The Coup: 1953, the CIA, and the Roots of Modern U.S.-Iranian Relations
deals with such an engaging topic that even this new book can't really
make it boring, hard as it seems to try. When asked what historical
figure I would most like to bring back to life and have a talk with I
tend to think of Mossadeq, the complex, Gandhian, elected leader,
denounced as both Hitler and a communist (as would become part of the
standard procedure) and overthrown in an early CIA coup (1953) -- a coup
that encouraged dozens more around the globe and led straight to the
Iranian revolution and to today's Iranian distrust of the United States.
I'm more inclined to believe that current Iranian distrust of the U.S.
government is well-merited than blaming it on a long-ago coup implies,
but the coup lies at the root of Iranian and worldwide skepticism about
generous U.S. intentions.
It's also an interesting fact, supported by this case, that some of
the best government actions, taken by any government around the world,
have occurred just prior to various U.S.-backed violent coups -- and I
include in that category the U.S. New Deal, followed by the unsuccessful
Wall Street coup attempt rejected by Smedley Butler. Mossadegh had just
done, among other things, these: Slashed the military budget 15%,
launched an investigation into weapons deals, retired 135 senior
officers, caused the military and police to report to the government
rather than to the monarch, slashed stipends to the royal family,
restricted the Shah's access to foreign diplomats, transferred the royal
estates to the state, and drafted bills to give women the vote and
protect the press and the independence of the Supreme Court and taxing
extreme wealth by 2% and giving workers healthcare and upping peasants'
share of the harvest by 15%. Facing an oil embargo, he cut state
salaries, eliminated chauffeured cars for high officials, and restricted
luxury imports. All of that was in addition, of course, to the cause of
the coup: his insistence on nationalizing the oil from which a British
company, and Britain, had been profiting enormously.
The bulk of the book is actually the lead-up to the coup, and much of
the emphasis is on proving other historians wrong in their
interpretations. Supposedly, historians tend to blame Mossadeq for
intransigence, as well as to blame the U.S. action on its Cold War
ideology. The author, Ervand Abrahamian, on the contrary, blames the
British and Americans, and explains why this was centrally a question of
who would control the oil lying underneath Iran. My reaction to that
was the same as yours might be: No kidding!
So, reading this book is a bit like reading criticism of the
corporate news after you've avoided the corporate news. It's good to see
such outrageous lunacy debunked, but on the other hand you were getting
along just fine not knowing it existed. Reading Richard Rorty, who gets
an odd mention on the last page of the book, is somewhat similar --
it's great to see a fine critique of the stupid things philosophers
think, but not knowing they thought them wasn't really so unpleasant
either. Still, in all of these case, what you don't know can hurt you.
What a group of bad historians thinks about the history of U.S.-Iranian
relations can inform current diplomacy (or lack thereof) in ways that
are easier to spot if you know exactly what these people have deluded
themselves with.
Abrahamian does document numerous historians who believe the British
were reasonable and ready to compromise, whereas -- as the author shows
-- that actually describes Mossadeq, while the British were unwilling to
do any such thing. His inclusion of Stephen Kinzer in the list of
historians getting it wrong is probably the most stretched, however. I
don't think Kinzer actually believes that Mossadeq was to blame. In
fact, I think Kinzer not only blames the United States and Britain, but
he also openly admits that what they did was a really bad thing (in
contrast to Abrahamian's emotion-free recounting).
Abrahamian gives extreme importance to the economic motivation, as
opposed to racism for example. But of course the two work together, and
Abrahamian documents both of them. If Iranians looked like white
Americans, the acceptability of stealing their oil would be less clear
in all minds, then and now.
The 1953 coup became a model. The arming and training of the local
military, the bribing of local officials, the use and abuse of the
United Nations, the propaganda against the target, the stirring up of
confusion and chaos, the kidnapping and deportation, the misinformation
campaigns. Abrahamian points out that even U.S. diplomats in Iran at the
time didn't know the U.S. role in the coup. The same is almost
certainly true today about Honduras or Ukraine. Most Americans have no
idea why Cuba fears an open internet. Just foreign backwardness and
stupidity, we're supposed to think. No there's an ideology that both
fueled the ongoing age of the CIA / USAID / NED coup and has been
reinforced by its criminal adventures.