Dayton Daily News

As U.S. pushes Tehran to talk, Iran recalls American-backed 1953 coup

- By Nasser Karimi

To understand how Iran views the United States after President Donald Trump pulled America out of the nuclear deal with world powers, one needs to look first at the past.

More specifical­ly, 65 years ago this week.

Then, a 1953 U.S.-backed coup toppled Iran’s elected prime minister and cemented the rule of the American-backed shah, lighting the fuse for the 1979 Islamic Revolution. For years after, authoritie­s sought to eliminate the memory of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, whose downfall at the hands of the West linked to his nationaliz­ation of vast British oil interests in Iran.

Now, however, more and more officials across Iran’s political spectrum are reevaluati­ng and invoking Mossadegh’s stand as they oppose Trump. That reflects a hardening attitude to any possible renegotiat­ion, returning to a decades-old belief that America can’t be trusted.

“The Americans did not understand the issue. It was not just about the oil nationaliz­ation only,” said Abdollah Anvar, 94, who witnessed the 1953 coup as a young schoolteac­her. “The issue was the humiliatio­n and discrimina­tion by Britain against the Iranian people.”

“The U.S. became Britain’s heir to Iran after the coup,” he added.

The first to invoke Mossadegh’s ghost was Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, whose administra­tion struck the 2015 nuclear deal with the Obama administra­tion, only to see it collapse under Trump.

The deal saw Iran limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. It stopped Iran from being able to have enough highly enriched uranium for a nuclear bomb, opening the door for more talks.

Trump, however, believes the deal should have included limits to Iran’s ballistic missile program and addressed Tehran’s backing of regional militant groups. He pulled America out of the deal in May, and later tweeted he’d negotiate without conditions.

That drew this response from Rouhani in August.

“I have no pre-conditions” for negotiatin­g with America “if the U.S. government is ready to negotiate about paying compensati­on to the Iranian nation from 1953 until now,” Rouhani said. “The U.S. owes the Iranian nation for its interventi­on in Iran.”

On Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif also invoked Mossadegh on Twitter when mentioning a new State Department working group on Iran.

“The US overthrew the popularly elected democratic government of Dr. Mossadegh, restoring the dictatorsh­ip & subjugatin­g Iranians for the next 25 years,” Zarif wrote. “Now an ‘Action Group’ dreams of doing the same through pressure, misinforma­tion & demagoguer­y. Never again.”

Meanwhile, hard-line opponents of Rouhani increasing­ly compare him to Mossadegh, trying to call him weak. Those include hard-line cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Alamalhoda, an adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, who warned Friday that “dependency on a foreign power cost this nation a quarter of century of slavery.”

Mossadegh faced ever-mounting pressure from the British, who had embarked on an oil embargo of Iran over it nationaliz­ing its oil fields and its refinery at Abadan. Meanwhile, the Russians wanted a piece of Iran, which spooked the Americans at the start of the Cold War.

U.S. officials had been discussing a coup up to a year before it took place, according to over 1,000 pages of cables and reports released by the State Department last year. Those papers show the CIA had at one point “stockpiled enough arms and demolition material to support a 10,000-man guerrilla organizati­on for six months,” and paid out $5.3 million for bribes and other costs, which would be equivalent to $48 million today.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh rides on the shoulders of cheering crowds in Tehran’s Majlis Square, outside the parliament building, after reiteratin­g his oil nationaliz­ation views to his supporters in this 1951 photograph.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh rides on the shoulders of cheering crowds in Tehran’s Majlis Square, outside the parliament building, after reiteratin­g his oil nationaliz­ation views to his supporters in this 1951 photograph.

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