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Iran Had a Democracy Before We Took It Away

canada-man

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Iran Had a Democracy Before We Took It Away

by Chris Hedges

Iranians do not need or want us to teach them about liberty and representative government. They have long embodied this struggle. It is we who need to be taught. It was Washington that orchestrated the 1953 coup to topple Iran’s democratically elected government, the first in the Middle East, and install the compliant shah in power. It was Washington that forced Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh, a man who cared as much for his country as he did for the rule of law and democracy, to spend the rest of his life under house arrest. We gave to the Iranian people the corrupt regime of the shah and his savage secret police and the primitive clerics that rose out of the swamp of the dictator’s Iran. Iranians know they once had a democracy until we took it away.

The fundamental problem in the Middle East is not a degenerate and corrupt Islam. The fundamental problem is a degenerate and corrupt Christendom. We have not brought freedom and democracy and enlightenment to the Muslim world. We have brought the opposite. We have used the iron fist of the American military to implant our oil companies in Iraq, occupy Afghanistan and ensure that the region is submissive and cowed. We have supported a government in Israel that has carried out egregious war crimes in Lebanon and Gaza and is daily stealing ever greater portions of Palestinian land. We have established a network of military bases, some the size of small cities, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Kuwait, and we have secured basing rights in the Gulf states of Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates. We have expanded our military operations to Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Egypt, Algeria and Yemen. And no one naively believes, except perhaps us, that we have any intention of leaving.

We are the biggest problem in the Middle East. We have through our cruelty and violence created and legitimized the Mahmoud Ahmadinejads and the Osama bin Ladens. The longer we lurch around the region dropping iron fragmentation bombs and seizing Muslim land the more these monsters, reflections of our own distorted image, will proliferate. The theologian Reinhold Niebuhr wrote that “the most significant moral characteristic of a nation is its hypocrisy.” But our hypocrisy no longer fools anyone but ourselves. It will ensure our imperial and economic collapse.

The history of modern Iran is the history of a people battling tyranny. These tyrants were almost always propped up and funded by foreign powers. This suppression and distortion of legitimate democratic movements over the decades resulted in the 1979 revolution that brought the Iranian clerics to power, unleashing another tragic cycle of Iranian resistance.

“The central story of Iran over the last 200 years has been national humiliation at the hands of foreign powers who have subjugated and looted the country,” Stephen Kinzer, the author of “All the Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror,” told me. “For a long time the perpetrators were the British and Russians. Beginning in 1953, the United States began taking over that role. In that year, the American and British secret services overthrew an elected government, wiped away Iranian democracy, and set the country on the path to dictatorship.”

“Then, in the 1980s, the U.S. sided with Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq war, providing him with military equipment and intelligence that helped make it possible for his army to kill hundreds of thousands of Iranians,” Kinzer said. “Given this history, the moral credibility of the U.S. to pose as a promoter of democracy in Iran is close to nil.

Especially ludicrous is the sight of people in Washington calling for intervention on behalf of democracy in Iran when just last year they were calling for the bombing of Iran. If they had had their way then, many of the brave protesters on the streets of Tehran today—the ones they hold up as heroes of democracy—would be dead now.”

Washington has never recovered from the loss of Iran—something our intelligence services never saw coming. The overthrow of the shah, the humiliation of the embassy hostages, the laborious piecing together of tiny shreds of paper from classified embassy documents to expose America’s venal role in thwarting democratic movements in Iran and the region, allowed the outside world to see the dark heart of the American empire. Washington has demonized Iran ever since, painting it as an irrational and barbaric country filled with primitive, religious zealots. But Iranians, as these street protests illustrate, have proved in recent years far more courageous in the defense of democracy than most Americans.

Where were we when our election was stolen from us in 2000 by Republican operatives and a Supreme Court that overturned all legal precedent to anoint George W. Bush president? Did tens of thousands of us fill the squares of our major cities and denounce the fraud? Did we mobilize day after day to restore transparency and accountability to our election process? Did we fight back with the same courage and tenacity as the citizens of Iran? Did Al Gore defy the power elite and, as opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi has done, demand a recount at the risk of being killed?

more at

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/06/22-0
 

slowpoke

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Ajax

The coup and CIA records
The coup was carried out by the US administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower in a covert action advocated by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles under the supervision of his brother Allen Dulles, the Director of Central Intelligence.[16] The coup was organized by the United States' CIA and the United Kingdom's MI6, two spy agencies that aided royalists and mutinous Iranian army officers.[17]

CIA officer Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. carried out the operation planned by CIA agent Donald Wilber.[18] One version of the CIA history, written by Wilber, referred to the operation as TPAJAX.[19][20]

During the coup, Roosevelt and Wilber bribed Iranian government officials, reporters, and businessmen.[21] The deposed Iranian leader, Mossadegh, was taken to jail and Iranian General Fazlollah Zahedi named himself prime minister in the new, pro-western government.

Iranian fascists and Nazis played prominent roles in the coup regime. Gen. Fazlollah Zahedi, who had been arrested and imprisoned by the British during World War II for his attempt to establish a pro-Nazi government, was made Prime Minister on August 19, 1953. The CIA gave Zahedi about $100,000 before the coup and an additional $5 million the day after the coup to help consolidate support for the coup. Bahram Shahrokh, a trainee of Joseph Goebbels and Berlin Radio's Farsi program announcer during the Nazi rule, became director of propaganda. Mr. Sharif-Emami, who also had spent some time in jail for his pro-Nazi activities in the 1940s, assumed several positions after 1953 coup, including Secretary General of the Oil Industry, President of the Senate, and Prime Minister (twice). [22] [23]
 

K Douglas

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Of course the writer tends to neglect that the elections in 1951 were a farce, that Mossadeq rigged them, that he came to power orginally through appointment by the Majils, that he took absolute power and put in drastic measures that even his own allies turned against him on. That he was bringing Iran towards communism and destabilizing the region. Not to mention his absolute theft of oil rights from Britain (remember it was the Brits who put in all the investments, exploration, training and work to extract the oil). The overthrow of Mossadeq, while extreme, was a necessity at that time. And was probably better for Iran, at least in the period from 1953-1979. It was the Islamic Revolution in 1979 that completely destabilized the region, caused the Iran-Iraq war, the war in Afganistan. All that bloodshed is on Carter's hands because he didn't have the balls to go in there and blow the mullahs to kingdom come.
 

K Douglas

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Secret_Admirer said:
The shameful coup of 1953 killed democrary in Iran for ever. Dr. Mossadegh who was the prime minister at the time nationalized Iranian oil company used to belong to the British and the British urged Americans to do the dirty job for them.

In the summer of 1953, Dr. Mossadegh had the support of overwhelming of Iranians. He was a nationalist leader loved and elected by the nation. People were demonstrating in his support. He was in fact monarchist except that he wanted a system like Britain where the king just rules and the elected prime minister runs the country. But no this was too much for the monarch (the Shah). The Shah left the country to the US while the British blocked Iran's ports denying it of oil export. The Shah sold himself and his country for the thrown. This was the darkest point of our history last century. Democracy died in Iran forever.

The Shah became very unpopular and ruled for another 25 years and then was swept away by islamic thugs in 1979. The only reason that people started supporting these backwards barbaric mullahs was because of what the CIA and British did in 1953. That is staging a military coup to bring back the Shah and overthrow the popular elected government of Dr. Mossadegh. Shame on CIA and The British for their acts in 1953 and now more than 60 years later our young daughters and sons are being shot in the hearts by these islamic thugs. These islamic thugs are in power now because Dr. Mossadegh was not in power in 1953. Thanks to US and British who removed him from power.:mad:
I disagree with you. Mossadegh was popular in the early going but faced alot of opposition and criticism when the British embargo started. What did he expect when he stole all their rights to oil royalties. So looking for another customer he turned to the Soviet Union and that sealed his fate. It was his extremist policies that killed democracy in Iran. Hell it was his own allies that turned on him and instigated the coup.
 

Aardvark154

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canada-man said:
Iran The fundamental problem in the Middle East is not a degenerate and corrupt Islam. The fundamental problem is a degenerate and corrupt Christendom.
Mr. Hedges takes the truth and twists it beyond almost all recognition.
 

Cinema Face

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Oh yeah… of course it’s ALWAYS THE WEST’S FAULT with everything that ever goes wrong in the world.

Iran was a place of utopian perfection where the birds were singing, the children playing and all people gathered around and sung cumbya. They had a democracy and everyone lived in peace before the evil west can and stole it all away from them. :rolleyes:
 

K Douglas

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Secret_Admirer said:
What do you mean that the Brits puts all the investments. They stole our oil for years even decades and paid nothing for it. They invested in the oil, because they wanted to steal more of our oil for themselves and who invited them anyways, their gun boats??. The oil was and is in Iranian soil and belong to the people of Iran and what the Brits did for all those years was nothing short of robbery and theft and when Dr. Mossadegh stood up against them, they destroyed him with the help of Americans and their paid agents.
The Iranians didn't have the money or expertise to build up their oil industry. It was the British who sunk all the investments into it and had an agreement with the Iranian government that was to go to 1993, I believe. The Iranians became disenchanted their cut of the oil revenues and demanded a new agreement. The Brits scoffed at it and when Mossadeq came into power he unilateraly disolved the agreement and kicked the Brits out, instead of trying to renegotiate. That made him popular in the short term because the public believed he was standing up to a bully. But as it turned out Mossadeq was just as much a bully and it was that that pissed off everyone and forced a coup. Sure the Brits and Americans backed it but they weren't the instigators. Mossadeq made his own bed and put democracy and advancement in Iran back years. Iranians may have been forcefed a different version (maybe you included) but this is how it went down.
 

danmand

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Nov 28, 2003
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K Douglas said:
The Iranians didn't have the money or expertise to build up their oil industry. It was the British who sunk all the investments into it and had an agreement with the Iranian government that was to go to 1993, I believe. The Iranians became disenchanted their cut of the oil revenues and demanded a new agreement. The Brits scoffed at it and when Mossadeq came into power he unilateraly disolved the agreement and kicked the Brits out, instead of trying to renegotiate. That made him popular in the short term because the public believed he was standing up to a bully. But as it turned out Mossadeq was just as much a bully and it was that that pissed off everyone and forced a coup. Sure the Brits and Americans backed it but they weren't the instigators. Mossadeq made his own bed and put democracy and advancement in Iran back years. Iranians may have been forcefed a different version (maybe you included) but this is how it went down.
The british were just trying to help the iranian people. Fortunately, they were able to get
some assistance from the americans to help the poor people, by putting in the Shah.
 

Aardvark154

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danmand said:
The british were just trying to help the iranian people. Fortunately, they were able to get
some assistance from the americans to help the poor people, by putting in the Shah.
Or to be more acurate restoring the Shah.
 
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