) was a major political figure
in the modern history of Iran and served as prime minister of that country
until he was overthrown in a joint U.S.-British coup. This photograph was taken
around 1965 in Ahmadabad, Iran.
If you plant ice, you’re gonna harvest wind. —Robert Hunter
Prime Minister Mohammed Mosaddegh rides on the shoulders of cheering crowds in Tehran's Majlis
When Iran Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh got too patriotic and nationalised his country's oil, the CIA had to correct this audacious behavior
Prime Minister Mohammed Mosaddegh rides on the shoulders of cheering crowds in Tehran's Majlis
Aftershocks Of Iran's 1953 Coup Still Felt Around The World, 60 Years Later
A crowd of demonstrators tear down the Iran Party's sign from the front of the headquarters in Tehran on August 19, 1953, during the pre-Shah riot that swept through the capital and ousted Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh.
Iranian-communists
March 19th coincides with 29th of Esfand in the Iranian calendar which is the anniversary of the nationalization of oil industry in Iran.
Mohammad Mossadeq reaching to Ayatollah Kashani
Mohammed Mossadegh, Iran's ousted prime minister, during his trial in the wake of the CIA-MI6 orchestrated coup that overthrew his elected government
Mossadegh with Truman by Abbie Rowe, 1951
When Iran Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh got too patriotic and nationalised his country's oil, the CIA had to correct this audacious behavior
“Iranians have taken to the streets across the country to
mark the 40th anniversary of the 1979 revolution, reads a
Monday morning Al Jazeera report, “renewing their allegiance to the
country’s Islamic principles at a time of rising economic and political
pressure amid the resumption of punishing US sanctions.”
So much terrible history rammed into one sentence: The
brutal U.S.-backed regime of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi; the 1979 revolution
and the 444-day hostage crisis that roiled the 1980 presidential election; four
decades of turmoil, sanctions, secret deals and Cold War manipulation; a ray of
hope after the Obama administration’s nuclear deal with Iran that was slapped
down by the Trump administration; a return to ruinous sanctions; and, as ever
over these 40 years, a looming threat of war.
There is a name missing from that Al Jazeera report,
just as there is a name missing from this Washington Post Report on the anniversary that nearly drips derision from
its deliberately hidebound rewrite of history. That name is Mohammad Mosaddegh,
the democratically elected prime minister of Iran who was deposed and
imprisoned at the behest of powerful inter Western politicians and the
mainstream journalists who cover them shy away from the name Mosaddegh, for his
name is an incantation summoning the bloody specter of blowback and the carnage
that comes whenever the game of thrones is played for petroleum in the battered
birthing bed of civilization. “Mosaddegh” is a condemnation, a warning, and a
lesson yet to be heeded by those in Washington, D.C., who believe their power
and wealth means they can outrun consequences.
Mosaddegh’s father was a finance minister, his mother a
princess of the Qajar dynasty. He studied law abroad in Paris and Switzerland
and was briefly a professor before entering the family business: politics. He
was elected to his first office at age 24, and rose to prominence over the
years as a vocal advocate for social and economic reform.
Iran, during this period, was suffering under the economic
occupation of Britain and the powerful Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC). A 1933
agreement between the AIOC and Iranian leader Reza Shah promised that the oil
giant would use a portion of its revenues to improve Iran’s infrastructure and
pay laborers fairly, but that promise went unfulfilled for years. Iran
suffered, and seethed, under the yoke of foreign influence.
On March 7, 1951, tensions reached a breaking point with the
assassination of Prime Minister Haj Ali Razmara by Fadayan-e Islam, a Shia
fundamentalist group which advocated for, among other things, wresting control
of Iran’s oil away from the AIOC and other Western influences. Later that same
month, the Parliament of Iran, known as the Majlis, nominated Mosaddegh — an
advocate for oil nationalization and an ally of a powerful pro-nationalization
political organization called the National Front — to be prime minister by an
overwhelming majority. The Shah, alert to the rising tensions within the
country, confirmed the nomination.
On May 1 of that same year, Prime Minister Mosaddegh
nationalized the AIOC and claimed the country’s oil reserves for the sole use
of Iran. “With the oil revenues,” he argued in a speech delivered
that June, “we could meet our entire budget and combat poverty, disease, and
backwardness among our people. Another important consideration is that by the
elimination of the power of the British company, we would also eliminate
corruption and intrigue, by means of which the internal affairs of our country
have been influenced. Once this tutelage has ceased, Iran will have achieved
its economic and political independence.”
The reforms presented by Prime Minister Mosaddegh were
profound, and deeply needed. Unemployment compensation was instated for the
first time. Employers were ordered to give benefits to sick and injured
workers. Mossadegh’s Land Reform Act required landowners to give 20 percent of
their profits to a pool fund that would pay for improved rural housing,
sanitation and other benefits for poor and middle-class residents. His oil
nationalization law even set aside 25 percent of petroleum profits to settle
claims from the AIOC and other aggrieved Western parties. Mossadegh’s long-term
goal was to use the rest of those revenues to build roads, schools, hospitals
and other infrastructure to finally bring Iran into the 20th century.
It was not to be.
Mosaddegh’s democratic revolution lasted two years. In 1953,
U.S. and British intelligence services acting on behalf of the AIOC engineered
a coup that overthrew Mosaddegh’s government in an action codenamed “Operation
Ajax.” Briefly threatened with execution, he was held in solitary
confinement for three years before spending the remainder of his life under
house arrest in the tiny village of Ahmadabad. Mosaddegh died in 1967. Deprived
of the simple dignity of a funeral, he was buried in his own living room.
The rest is all the permissible history we read today on the
anniversary of the Islamic Revolution. Reza Pahlavi Shah, son of Reza Shah,
ruled the nation in singularly brutal fashion until his overthrow in 1979. The
U.S. and British agencies responsible for the overthrow of Mosaddegh covered
their actions with concerns about communist influences, but in the end, it was
all about the oil.
With the rise of Reza Pahlavi, the AIOC changed its name to
British Petroleum (BP) in 1954 and joined a consortium of petroleum interests
in a holding company called Iranian Oil Participants (IOC). The organization —
comprised of familiar names like BP, Gulf Oil, Royal Dutch Shell, Standard Oil
of California (later re-named Chevron), Standard Oil of New York (later
re-named ExxonMobil) and Texaco — became known as the “Seven Sisters ” and controlled roughly 85 percent of the world’s oil reserves
until the oil crisis of 1973. Six years later, the revolution put a period at
the end of that sentence and started a whole new chapter, one we still live
within today.
Mosaddegh’s name whispers beneath the lies peddled a decade
ago by George W. Bush and Dick Cheney, lies that are heard in the Oval Office
today when spoken by Iraq War architect and Trump National Security Adviser
John Bolton. “Bringing democracy to the Middle East,” they said, forgetting or
ignoring that it was there once already, thoroughly organic, until it was
pulled up by the roots and destroyed because petroleum pays better.
Mosaddegh’s name whispers now in Yemen, in Syria, in Iraq
and once again in Iran, where men like Bolton still lust to make war. The
indescribable current calamity wrought by the West upon the Middle East could
have been entirely averted had the U.S. and Britain simply allowed Iran to keep
its oil, taken the proffered 25 percent payout and let that country develop on
its own. It wouldn’t be perfect (nothing is), but it would be better than this:
The tedious triumphalism embedded within these messages from
the Trump administration obscures a violent truth: Those 40 years of failure
belong to the United States and Britain, to actions taken 66 years ago by
politicians who also believed they could run through the raindrops as they
played God for profit with the lives of others. The suffering of the Iranian
people has “Made in the USA” and “God Save the Queen” stamped across it, a
history lesson inked in blood.
Remember the name Mohammad Mosaddegh the next time you hear
a politician or businessman talk about bringing freedom somewhere. Like as not
there’s a buck to be turned, and the bodies will be buried where they drop. All
the oil money in the whole wide world cannot outrun consequences.
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