Inside Iran's Fury
Scholars trace the nation's antagonism to its history of domination by foreign powers
- By Stephen Kinzer
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
The winds of nationalism and anti-colonialism that swept across Asia, Africa and Latin America in the years after World War II whipped up a sandstorm in Iran. Since the early 20th century, the immeasurably rich Iranian oil industry had been under the control of a British monopoly, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, which was owned principally by the British government. Iranian oil powered the British economy and made possible the high standard of living Britons enjoyed from the 1920s through the 1940s. It also fueled the Royal Navy as it projected British power around the world. Most Iranians, meanwhile, lived in wretched poverty.
Anger over this glaring inequality triggered the next Iranian revolution, a peaceful but deeply transformative one. In 1951, Iran's parliament chose as prime minister one of the most highly educated men in the country, Mohammed Mossadegh, whose degree from the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland made him the first Iranian ever to earn a doctorate in law from a European university. Mossadegh championed what had become the nation's transcendent goal: nationalization of the oil industry. Even before taking office, he proposed a nationalization law that both houses of parliament passed unanimously. The British, to no one's surprise, refused to accept it. They withdrew their oil technicians, blockaded the port from which oil was exported and asked the United Nations to order Iran to withdraw the plan. Mossadegh's popularity at home skyrocketed; as a British diplomat wrote in a report from Tehran, he had done "something which is always dear to Persian hearts: he flouted the authority of a great power and a great foreign interest."
Mossadegh's daring challenge to Britain also turned him into a world figure. Time magazine chose him as its 1951 Man of the Year. In October he traveled to New York City to plead his case at the United Nations. It was the first time the leader of a poor country had mounted this august stage to challenge a great power so directly.
"My countrymen lack the bare necessities of existence," Mossadegh told the U.N. Security Council. "Their standard of living is probably one of the lowest in the world. Our greatest national resource is oil. This should be the source of work and food for the population of Iran. Its exploitation should properly be our national industry, and the revenue from it should go to improve our conditions of life." Most American newspapers, however, were unsympathetic to Mossadegh's plea on the grounds that he was defying international law and threatening the flow of oil to the free world. The New York Times, for instance, decried Iran as a "defiant scorner" of the United Nations, and further blamed "Iranian nationalism and Islamic fanaticism" for carrying the dispute "beyond the field of legality and common sense."
The epic struggle for control of the oil industry helped transform Iranian nationalism from an abstract idea into a movement. "While Reza Shah crafted the vessel, it was Mossadegh who filled it," says Iranian-British scholar Ali Ansari. "Between 1951 and 1953, Persian nationalism became truly Iranian—inclusive, broad-based and with increasing mass appeal." During this period, many Iranians came to hope the United States would emerge as their friend and protector. Most of the Americans who had come to Iran during the first half of the 20th century were teachers, nurses and missionaries who had left highly positive impressions. That view changed abruptly in the summer of 1953, when the United States took a step that made it an object of deep resentment in Iran.
After trying every conceivable way to pressure Mossadegh to abandon his nationalization plan, Prime Minister Winston Churchill ordered British agents to organize a coup and overthrow him. When Mossadegh learned of the plot, he closed the British Embassy in Tehran and expelled all British diplomats, including the agents who were plotting his overthrow. In desperation, Churchill asked President Harry S. Truman to order the newly formed Central Intelligence Agency to depose Mossadegh. Truman refused. "The CIA was then a new agency, and Truman saw its mission as gathering and collecting intelligence, not undermining or overthrowing foreign governments," says James Goode, a historian at Grand Valley State University in Michigan who was a Peace Corps volunteer in Iran and later taught at the University of Mashhad. "He was almost as frustrated with the British as he was with the Iranians."
After President Dwight D. Eisenhower took office in 1953, however, U.S. policy changed. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was eager to strike back against growing Communist influence worldwide, and when the British told him that Mossadegh was leading Iran toward Communism—a wild distortion, since Mossadegh despised Marxist ideas—Dulles and Eisenhower agreed to send the CIA into action.
"The intense dislike that Dulles and Eisenhower had toward Mossadegh was visceral and immediate," says Mary Ann Heiss, a historian at Kent State University who specializes in early cold war history. "They were not interested in negotiation at all. For Dulles, coming from a corporate law background, what Mossadegh had done seemed like an attack on private property, and he was bothered by what he saw as the precedent that it might be setting. He was also worried about the possibility that the Soviet Union might gain a foothold in Iran....It was all very emotional and very quick. There was no real attempt to find out who Mossadegh was or what motivated him, to talk to him or even to respond to letters he was sending to Washington."
In August 1953, the CIA sent one of its most intrepid agents, Kermit Roosevelt Jr., grandson of president Theodore Roosevelt, to Tehran with orders to overthrow Mossadegh. Employing tactics that ranged from bribing newspaper editors to organizing riots, Roosevelt immediately set to work. From a command center in the basement of the U.S. Embassy, he managed to create the impression that Iran was collapsing into chaos. On the night of August 19, an angry crowd, led by Roosevelt's Iranian agents—and supported by police and military units whose leaders he had suborned—converged on Mossadegh's home. After a two-hour siege, Mossadegh fled over a back wall. His house was looted and set afire. The handful of American agents who organized the coup were, as Roosevelt later wrote, "full of jubilation, celebration and occasional and totally unpredictable whacks on the back as one or the other was suddenly overcome with enthusiasm." Mossadegh was arrested, tried for high treason, imprisoned for three years, then sentenced to house arrest for life. He died in 1967.
The 1953 coup put an end to democratic rule in Iran. After Mossadegh was deposed, the CIA arranged to bring Mohammad Reza Shah back from Rome, where he had fled during the pre-coup turmoil, and returned him to the Peacock Throne. He ruled with increasing repression, using his brutal secret police, Savak, to torture opposition figures. No independent institutions—political parties, student groups, labor unions or civic organizations—were tolerated during his quarter century in power. The only place dissidents could find shelter was in mosques, which gave the developing opposition movement a religious tinge that would later push Iran toward fundamentalist rule.
Throughout the cold war, relations between Washington and Tehran were exceedingly close, largely because the Shah was, as former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger wrote in his memoir, "that rarest of leaders, an unconditional ally." Iranians, for their part, came to see the United States as the force that propped up a hated dictatorship. "Iranians traditionally believed that the United States was not a colonial power, and older people remembered [President] Woodrow Wilson's anti-colonial views," says Mansour Farhang, who was the revolutionary government's first ambassador to the United Nations and now teaches history at Bennington College. "Even Mossadegh initially had great goodwill toward the United States. But during the 1950s and '60s, largely as a result of the 1953 coup and concessions the Shah made to the Americans, a new generation emerged that saw the United States as imperialist and neo-colonialist. As time went by, this perspective became completely dominant."
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Comments (44)
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I just toured the magnificent cities of Tehran, Tabriz and Esfahan in Iran. Such prosperous and peaceful cities populated by the most friendly, most hospitable and awesomely beautiful people in the world. Iran is totally the opposite of what headlines in the mainstream media depict. The negative portrayal of this lovely country by the western media and the sanctions by the western countries are just another form of colonialism and foreign interference that are suppressing Iranians. God Bless Iran.
Posted by Iskandar Zulbryner on May 11,2012 | 01:12 PM
Umm...Iran right to their nuclear is not just something they claim, it is a fact - Iran has the same rights as the US and Argentina and any other country (in fact the program started under the Shaggy with US aid.) And, you've overlooked the role of the pro-Israeli lobby in exasperating the conflict with the US. I'm not sure where you get info thst inflation etc is spiraling but the IMF just commended Iran on halving inflation. And US polls show for the first time that not only does the nuclear program enjoy massive popularity but for the first time a large majority of Iranian endorse building nuclear weapons too, though their govt has repeatedly offered to place additional restrictions on their nuclear program well beyond their legal ovligstions, which the US has torpedoed as stated by firmer IAEA head Elbaradei.
Posted by hass on June 20,2011 | 07:32 PM
Wow, what a great article. Goes to show that what US elites view as "past history" is still very real for the victims of their interventionist foreign policy
Posted by Tomas on March 7,2011 | 03:31 AM
Living in Iran as an American teenager during the 1950's, I saw first hand the demonstrations that occurred during the spring and summer of 1953. Some of the parades were part of Moharram, the Shia month of mourning, but the news reporters did not distinguish between those parades and the political demonstrations, making the whole situation seem worse than it was leading up to CIA intervention. For many years I have told my friends what really happened, just as the article describes. I also remember all the rumors spread by Kermit Roosevelt to justify his actions, which to those of us who had lived there many years knew to be blatantly false. Iran is a country of culture, history, and long memory.
Posted by Margaret F. on December 27,2008 | 02:29 PM
Iran is a great ancient civilisation with a long history of and culture and heritage like India and China. No western culture can come anywhere near that of Iran, India and China and we must all be proud of our heritage ad try to uphold the dignity of out Nations before the neuvaux rich powers of the modern world with super eapons of destrction.
Posted by Ranjan Khastgir on November 25,2008 | 09:12 AM
Well said EM - stop living in the past, makes something of yourself NOW, stop whining and complaining and get it done instead of talking about it
Posted by GoozNejad on November 23,2008 | 07:39 PM
So am I to gather that when Persia conquered many other countries and created an "empire" this is cause for admiration? But when Iran itself falls victim to foreign powers this is injustice?
Posted by EM on November 15,2008 | 08:23 PM
Sadly, there is simply too much interest in the US -- financial and political -- to keep the demonization of Iran and other nations and peoples alive.
Posted by Ellen on November 12,2008 | 02:55 AM
This excellent article should serve as an eye opener to the Americans who see Iranians the tunnel vision of the US presidents since Jimmy Carter as terrorists and war mongers. It is time for a change in American foreign policy and it is time for normalization of relations with the people of Iran and to recognize that American policy leading to the overthrow of the Shah was flawed and not in the interest of the people of Iran and it is time for putting the past behind and making peace and promoting trade between Iran and the USA. The Iran Iraq war in the early 80s was imposed on Iran and the rest of the world ganged up on it and did not share the sorrow of its people. The Reagan Bush administration cheered Saddam Hussein to bloody the Iranian people and built up Saddam's army. No the US has no higher ground in relations to Iran. The US needs to therefore forget the past and look to better relations with the Iranian people. As an Obama supporter I would urge him to take a revisit the strategic relationship with Iran.
Posted by Girish on November 11,2008 | 09:27 AM
Definitely, one of the best articles that describe almost all things about Persian.
Posted by Dariush on November 6,2008 | 02:42 PM
I sure am glad that we are refusing as Americans to talk to Iran. I'm sure that this will make the world a safer place to live. Long live insanity.
Posted by Kirk Nelson on October 24,2008 | 05:53 PM
As an Iranian raised in Canada, I am often frustrated that people don't take the time to actually examine my country's history before they pontificate on its domestic and international affairs. I want to sincerely thank you for doing the opposite: your honest and even-handed approach is refreshing.
Posted by Azin Samani on October 17,2008 | 02:00 AM
Can someone print this out for Senator McCain? Maybe he will quit singing "Bomb bomb bomb Iran". Warmongering must stop. In all seriousness, I agree with other comments. This type of historical perspective should be included in core curriculum. Yes, it is hard to believe our government could be involved as it was in teh 1950's but we must learn from history, not repeat it as it appears we are today. Coincidently, the August 2008 edition of National Geographic has an article about Iran. Well worth the read. http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/08/iran-archaeology/del-giudice-text
Posted by Walter on October 17,2008 | 07:07 PM
It would be a great idea to send a copy of this to the candidates for the office of president and the current president and their staffs to read. This gives one a slightly different take on the present standoff between the U.S. and Iran. How is this true of our relationships with some other countries?
Posted by James R. Miller on October 15,2008 | 03:17 PM
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