Ioseb
Besarionis due Jughashvili or Joseph Vissarionocivh Stalin, the
strongman of the USSR died. Elizabeth Alexandra Mary was crowned queen
of England. James D. Watson and Francis H.C. Crick announced the
discovery of the double-helix structure of DNA. Cambodia declares its
independence from France. Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay completed
the first recorded ascent to the summit of Mount Everest. Jonas Salk
gave himself and his family the polio vaccine. The Korean War came to an
end. The North Sea flood left 1,835 people dead in the Netherlands.
History
does not pause. Natural disasters do not retire. The year 1953 was not
an exception. Name the year and ask a Sri Lankan, ‘what happened in
1953?’ The likely answer would be ‘The Hartal.’ The answer would be
different in each country. Sometimes it is personal but sometimes it is
of national importance.
Len Hutton’s Englishmen defeated
Australia to win ‘The Ashes’ for the first time in 19 years that year
but few would remember the fact. It must have been big news back then.
Ask any citizen of the United Kingdom to name a single event that had an
overwhelming impact on that country in 1953 and few would say ‘Iranian
coup d'état'. Ask anyone in that county if he or she knows about
‘Operation Boot’ and you’ll probably get far more blank faces than
raised eyebrows, fist-pumps or shame-showing dropping of gaze.
And
yet, in terms of providing an example that clearly indicates the true
worth of democracy and human rights posturing of the British and of
course her friends and masters in the matter of plunder, ‘1953’ is
pretty significant.
It’s all there in ‘Coup 53,’ a documentary by
Iranian filmmaker Taghi Amirani which details how the CIA worked with
Britain’s MI6 clandestinely in Operation Boot. At the time the British
were more like what the US is today, thinking of themselves as equal
rather than junior partners in imperialism as evident in involvement in
Iran, the Suez Canal, Egypt and of course the most violent and
pernicious displacement in the 20th century, that of Palestinians.
The
UK now plays second fiddle to the USA, but that country has planned or
executed over 40 attempts to remove foreign governments in 27 countries
since the end of the Second World War. And the USA?
Here’s a
post-1953 list. Guatemala, Syria, Indonesia, Iraq, Vietnam, Cuba,
Cambodia, the Congo, Laos, Dominican Republic, Iraq (again), , Indonesia
(again), Cambodia (again), Chile, Bolivia, Ethiopia, Angola, East
Timor, Argentina, Afghanistan, Poland, Chad, Nicaragua, Grenada,
Panama, Iraq, Haiti, Zaire, Yugoslavia, , Afghanistan, Iraq,
Kyrgyzstan, Palestinian territories, Syria, Libya, Syria and Pakistan.
This is not counting all those so-called democratising efforts executed
by ambassadors like Julie Chung and State Department busybodies like
Victoria Nuland.
Iran in 1953 provided a blueprint for
CIA-orchestrated coups. Had it not been for ‘Iran 1953’ how would such
moves have played out is a question people have pondered. That’s
speculation, though.
Let’s go with what is known. The
introduction by Chris Hedges in an interview of Amirani for ‘The Real
News Network,’ is a nutshell capture.
‘On
August 19th, 1953, 70 years ago this week, the democratically-elected
prime minister of Iran, Mohammad Mosaddegh, who had seized Iran’s vast
oil fields from the British and put them under Iranian control, was
removed from power in a coup organized and financed by the British and
US governments. He was replaced by the dictatorial Shah, who immediately
signed over 40% of Iran’s oil fields to US companies.‘The
CIA and the British Intelligence Services used bribery, libel, black
propaganda that accused Mosaddegh of being a communist, assassinations,
and orchestrated riots by paid mercenaries to overthrow the democratic
government. They hired agents to pose as communists to threaten
religious leaders, while the US ambassador lied to the prime minister
about alleged attacks on American citizens. They oversaw the
assassination of the chief of police, a Mosaddegh loyalist, leaving his
mutilated body on the street as a warning to others who might defend the
democracy. Mosaddegh’s house was surrounded and attacked and most of
his security detail were killed. Mosaddegh was sentenced to three years
in prison, followed by house arrest for life.'
Amirani
observes: ‘To this day, 70 years since the 1953 coup, the British
government has not officially admitted its role in this coup. Everything
that happens in Coup 53, everything that happened to Coup 53 after its
release, everything we talk about right now must be seen through that
prism. The British have not yet come clean. The coup didn’t happen. They
had nothing to do with it, although the CIA have finally admitted. They
released the documents.’
It was about oil. The sequence isn’t all that unfamiliar.
In
March 1951 Mohammed Mossadegh presented the idea of nationalization of
the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company to the Iranian Parliament. The Parliament
approved it. In April that year Mossadegh was elected as Iran's new
Prime Minister. In May 1951 Britain imposed an embargo on Iranian oil
and banned the exportation of goods to Iran in retaliation while
mobilising her navy as a show of force. In June, President Truman of the
USA tried to sort out Iran-Britain tensions diplomatically, but Britain
decided to take legal action against Iran in the International Court of
Justice. The ICJ threw out the case. In 1952, Iran severed
diplomatic ties with Great Britain. In 1953, a failed coup against
Mossadegh forced Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to flee, but he returned to
power in a second coup heavily backed by Britain and the USA.
This
is the story of 'empire' that has only seen the addition of several
more chapters since 1953. This is why France is so agitated over the
coup in Niger. ‘Our interests,’ France thunders. What are these
interests and have they changed since 1953 (yes, and for several
centuries before that when marauding Europeans laid waste lands,
perpetrated genocide and plundered resources)? Access to and control of
resources (primarily oil, but also, as in the case of Niger, uranium),
strategic footholds and more, and creation of markets. That’s what it
is.
A central feature of Amirani’s documentary is an
interview given in 1985 by Norman Darbyshire to the Granada TV
documentary ‘End of Empire.’ Amirani claims that Darbyshire, ‘in the
absence of the British government official admission, stands in for that
confession.’
‘He happens to be the lead MI6
officer who co-wrote the plan. He masterminded the coup. He ran the
coup. He paid the mob. He orchestrated the whole management of agents on
the ground. When the British were kicked out of Iran, when Mosaddegh
discovered the plots for the coup, he remote-controlled the coup from
Cyprus. Darbyshire’s interview is really the most clear piece of
evidence of British involvement in this coup.’
The
British Foreign Office hasn’t responded, to my knowledge. They do not.
Neither does the US State Department. They believe that tossing in
liberal quantities of words like peace and democracy, and enhancing
traction by kept-media would suffice. They aren’t wrong.
This
is why whenever Europeans and North Americans and their lapdog allies
Japan and Australia (and sometimes India too) offer tuition classes to
countries such as Sri Lanka, they should be told, ‘STOP, tell me about
1953 and all 1953s thereafter that your country has been associated
with, directly or indirectly.’
They might say ‘yes, but that’s then,
this is now,’ but they can be told, “‘1953’ is TODAY, darling.’ Got to
do homework though. Got to know history. Got to know the global
political economy. No shortcuts to exposing lies and liars.
malindadocs@gmail.com.
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