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http://www.globalpolicy.org/empire/history/2000/0416ciairan.htm
Secrets of History: The CIA in Iran
By James Risen
New York Times
April 16, 2000

The Central Intelligence Agency's secret history of its covert operation to
overthrow Iran's government in 1953 offers an inside look at how the agency
stumbled into success, despite a series of mishaps that derailed its
original plans. Written in 1954 by one of the coup's chief planners, the
history details how United States and British officials plotted the military
coup that returned the shah of Iran to power and toppled Iran's elected
prime minister, an ardent nationalist.

The document shows that:

• Britain, fearful of Iran's plans to nationalize its oil industry, came up
with the idea for the coup in 1952 and pressed the United States to mount a
joint operation to remove the prime minister.
• The C.I.A. and S.I.S., the British intelligence service, handpicked Gen.
Fazlollah Zahedi to succeed Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh and covertly
funneled $5 million to General Zahedi's regime two days after the coup
prevailed.
• Iranians working for the C.I.A. and posing as Communists harassed
religious leaders and staged the bombing of one cleric's home in a campaign
to turn the country's Islamic religious community against Mossadegh's
government.
• The shah's cowardice nearly killed the C.I.A. operation. Fearful of
risking his throne, the Shah repeatedly refused to sign C.I.A.-written royal
decrees to change the government. The agency arranged for the shah's twin
sister, Princess Ashraf Pahlevi, and Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, the father
of the Desert Storm commander, to act as intermediaries to try to keep him
from wilting under pressure. He still fled the country just before the coup
succeeded.

How a Plot Convulsed Iran in '53 (and in '79)

For nearly five decades, America's role in the military coup that ousted
Iran's elected prime minister and returned the shah to power has been lost
to history, the subject of fierce debate in Iran and stony silence in the
United States. One by one, participants have retired or died without
revealing key details, and the Central Intelligence Agency said a number of
records of the operation — its first successful overthrow of a foreign
government — had been destroyed.

But a copy of the agency's secret history of the coup has surfaced,
revealing the inner workings of a plot that set the stage for the Islamic
revolution in 1979, and for a generation of anti-American hatred in one of
the Middle East's most powerful countries. The document, which remains
classified, discloses the pivotal role British intelligence officials played
in initiating and planning the coup, and it shows that Washington and London
shared an interest in maintaining the West's control over Iranian oil.

The secret history, written by the C.I.A.'s chief coup planner and obtained
by The New York Times, says the operation's success was mostly a matter of
chance. The document shows that the agency had almost complete contempt for
the man it was empowering, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, whom it derided as a
vacillating coward. And it recounts, for the first time, the agency's
tortured efforts to seduce and cajole the shah into taking part in his own
coup.

The operation, code-named TP-Ajax, was the blueprint for a succession of
C.I.A. plots to foment coups and destabilize governments during the cold
war — including the agency's successful coup in Guatemala in 1954 and the
disastrous Cuban intervention known as the Bay of Pigs in 1961. In more than
one instance, such operations led to the same kind of long-term animosity
toward the United States that occurred in Iran.

The history says agency officers orchestrating the Iran coup worked directly
with royalist Iranian military officers, handpicked the prime minister's
replacement, sent a stream of envoys to bolster the shah's courage, directed
a campaign of bombings by Iranians posing as members of the Communist Party,
and planted articles and editorial cartoons in newspapers.

But on the night set for Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh's overthrow,
almost nothing went according to the meticulously drawn plans, the secret
history says. In fact, C.I.A. officials were poised to flee the country when
several Iranian officers recruited by the agency, acting on their own, took
command of a pro-shah demonstration in Tehran and seized the government.

Two days after the coup, the history discloses, agency officials funneled $5
million to Iran to help the government they had installed consolidate power.

The outlines of the American role in the coup were disclosed in Iran at the
outset and later in the memoirs of C.I.A. officers and other published
accounts. But many specifics have remained classified, and the secret
history obtained by The New York Times is the first detailed government
account of the coup to be made public.

The C.I.A. has been slow to make available the Iran files. Two directors of
central intelligence, Robert Gates and R. James Woolsey, vowed to declassify
records of the agency's early covert actions, including the coup. But the
agency said three years ago that a number of relevant documents had been
destroyed in the early 1960's. A C.I.A. spokesman said Friday that the
agency had retained about 1,000 pages of documents related to the coup,
besides the history and an internal account written later. He said the
papers destroyed in the early 1960's were duplicates and working files.

The chief State Department historian said that his office received a copy of
the history seven years ago but that no decision on declassifying it had yet
been made.

The secret history, along with operational assessments written by coup
planners, was provided to The Times by a former official who kept a copy. It
was written in March 1954 by Dr. Donald N. Wilber, an expert in Persian
architecture, who as one of the leading planners believed that covert
operatives had much to learn from history.

In less expansive memoirs published in 1986, Dr. Wilber asserted that the
Iran coup was different from later C.I.A. efforts. Its American planners, he
said, had stirred up considerable unrest in Iran, giving Iranians a clear
choice between instability and supporting the shah. The move to oust the
prime minister, he wrote, thus gained substantial popular support. Dr.
Wilber's memoirs were heavily censored by the agency, but he was allowed to
refer to the existence of his secret history. "If this history had been read
by the planners of the Bay of Pigs," he wrote, "there would have been no
such operation."

"From time to time," he continued, "I gave talks on the operation to various
groups within the agency, and, in hindsight, one might wonder why no one
from the Cuban desk ever came or read the history."

The coup was a turning point in modern Iranian history and remains a
persistent irritant in Tehran-Washington relations. It consolidated the
power of the shah, who ruled with an iron hand for 26 more years in close
contact with to the United States. He was toppled by militants in 1979.
Later that year, marchers went to the American Embassy, took diplomats
hostage and declared that they had unmasked a "nest of spies" who had been
manipulating Iran for decades.

The Islamic government of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini supported terrorist
attacks against American interests largely because of the long American
history of supporting the shah. Even under more moderate rulers, many
Iranians still resent the United States' role in the coup and its support of
the shah.

Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright, in an address in March,
acknowledged the coup's pivotal role in the troubled relationship and came
closer to apologizing than any American official ever has before. "The
Eisenhower administration believed its actions were justified for strategic
reasons," she said. "But the coup was clearly a setback for Iran's political
development. And it is easy to see now why many Iranians continue to resent
this intervention by America in their internal affairs."

The history spells out the calculations to which Dr. Albright referred in
her speech. Britain, it says, initiated the plot in 1952. The Truman
administration rejected it, but President Eisenhower approved it shortly
after taking office in 1953, because of fears about oil and Communism. The
document pulls few punches, acknowledging at one point that the agency
baldly lied to its British allies. Dr. Wilber reserves his most withering
asides for the agency's local allies, referring to "the recognized
incapacity of Iranians to plan or act in a thoroughly logical manner."

THE ROOTS
Britain Fights Oil Nationalism

The coup had its roots in a British showdown with Iran, restive under
decades of near-colonial British domination. The prize was Iran's oil
fields. Britain occupied Iran in World War II to protect a supply route to
its ally, the Soviet Union, and to prevent the oil from falling into the
hands of the Nazis — ousting the shah's father, whom it regarded as
unmanageable. It retained control over Iran's oil after the war through the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.

In 1951, Iran's Parliament voted to nationalize the oil industry, and
legislators backing the law elected its leading advocate, Dr. Mossadegh, as
prime minister. Britain responded with threats and sanctions. Dr. Mossadegh,
a European-educated lawyer then in his early 70's, prone to tears and
outbursts, refused to back down. In meetings in November and December 1952,
the secret history says, British intelligence officials startled their
American counterparts with a plan for a joint operation to oust the
nettlesome prime minister.

The Americans, who "had not intended to discuss this question at all,"
agreed to study it, the secret history says. It had attractions.
Anti-Communism had risen to a fever pitch in Washington, and officials were
worried that Iran might fall under the sway of the Soviet Union, a
historical presence there.

In March 1953, an unexpected development pushed the plot forward: the
C.I.A.'s Tehran station reported that an Iranian general had approached the
American Embassy about supporting an army-led coup. The newly inaugurated
Eisenhower administration was intrigued. The coalition that elected Dr.
Mossadegh was splintering, and the Iranian Communist Party, the Tudeh, had
become active. Allen W. Dulles, the director of central intelligence,
approved $1 million on April 4 to be used "in any way that would bring about
the fall of Mossadegh," the history says. "The aim was to bring to power a
government which would reach an equitable oil settlement, enabling Iran to
become economically sound and financially solvent, and which would
vigorously prosecute the dangerously strong Communist Party."

Within days agency officials identified a high-ranking officer, Gen.
Fazlollah Zahedi, as the man to spearhead a coup. Their plan called for the
shah to play a leading role.

"A shah-General Zahedi combination, supported by C.I.A. local assets and
financial backing, would have a good chance of overthrowing Mossadegh,"
officials wrote, "particularly if this combination should be able to get the
largest mobs in the streets and if a sizable portion of the Tehran garrison
refused to carry out Mossadegh's orders."

But according to the history, planners had doubts about whether the shah
could carry out such a bold operation. His family had seized Iran's throne
just 32 years earlier, when his powerful father led a coup of his own. But
the young shah, agency officials wrote, was "by nature a creature of
indecision, beset by formless doubts and fears," often at odds with his
family, including Princess Ashraf, his "forceful and scheming twin sister."
Also, the shah had what the C.I.A. termed a "pathological fear" of British
intrigues, a potential obstacle to a joint operation.

In May 1953 the agency sent Dr. Wilber to Cyprus to meet Norman Darbyshire,
chief of the Iran branch of British intelligence, to make initial coup
plans. Assuaging the fears of the shah was high on their agenda; a document
from the meeting said he was to be persuaded that the United States and
Britain "consider the oil question secondary."

The conversation at the meeting turned to a touchy subject, the identity of
key agents inside Iran. The British said they had recruited two brothers
named Rashidian. The Americans, the secret history discloses, did not trust
the British and lied about the identity of their best "assets" inside Iran.

C.I.A. officials were divided over whether the plan drawn up in Cyprus could
work. The Tehran station warned headquarters that the "the shah would not
act decisively against Mossadegh." And it said General Zahedi, the man
picked to lead the coup, "appeared lacking in drive, energy and concrete
plans." Despite the doubts, the agency's Tehran station began disseminating
"gray propaganda," passing out anti-Mossadegh cartoons in the streets and
planting unflattering articles in the local press.

THE PLOTTING
Trying to Persuade a Reluctant Shah

The plot was under way, even though the shah was a reluctant warrior and Mr.
Eisenhower had yet to give his final approval.

In early June, American and British intelligence officials met again, this
time in Beirut, and put the finishing touches on the strategy. Soon
afterward, the chief of the C.I.A.'s Near East and Africa division, Kermit
Roosevelt, a grandson of Theodore Roosevelt, arrived in Tehran to direct it.

The shah was a problem from the start. The plan called for him to stand fast
as the C.I.A. stirred up popular unrest and then, as the country lurched
toward chaos, to issue royal decrees dismissing Dr. Mossadegh and appointing
General Zahedi prime minister. The agency sought to "produce such pressure
on the shah that it would be easier for him to sign the papers required of
him than it would be to refuse," the secret history states. Officials turned
to his sister for help.

On July 11, President Eisenhower finally signed off on the plan. At about
the same time, C.I.A. and British intelligence officers visited Princess
Ashraf on the French Riviera and persuaded her to return to Iran and tell
her brother to follow the script. The return of the unpopular princess
unleashed a storm of protest from pro-Mossadegh forces. The shah was furious
that she had come back without his approval and refused at first to see her.
But a palace staff member — another British agent, according to the secret
history — gained Ashraf access on July 29.

The history does not reveal what the siblings said to each other. But the
princess gave her brother the news that C.I.A. officials had enlisted Gen.
H. Norman Schwarzkopf in the coup campaign. General Schwarzkopf, the father
of the Persian Gulf war commander, had befriended the shah a decade earlier
while leading the United States military mission to Iran, and he told the
agency "he was sure he could get the required cooperation."

The British, too, sought to sway the shah and assure him their agents spoke
for London. A British agent, Asadollah Rashidian, approached him in late
July and invited him to select a phrase that would then be broadcast at
prearranged times on the BBC's Persian-language program — as proof that Mr.
Rashidian spoke for the British. The exercise did not seem to have much
effect. The shah told Mr. Rashidian on July 30 and 31 that he had heard the
broadcast, but "requested time to assess the situation."

In early August, the C.I.A. stepped up the pressure. Iranian operatives
pretending to be Communists threatened Muslim leaders with "savage
punishment if they opposed Mossadegh," seeking to stir anti-Communist
sentiment in the religious community. In addition, the secret history says,
the house of at least one prominent Muslim was bombed by C.I.A. agents
posing as Communists. It does not say whether anyone was hurt in this
attack.

The agency was also intensifying its propaganda campaign. A leading
newspaper owner was granted a personal loan of about $45,000, "in the belief
that this would make his organ amenable to our purposes."

But the shah remained intransigent. In an Aug. 1 meeting with General
Schwarzkopf, he refused to sign the C.I.A.-written decrees firing Mr.
Mossadegh and appointing General Zahedi. He said he doubted that the army
would support him in a showdown. During the meeting, the document says, the
shah was so convinced that the palace was bugged that he "led the general
into the grand ballroom, pulled a small table to its exact center" and got
onto it to talk, insisting that the general do the same. "This meeting was
to be followed by a series of additional ones, some between Roosevelt and
the shah and some between Rashidian and the shah, in which relentless
pressure was exerted in frustrating attempts to overcome an entrenched
attitude of vacillation and indecision," the history states.

Dr. Mossadegh had by now figured out that there was a plot against him. He
moved to consolidate power by calling for a national referendum to dissolve
Parliament. The results of the Aug. 4 referendum were clearly rigged in his
favor; The New York Times reported the same day that the prime minister had
won 99.9 percent of the vote. This only helped the plotters, providing "an
issue on which Mossadegh could be relentlessly attacked" by the
agency-backed opposition press.

But the shah still wouldn't move against Dr. Mossadegh. "On Aug. 3rd," the
secret history says, "Roosevelt had a long and inconclusive session with the
shah," who "stated that he was not an adventurer, and hence, could not take
the chances of one.

"Roosevelt pointed out that there was no other way by which the government
could be changed and the test was now between Mossadegh and his force and
the shah and the army, which was still with him, but which would soon slip
away." Mr. Roosevelt told the shah "that failure to act could lead only to a
Communist Iran or to a second Korea."

Still haunted by doubts, the shah asked Mr. Roosevelt if President
Eisenhower could tell him what to do. "By complete coincidence and great
good fortune," the secret history says, "the president, while addressing the
governors' convention in Seattle on 4 August, deviated from his script to
state by implication that the United States would not sit by idly and see
Iran fall behind the Iron Curtain."

By Aug. 10, the shah had finally agreed to see General Zahedi and a few army
officers involved in the plot, but still refused to sign the decrees. The
C.I.A. then sent Mr. Rashidian to say Mr. Roosevelt "would leave in complete
disgust unless the shah took action within a few days." The shah finally
signed the decrees on Aug. 13. Word that he would support an army-led coup
spread rapidly among the army officers backing General Zahedi.

THE COUP
First Few Days Look Disastrous

The coup began on the night of Aug. 15 and was immediately compromised by a
talkative Iranian Army officer whose remarks were relayed to Mr. Mossadegh.
The operation, the secret history says, "still might have succeeded in spite
of this advance warning had not most of the participants proved to be inept
or lacking in decision at the critical juncture."

Dr. Mossadegh's chief of staff, Gen. Taghi Riahi, learned of the plot hours
before it was to begin and sent his deputy to the barracks of the Imperial
Guard. The deputy was arrested there, according to the history, just as
pro-shah soldiers were fanning out across the city arresting other senior
officials. Telephone lines between army and government offices were cut, and
the telephone exchange was occupied. But phones inexplicably continued to
function, which gave Dr. Mossadegh's forces a key advantage. General Riahi
also eluded the pro-shah units, rallying commanders to the prime minister's
side.

Pro-shah soldiers sent to arrest Dr. Mossadegh at his home were instead
captured. The top military officer working with General Zahedi fled when he
saw tanks and loyal government soldiers at army headquarters. The next
morning, the history states, the Tehran radio announced that a coup against
the government had failed, and Dr. Mossadegh scrambled to strengthen his
hold on the army and key installations. C.I.A. officers inside the embassy
were flying blind; the history says they had "no way of knowing what was
happening."

Mr. Roosevelt left the embassy and tracked down General Zahedi, who was in
hiding north of Tehran. Surprisingly, the general was not ready to abandon
the operation. The coup, the two men agreed, could still work, provided they
could persuade the public that General Zahedi was the lawful prime minister.

To accomplish this, the history discloses, the coup plotters had to get out
the news that the shah had signed the two decrees. The C.I.A. station in
Tehran sent a message to The Associated Press in New York, asserting that
"unofficial reports are current to the effect that leaders of the plot are
armed with two decrees of the shah, one dismissing Mossadegh and the other
appointing General Zahedi to replace him."

The C.I.A. and its agents also arranged for the decrees to be mentioned in
some Tehran papers, the history says. The propaganda initiative quickly
bogged down. Many of the C.I.A.'s Iranian agents were under arrest or on the
run. That afternoon, agency operatives prepared a statement from General
Zahedi that they hoped to distribute publicly. But they could not find a
printing press that was not being watched by forces loyal to the prime
minister.

On Aug. 16, prospects of reviving the operation were dealt a seemingly a
fatal blow when it was learned that the shah had bolted to Baghdad. C.I.A.
headquarters cabled Tehran urging Mr. Roosevelt, the station chief, to leave
immediately. He did not agree, insisting that there was still "a slight
remaining chance of success," if the shah would broadcast an address on the
Baghdad radio and General Zahedi took an aggressive stand.

The first sign that the tide might turn came with reports that Iranian
soldiers had broken up Tudeh, or Communist, groups, beating them and making
them chant their support for the shah. "The station continued to feel that
the project was not quite dead," the secret history recounts. Meanwhile, Dr.
Mossadegh had overreached, playing into the C.I.A.'s hands by dissolving
Parliament after the coup.

On the morning of Aug. 17 the shah finally announced from Baghdad that he
had signed the decrees — though he had by now delayed so long that plotters
feared it was too late. At this critical point Dr. Mossadegh let down his
guard. Lulled by the shah's departure and the arrests of some officers
involved in the coup, the government recalled most troops it had stationed
around the city, believing that the danger had passed. That night the C.I.A.
arranged for General Zahedi and other key Iranian agents and army officers
to be smuggled into the embassy compound "in the bottom of cars and in
closed jeeps" for a "council of war."

They agreed to start a counterattack on Aug. 19, sending a leading cleric
from Tehran to the holy city of Qum to try to orchestrate a call for a holy
war against Communism. (The religious forces they were trying to manipulate
would years later call the United States "the Great Satan.") Using travel
papers forged by the C.I.A., key army officers went to outlying army
garrisons to persuade commanders to join the coup.

Once again, the shah disappointed the C.I.A. He left Baghdad for Rome the
next day, apparently an exile. Newspapers supporting Dr. Mossadegh reported
that the Pahlevi dynasty had come to an end, and a statement from the
Communist Party's central committee attributed the coup attempt to
"Anglo-American intrigue." Demonstrators ripped down imperial statues -- as
they would again 26 years later during the Islamic revolution.

The C.I.A. station cabled headquarters for advice on whether to "continue
with TP-Ajax or withdraw."

"Headquarters spent a day featured by depression and despair," the history
states, adding, "The message sent to Tehran on the night of Aug. 18 said
that 'the operation has been tried and failed,' and that 'in the absence of
strong recommendations to the contrary operations against Mossadegh should
be discontinued.'"

THE SUCCESS
C.I.A. and Moscow Are Both Surprised

But just as the Americans were ready to quit, the mood on the streets of
Tehran shifted. On the morning of Aug. 19, several Tehran papers published
the shah's long-awaited decrees, and soon pro-shah crowds were building in
the streets. "They needed only leadership," the secret history says. And
Iranian agents of the C.I.A. provided it. Without specific orders, a
journalist who was one of the agency's most important Iranian agents led a
crowd toward Parliament, inciting people to set fire to the offices of a
newspaper owned by Dr. Mossadegh's foreign minister. Another Iranian C.I.A.
agent led a crowd to sack the offices of pro-Tudeh papers. "The news that
something quite startling was happening spread at great speed throughout the
city," the history states.

The C.I.A. tried to exploit the situation, sending urgent messages that the
Rashidian brothers and two key American agents should "swing the security
forces to the side of the demonstrators." But things were now moving far too
quickly for the agency to manage. An Iranian Army colonel who had been
involved in the plot several days earlier suddenly appeared outside
Parliament with a tank, while members of the now-disbanded Imperial Guard
seized trucks and drove through the streets. "By 10:15 there were pro-shah
truckloads of military personnel at all the main squares," the secret
history says.

By noon the crowds began to receive direct leadership from a few officers
involved in the plot and some who had switched sides. Within an hour the
central telegraph office fell, and telegrams were sent to the provinces
urging a pro-shah uprising. After a brief shootout, police headquarters and
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs fell as well.

The Tehran radio remained the biggest prize. With the government's fate
uncertain, it was broadcasting a program on cotton prices. But by early
afternoon a mass of civilians, army officers and policemen overwhelmed it.
Pro-shah speakers went on the air, broadcasting the coup's success and
reading the royal decrees.

At the embassy, C.I.A. officers were elated, and Mr. Roosevelt got General
Zahedi out of hiding. An army officer found a tank and drove him to the
radio station, where he spoke to the nation. Dr. Mossadegh and other
government officials were rounded up, while officers supporting General
Zahedi placed "known supporters of TP-Ajax" in command of all units of the
Tehran garrison.

The Soviet Union was caught completely off-guard. Even as the Mossadegh
government was falling, the Moscow radio was broadcasting a story on "the
failure of the American adventure in Iran." But C.I.A. headquarters was as
surprised as Moscow. When news of the coup's success arrived, it "seemed to
be a bad joke, in view of the depression that Throughout the day, Washington
got most of its information from news agencies, receiving only two
cablegrams from the station. Mr. Roosevelt later explained that if he had
told headquarters what was going on, "London and Washington would have
thought they were crazy and told them to stop immediately," the history
states. Still, the C.I.A. took full credit inside the government. The
following year it overthrew the government of Guatemala, and a myth
developed that the agency could topple governments anywhere in the world.

Iran proved that third world king-making could be heady. "It was a day that
should never have ended," the C.I.A.'s secret history said, describing Aug.
19, 1953. "For it carried with it such a sense of excitement, of
satisfaction and of jubilation that it is doubtful whether any other can
come up to it."

still hung on from the day before," the history says.





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credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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Om

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