The shipment of arms to Iran through Israel didn't begin in 1985, when the congressional inquiry and the special prosecutor pick up the story. It began almost immediately after the fall of the Shah in the Iranian Revolution of 1979. By 1982, it was public knowledge that Israel was providing a large part of the arms for Iran - you could read it on the front page of the New York Times.
As usual, mainstream history is upside down. Looks like Khomeini was more 'their man' than the Shah. I always thought the Savak were like the Stasi. More research needed, no time left.
from above
Quote:
The high Israeli officials involved also gave the reasons: to establish links with elements of the military in Iran who might overthrow the regime, restoring the arrangements that prevailed under the Shah -- standard operating procedure.
Joined: 03 Apr 2007 Posts: 101 Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posted: Thu Apr 26, 2007 1:54 am Post subject:
Very interesting - thanks rodin.
I guess from 1953 to the mid 1970's is plenty of time for the Shah to outlive his usefulness. And it's plain for all the world to see in that video, that he simply didn't have the right attitude for doing business, did he?
Was he killed? I thought he was exiled and died naturally years later.
You are correct. My bad. I made an 'assumption'.
More evidence/analysis that he was outed by the 'West'....
Quote:
With the fall of the Shah and the coming to power of the fanatical Khomeini adherents in Iran, chaos was unleashed. By May 1979, the new Khomeini regime had singled out the country's nuclear power development plans and announced cancellation of the entire program for French and German nuclear reactor construction.
Iran's oil exports to the world were suddenly cut off, some 3 million barrels per day. Curiously, Saudi Arabian production in the critical days of January 1979 was also cut by some 2 million barrels per day. To add to the pressures on world oil supply, British Petroleum declared force majeure and cancelled major contracts for oil supply. Prices on the Rotterdam spot market, heavily influenced by BP and Royal Cutch Shell as the largest oil traders, soared in early 1979 as a result. The second oil shock of the 1970s was fully under way.
Indications are that the actual planners of the Iranian Khomeini coup in London and within the senior ranks of the U.S. liberal establishment decided to keep President Carter largely ignorant of the policy and its ultimate objectives. The ensuing energy crisis in the United States was a major factor in bringing about Carter's defeat a year later.
There was never a real shortage in the world supply of petroleum.
Joined: 09 Jun 2006 Posts: 645 Location: UK Midlands
Posted: Thu Apr 26, 2007 8:42 am Post subject:
Nice find.
You made reference to the Iran contra affair. This had little to do with arms a FAR more to do with the flow of heroin from the Bekaa Valley and other regions [the Columbian thing was just one more ongoing episode].
Given what we know about what went on with the heroin supply [in the UK] when the Shah was deposed I would suggest when he said:
"I'll stop there..."
one of the things he would have listed was the struggle for the control of the drugs trade in his region by western above-government organisations.
More importantly the Shah's downfall was engineered to bring about a supposed Islamic theocracy in Iran and to ruin Carter's Presidency after he had succeeded in bringing Israel and Egypt to the Camp David Peace Accords and signing the SALT II Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty between the Soviet Union and the USA.
The fait accompli Iranian Hostage Crisis was the final nail in his coffin and heralded the arch B movie marionette Ronnie Reagan into power on the day the hostages were released.
The new re-shaping of Eurasia had begun in earnest.
Pay back for Nixon too ? _________________ The Medium is the Massage - Marshall McLuhan.
Joined: 03 Apr 2007 Posts: 101 Location: Brisbane, Australia
Posted: Thu Apr 26, 2007 9:59 am Post subject:
Here is an interesting graph:
And the price of oil more than doubled in 1979, from ~$15 to ~$40. Poor old Iran never has quite recovered from having its revolution, as far as oil production is concerned.
The fait accompli Iranian Hostage Crisis was the final nail in his coffin and heralded the arch B movie marionette Ronnie Reagan into power on the day the hostages were released.
Interestingly, Ahmedinejad has been identified by six of the hostages as having been one of their captors. See here:
This topic links in to some of the comments on the recent "British Iranian Hostages" thread, here , here and here.
There are hints here that the so-called "enemy of the west", Iran, and her radical Islamic leaders, who apparently regard the west as "the Great Satan", may not be the enemies of the PTB at all... _________________ "Nothing can trouble you but your own imagination." ~ Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj
Newly released documents reveal officials fearing eroding Western control of Iranian oil, motivating a plan to fund opposition groups and propaganda.
Newly released documents by the United States Department of State provide an inside look at the motivations and tactics used by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in orchestrating the 1953 coup in Iran that toppled the democratically elected government of former Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh, reinstating the rule of the U.S.-friendly Shah monarchy.
In over 1,000 pages of internal cables and letters released with little publicity on June 15th, U.S. officials discussed western economic and political interests in Iran, as well as the tactics and viability of arranging a coup in the year leading up to Mosaddegh's eventual removal.
The plot was eventually successful, although knowledge that the CIA had been involved led to widespread popular anger that some have said laid the conditions for the Iranian Revolution of 1979, when the U.S. Embassy was occupied.
“The things we did were 'covert',” President Dwight Eisenhower remarked in a diary entry included in the recently released documents. “If knowledge of them became public, we would not only be embarrassed in that region, but our chances to do anything of like nature in the future would almost totally disappear.”
Running through the documents is a pervasive concern over eroding western influence, and the potential for Communism to gain a foothold in the oil rich region.
One CIA official articulated U.S. and British fears well when he said in a letter to Eisenhower that since Mosaddegh's election, there had been “a steady decrease in the power and influence of Western democracies and the building up of a situation where a Communist takeover is becoming more and more of a possibility.”
Mosaddegh had implemented sweeping social and economic reforms in the country, most notably implementing a taxation on land rents, and nationalizing the oil industry, which had been controlled by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, now called British Petroleum, for almost half a century. In what was a highly popular move, the new Prime Minister aimed to expropriate the assets of the company in order to use Iranian oil for the construction of social services and the building of a strong national economy.
The documents reveal the CIA working closely with a U.K. deeply concerned by their loss of oil hegemony in the country.
Officials were fearful that western countries would be “deprived of the enormous assets represented by Iranian oil production and reserves,” and feared a domino-effect whereby the Middle-East, along with “some 60% of the world's oil reserves, would fall into Communist control.”
TPAJAX, the codenamed CIA coup plot planned against Mosaddagh, was the U.S. and U.K.'s response to Iran's attempt to assert its independence and economic sovereignty.
In documents taking stock of “western assets” in Iran months before the coup took place, the CIA notes that they were stockpiling “enough arms and demolition material to support a 10,000 -man guerilla organization for six months,” were paying millions of dollars in bribes, and were supplying arms and payment to tribal groups in the south to organize a “resistance” to the Iranian government.
In documents which detail operations in the region, paragraphs subheaded as “political and psychological warfare,” and “paramilitary operations” are still left classified, leaving the full extent of some operations a mystery.
Assessing their heavy diplomatic, military, and covert presence in Iranian institutions, CIA officials were confident in their ability to exploit internal political interests within the Iranian government that “would welcome secret American intervention” to help them achieve their “individual or group political ambitions.”
In the year leading up to Mosaddegh's removal and immediately following it, U.S. officials were keenly aware that one of their most important tasks was to affect public opinion through mass propoganda campaigns. They were careful in documents to distinguish between “public” and “private” lines on various issues.
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Documents refer to a “group serving the CIA which is capable of providing reasonably effective pro-Shah propaganda,” although they acknowledge their limitations in effectively countering pro-Mossadegh sentiment.
Touching on the need to bolster a “propaganda machine”, as they refer to it, an official suggests that following a successful coup “the U.S. might covertly assist in subsidizing some pro-government newspapers and could openly make radio equipment and technical advice available to a new government’s effective operation of Radio Tehran.”
It is repeatedly emphasized that Iranian public opinion was highly antagonistic to foreign oil interests, and that “concealing the foreign hand,” is of utmost importance in any change of government. Documents also repeatedly state that the “oil question” must be left out of all public discourse surrounding the change in government.
“It would be literally fatal to any non-communist successor to Mosaddegh if the Iranian public gained an impression that the new premier was a 'foreign tool',” a coup-planning document says.
The coup almost failed, as Mosaddegh found out about the plans and left to Rome. However, the CIA then proceeded to fuel pro-Shah protests which reinstated monarchy in Iran. Following the coup, one official expressed hope that “Iran will again assume its place in the pro-Western grouping of nations.” _________________ --
'Suppression of truth, human spirit and the holy chord of justice never works long-term. Something the suppressors never get.' David Southwell
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