The coup and the subsequent US support for the ruthless
military regime under Mohamad Reza Shah, who had escaped the country while the
coup was taking place, came with grave implications. The coup played a major
role in shaping the Iranian perceptions of the United States, a new imperialist
that had entered the course of the competition with the British and Russians to
gain control on Iran’s vast resources.
The
US intervention in Iran is part of a broader trend in American foreign policy
that is aimed at toppling states that refuse to become puppet governments
controlled by Washington. According to a dataset published by the Military Intervention
Project (MIP), the US has waged nearly 400 military interventions since its
founding in 1776.
The
coup was primarily motivated by the desire to protect British oil interests in
Iran, specifically after Prime Minister Mossadegh had nationalized the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.
The
movement to nationalize the oil industry was a reaction by the Iranians to
concessions made by both Qajar and Pahlavi Shahs to foreign powers. The
movement had originated in the parliament and was led by Mosaddegh when he was
a lawmaker.
After the British and Soviet troops invaded Iran in 1941 and
toppled first the Pahlavi king, Reza Shah, they replaced him with his young son
Mohammad Reza. In the early years of the second Pahlavi Shah, the anti-colonial
oil nationalization movement had become too strong to suppress. The weakness of
Mohammad Reza Shah’s regime benefited the movement in the period after World
War II. Different political groups emerged and the oil movement gradually got
stronger and stronger.
As time
passed, the United States joined the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union, who
were seeking to gain control of the Iranian oil reserves.
In the meantime, a senior cleric named Ayatollah Abol-Ghasem
Kashani was leading a powerful popular movement outside the parliament against
foreign interference in the country’s affairs, giving a hand to the
democratically-elected government of Premier Mossadegh.
The
coup plot lasted for five days from August 15th to 19th. This event involved
the CIA and British intelligence (MI6) orchestrating a series of actions,
including disinformation and military campaigns, to undermine Mosaddegh's
government and install Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as the sole ruler.
In fact, the CIA and British intelligence operations had
already been playing out in the previous months to undermine Mosaddegh's
popularity and build support for the Shah. This involved propaganda campaigns
and organizing protests that eventually led to the army siding with the
pro-Shah forces.
The
coup plot had been formally approved by President Dwight D. Eisenhower as the
CIA played the leading role in a covert operation, called Operation Ajax,
whereby CIA-funded agents were used to foment unrest inside the capital,
Tehran.
The CIA released dangerous thugs such as Shaban Jafari and
his friends from prisons and unleashed them in groups to walk in the city
streets while hanging posters of Mossadegh on their chests. The funded gangs
attacked public and private properties on their way while ranting and raving in
the name of the Mossadegh supporters.
In the period of five days, fighting between supporters of
Mossadegh and the Shah resulted in hundreds of deaths.
Eventually,
the coup, which was cod-named Operation Boot in the United Kingdom, brought
back the stumbling Pahlavi dynasty to the top of power and ensured brutal
Pahlavi suppression of the Iranian people for the next 26 years.
After the coup succeeded, Shah, who had returned to the
country, issued decrees dismissing Mosaddegh and appointing General Fazlollah
Zahedi as the prime minister. These decrees, while issued earlier, played a
crucial role in legitimizing the coup when they were revealed to the public.
Mosaddegh was arrested,
tried and convicted of treason by the Shah's military court. On 21 December
1953, he was sentenced to three years in jail, then placed under house arrest
for the rest of his life. Other Mosaddegh supporters were imprisoned, and
several received the death penalty.
The young Shah, along with Britain and the US, could not
stand the nationalization of the oil industry and the democratically-elected
Mosaddegh. For that, they overthrew his government.
In the aftermath of the
coup, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi could reassert his autocratic rule and negotiated
the 1954 Consortium Agreement with the British, which returned the ownership of
Iranian oil to a consortium of Western companies until 1979, the year the
Islamic Revolution became victorious.
It is generally agreed today that the 1953 coup sowed the
seeds for the Islamic Revolution of 1979, in which the Shah was overthrown. But
even after the 1979 Islamic revolution, which eliminated US presence in Iran
entirely, Washington continued its efforts to bring down the revolutionary
government in Iran.
They dispatched military troops to Iran in Operation Eagle
Claw, supported anti-revolutionary coup plotters and the Saddam Hussein regime,
and imposed sanctions on Iran, which continue to this day.
Courtesy: Tehran Times
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