The current
failing effort to make Iran out to be a major threat to world peace starts the
clock at 1979 in its propaganda effort to justify U.S. aggression against Teheran,
which deliberately overlooks the events of 1953, when a joint U.S.-British
effort overthrew the then secular Iranian government in order to take over the
country's oil industry.
Much like John Foster Dulles and his
brother Allen, who successfully plotted the U.S. coup against him, Mohammad
Mossadegh (Time’s Man-of-the-Year in
1952) came from an affluent background, welcomed the principles of capitalist
democracy, and loathed Marxism. What set the three men on a collision course
was not their political values, but the radically unequal world around them.
Mossadegh grew up watching foreigners
loot his defenseless country. Nourished by corruption, predatory foreign
companies bought up rights to establish Iranian banks and run its post office,
telegraph service, railroads, and ferry lines. Other Western firms took over
the caviar industry and tobacco trade. When oil was discovered at the beginning
of the twentieth century, British officials just bribed a puppet monarch -
Mozaffar al-Din Shah - to sign Iran's rights away to foreign investors. The
ocean of oil underfoot became the property of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company,
mostly owned by the British government.
Thus it was that in his short span of
years Mossadegh witnessed a stupendous source of national wealth siphoned off
to benefit distant foreigners while Iranian peasants lived in hovels and a
quarter of the population consisted of nomadic bands. The country suffered a
ninety-percent illiteracy rate, an incredible fifty-percent infant mortality
rate, and saw seventy percent of its land monopolized by two percent of its
population. Iran exported $360 million worth of oil a year, but only received
$35 million in royalties from the Anglo-American Oil Company.
Educated Iranians of Mossadegh's era
faced a choice of continuing this humiliating submission to foreign
exploitation or launching a rebellion doomed to failure. Mossadegh chose to
rebel, demanding full Iranian control of the nation's resources, which made him
a target for Anglo-American imperialism.
Following World War II Mossadegh had
emerged as the leader of the nationalists in the Iranian Parliament, with a
reputation for being an honest patriot.
He not only denounced British control of the oil industry, but also opposed a
vast, mega-profit development scheme Allen Dulles had negotiated for Overseas
Consultants Inc., a group of eleven American engineering firms with massive
construction plans, including hydroelectric plants, rebuilt cities, and
industries imported from abroad. Mossadegh denounced it as a sellout to foreign
interests, a judgment that found favor in the Iranian Parliament, which killed
the project by refusing to appropriate funds for it in December, 1950.
After delivering this heavy blow to
foreign capital, Mossadegh was chosen to be prime minister in April 1951.
Before accepting, he asked for a vote in favor of nationalizing Iran's oil
industry, and the vote was unanimous. From that moment on he was regarded in
Washington and London as the worst sort of enemy, a populist rabble-rouser who
stirred the masses with appeals to independent nationalism, which was
effectively treason to transnational capital.
In 1953, with the unanimous backing of
the Iranian Parliament and overwhelming public support, Mossadegh proceeded
with the nationalization, expropriating the Anglo-American Oil Company. In an
impassioned address to the nation he warned that Iran was taking control of
"a hidden treasure upon which lies a dragon."
The dragon retaliated by CIA coup,
overthrowing Mossadegh in favor of Shah Reza Pahlavi. General Fazollah Zahedi,
a Nazi collaborator and staunch partisan of American oil, became the new prime
minister.
President Eisenhower quickly extended him "sympathetic
consideration."
The CIA's Kermit Roosevelt emerged as
vice-president of Gulf Oil. U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles refused
to divulge details of the new arrangements, because "making them public
would affect adversely the foreign relations of the United States."
President Eisenhower told the American
people that the Iranian people had "saved the day," owing to their
"revulsion against communism," and "their profound love for
their monarchy."
The New
York Times hailed the destruction of Iranian democracy as "good news
indeed," calling the putsch an "object lesson in the heavy cost that
must be paid" by a country that "goes berserk with fanatical
nationalism."
Thousands of Mossadegh supporters were
dispatched to jail, torture chambers, and graveyards.
A deeply grateful Shah thanked U.S.
Ambassador Loy Henderson and Kermit Roosevelt, telling them that he owed his
throne to God, the Iranian people, the army, and to Washington.
Gripped by megalomania, the Shah ruled
for the subsequent quarter century in a romantic haze built on a fantasy
version of Iran and also of himself. He told Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci
that he was guided by visions and messages from God, as well as Imam Ali.
"I am accompanied by a force that others can't see, my mythical force, I
get messages, religious messages."
Instead of seeking psychological help,
the Shah went for armaments and the technology of repression, soon becoming the
central U.S. military and economic partner in the Middle East. Portrayed in the
West as a far-seeing moderate in a land teeming with swarthy medievalists, he
remained deeply unpopular at home due to his policies of super-militarization,
forced modernization, and systematic torture. Powerful Ayatollahs bitterly
objected to his rule, and as they amassed a huge popular following the Shah
grew increasingly isolated, clinging to power with an avalanche of weapons sent
on by Washington.
By the mid-seventies the Shah's throne
sat atop a veritable powder keg. Two-thirds of the population was under thirty.
Cities were hideously unlivable, as urban settlements had quadrupled to twenty
million in the previous twenty years. Fifteen percent of the entire country
lived around Teheran in shanty dwellings lacking sewage or other water
facilities. The nation's incalculable oil wealth reached few hands, and a
restless student generation had no prospects. The bloated bureaucracy was
totally corrupt.
Hatred of the military surged as the
economy gagged on $18 billion in Western arms imports (mostly from the U.S.)
between 1974 and 1978, including air-to-air missiles, smart bombs, and aerial
tankers, "everything but the atomic bomb," according to a State
Department official. While Shiite leaders rallied massive popular support, the
Shah eliminated civilian courts, held 100,000 political opponents in jail, and
carried out more official executions than any other country in the world, in
addition to using methods of torture that Amnesty
International called "beyond belief."
Nevertheless, enthroned as he was atop
an ocean of oil, the staunchly anti-communist Shah was a greatly admired leader
of the "Free World."
For New Year's Eve in 1977 Jimmy Carter
flew to Teheran to celebrate the 2500th anniversary of the Persian Empire with
the Shah. The two heads of state dined in the Niyavaran Palace surrounded by
obscene luxury in a city teeming with hideous slums.
In his after dinner speech Carter all
but buried his face in the Shah's lap, displaying a stomach-turning capacity
for obsequious flattery. He praised the "great leadership of the
Shah," and proclaimed Iran a "great island of stability" in a
"troubled" region of the world, which, he gushed, was a great tribute
to "you, Your Majesty," and to "the respect and admiration and
love" which, he alleged, the Iranian people felt for their King, though at
that very moment thousands of them were political prisoners suffering Nazi
torture techniques in Iranian jails.
Continuing in the same vein, Carter declared that "the cause of human
rights is one that also is shared deeply by our people and by the leaders of
our two nations." He concluded on a note of utter devotion: "There is
no leader with whom I have a deeper sense of personal friendship and
gratitude."
A beaming Shah leaped to his feet in
applause, grasping Carter's right hand in both of his.
On the route to the airport the next
morning the mutual admirers failed to notice thousands of young Iranians
pelting the army with rocks along the side streets. Soon, nationwide riots
would break out.
Nine months later, Carter phoned the
Shah during the worst crisis of his entire rule ("Black Friday"),
expressing support following his machine-gunning of dozens of demonstrators
(thousands according to Iranian dissidents) by troops that had been armed and
trained by the United States. The following month Carter received the Shah's
son (who was undergoing training at the United States Air Force Academy at the
time) in Washington and told him: "Our friendship and our alliance
with Iran is one of our important bases on which our entire foreign policy
depends." Speaking of the Shah's liberalization policies, he added,
"We're thankful for this move towards democracy. We know it is opposed by
some who don't like democratic principles, but his progressive administration
is very valuable, I think, to the entire Western world."
By that point, of course, nearly the
entire Iranian population was fed up with the Shah's blood-soaked
"progressive administration" and its boundless corruption. Graft and
bribery were so endemic under his rule that he had amassed a personal fortune
worth billions of dollars, still a large sum today, and a gargantuan one in the
late 1970s.
There can be little doubt that Carter's
complete lack of concern for democracy, in spite of protestations of the
centrality of "human rights" to his administration, was helping
provoke an explosion of popular revulsion at the Shah's misrule.
By January, 1979 the breaking point had
been reached. Everyone was cursing the cold, the snow, and the Shah, and strikes paralyzed the country. As power
cuts plunged the capital into darkness, food supplies ran out and long lines
formed for resupplies of paraffin. Roaming gangs stopped fancy cars to siphon
what they needed while oil production stopped and the army went to work the
fields. With gas lines backing up for hours, soldiers kept order firing
automatic weapons in the air.
The Shah’s henchmen fled like startled
cockroaches. Ministers carted away bags stuffed with bank notes; ladies made
off with jewelry boxes; masterless butlers wandered around in a daze. Suitcases
and crates crammed with paintings, Persian rugs, and precious jewelry, found
their way to Europe and America, leaving palaces and elegant homes suddenly
eerily empty. Bombarded by money transfers, Central Bank workers went out
on strike, refusing to process the deluge.
At Niyavaran palace the Shah sat behind
a bank of guards and surveillance equipment wondering what went wrong.
Surrounded by gilt, beveled mirrors, chandeliers, gold-plated telephones and
jewel-studded gold cigarette boxes, he was plunged into gloom. Anwar Sadat
beckoned him to exile in Egypt.
He fled, and Teheran erupted in joy.
Two weeks later the Ayatollah Khomeini
returned from fifteen years of exile, greeted by a joyous crowd of three
million at the airport.
Two months after that, 99% of the adult population voted for an Islamic
Republic in an extraordinary 95% turnout.
The U.S. client state was no more.
At every stage of its confrontation
with the Islamic Revolution, the U.S. response appeared to be tone deaf and
inept. A little over eight months after Khomeini's return to Iran, Carter
allowed admission of the ailing ex-Shah to a New York hospital for cancer
treatment, and enraged Iranian protesters poured over the U.S. Embassy walls in
Teheran, seizing 66 Americans trapped inside. Telling a lurid tale of
America-backed torture, murder, and looting, they announced themselves as
"followers of the Imam's line," and demanded the return of "the
criminal Shah."
Effigies of President Carter and Uncle
Sam were set aflame. American flags were spat on, trampled, and burned in the
street. Blindfolded Marines, handcuffed behind their backs, were paraded before
TV cameras surrounded by vengeful, chanting mobs. "Death to America! Death
to Carter! Death to the Shah!"
The Pope, offering to mediate the
crisis, was rebuffed by an angry Ayatollah Khomeini: "Where was the
Vatican, when the Shah put our youth in frying pans and sawed off their
legs?"
Although the U.S. media offered
extensive and dramatic coverage of events in Teheran, the non-stop chatter of
the pundits did nothing to enlighten the viewing audience. Terms like Mohamedanism, Mecca, purdah, chador, Sunni,
Shiite, mullah, imam, Ayatollah Khomeini, militant Islam were packaged up
for American viewers in absurd three minute summaries of the meaning of Islam,
which only conveyed the mis-impression that Islam was inherently violent,
dangerous, and anti-American, a view that persists to this day.
Interviews with Iranian officials
alternated with comments from the hostages' parents, bulletins on the ex-Shah's
failing health, and footage of emotional street demonstrations in Iran. The
rituals of the Iranian crowds were cast as though they were sick imitations of
Nuremberg, circuses manipulated by mad dictators caught up in religious frenzy,
in stark contrast to the level-headed millionaires psychoanalyzing their
behavior in American T.V. studios.
Not a single establishment journalist
found the U.S. responsible in any way for its Iran predicament. No one offered
to make amends for the coup of 1953. The Washington
Post dismissed the Shah's use of systematic torture as inconsequential,
since "it can be argued that it was entirely in the tradition of Iranian
history."
In the middle of the hostage crisis
another one occurred in neighboring Iraq, where Saddam Hussein overthrew General Ahmed
Hassan Bakr and executed all his political rivals. A short time later, president
Carter's national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski publicly encouraged him
to attack Iran, which he promptly did, invading in September, 1980 with
"strong U.S. backing," according to war correspondent Robert Fisk.
For Saddam the goal was to seize the
Shatt al-Arab waterway and Iran's oil-rich southwestern Khuzestan region; for
Iran, it was to survive an existential war and defend the Islamic Revolution.
The war lasted eight long years and featured
horrifying trench warfare similar to battles in WWI, with maimings and killings
well into the hundreds of thousands on both sides, while the combined
population of Iran and Iraq was only fifty-seven million. Iraq repeatedly used
nerve and mustard gas thanks to a Department of Commerce license that allowed
an American company to ship Saddam a smorgasbord of deadly agents for years,
and both sides freely bombed civilian populations.
Washington also provided Hussein with
battle plans and satellite data. Over the course of the war, Iraq-U.S.
relations became so close that the Reagan administration barely reacted when
Iraqi missiles hit the USS Stark in
the Gulf, killing several dozen U.S. servicemen. Only when it became
convenient following Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait did Washington criticize Iraq’s appalling human rights record, omitting mention of the U.S.'s starring role in his worst crimes.
One of the most gruesome atrocities of
the war period occurred in 1988, when the U.S.S.
Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655 in an ascending flight path over
civilian airspace in the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people on board. The
American commander knew at the time that he was shooting down a civilian
plane.
Admiral William J. Crowe, Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, established the U.S. official line on the horror,
accusing the Iranians of having brought the attack on themselves with
irresponsible behavior.
The U.S. establishment media suggested
that the Airbus might have been on a suicide mission, that the pilot may have
been deliberately trying to crash his passenger-packed plane into the American
frigate that shot it down. Articles focused on the commander's anguish in having shot the plane down, reporting the
event as a tragic error. President Reagan called it an "understandable
accident." Vice-President Bush declared he would "never apologize for
the United States of America. I don't care what the facts are."
This was all self-serving nonsense.
In an article in the September 1989
issue of the U.S. Naval Institute's Proceedings,
Edward Herman reported in his 1992 book, "Beyond Hypocrisy," David R.
Carlson, commander of the USS Sides,
an escort frigate in the vicinity of the USS Vincennes when it shot the Iranian Airbus down, wrote that he was
disgusted with the U.S. excuses for this act, as well as the attempt to blame
it on the Iranians. He added that the idea that the Vincennes was attempting to defend itself against Iranian attack
was based on a series of lies. "When the decision was made to shoot down
the Airbus, the airliner was climbing, not diving; it was showing the proper
identification friend or foe - IFF (Mode III); and it was in the correct flight
corridor from Bandar Abbas to Dubai. The Vincennes
was never under attack by Iranian aircraft. There was no targeting being done
by the Iranian P3. The conduct of Iranian military forces in the month
preceding the incident was profoundly nonthreatening." According to
Carlson’s account, Herman wrote, for a considerable time before the shootdown
the Vincennes' actions "appeared
to be consistently aggressive, and had become a topic of wardroom conversation." Someone had even jokingly come up with
the nickname "Robo Cruiser" for the Vincennes, and it apparently stuck.
Nevertheless, the New York Times continued to support the official story that the
Iranians were to blame for the "accidental" shoot-down and never
reported on Commander Carlson's correction.
Adding to the horror, the personnel on
the Vincennes were given a hero's
welcome when they returned to the dock in San Diego, and later made it onto
national TV and became celebrities. In April, 1990, Herman wrote, the commander
of the Vincennes was given the Legion
of Merit award for "exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance
of outstanding service" and for "the calm and professional
atmosphere" under his command. The destruction of the Airbus and the
killing of 290 passengers was not explicitly mentioned in the citation.
Nearly forty years later, Washington is
still attacking Iran, based largely on the same highly caricatured image of the
country it has held since 1979, and has learned nothing about the reality of
its own relations with Teheran. The U.S. continues to be in the Iranians' back yard -
relentlessly - supporting dictatorships, overthrowing regimes, backing
genocidal Israel to the hilt, all of which results in a horrifying record of
slaughtered civilians that has literally appalled the entire world.
Meanwhile, the Iranian proxies
Washington accuses of terrorism are all products, directly or indirectly, of
its own foreign policy. It was Israel and the United States, after all, who
took a small, Islamic group offshoot from the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt
called Hamas in the early eighties and built it up and funded it to counteract
the secular Palestine Liberation Organization with a religious group. Hizbollah
arose because the U.S. backed Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, killing
thousands of Shiites who had no real stake in the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
The rise of ISIS a generation later is directly attributable to the Bush-Cheney
invasion of Iraq in 2003. And Al Qaeda, which preceded it, grew out of U.S. support for
the mujahedeen in Afghanistan after
the Soviets invaded that country in 1979.
Aside from the obvious fact that the
U.S. is far and away the world leader in committing acts of terrorism, the
bungling incompetence at protecting its own declared interests is staggering.
Meanwhile, to this day a bipartisan consensus
reigns in Washington that the U.S. somehow has the moral standing to judge
Teheran for its human rights record.
But as is so often the case with imperial moralizing, the crimes of the accused
pale in comparison to the horrors perpetrated by those who wish to see them self-righteously
judged.