[Vision2020] We Had a Democracy Once
Chasuk
chasuk at gmail.com
Thu Jun 1 15:54:26 PDT 2006
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=4028
We Had a Democracy Once, But You Crushed It
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman; August 11, 2003
In yesterday's Washington Post, Condoleeza Rice, the President's
National Security Advisor, writes the following:
"Our task is to work with those in the Middle East who seek progress
toward greater democracy, tolerance, prosperity and freedom. As
President Bush said in February, 'The world has a clear interest in
the spread of democratic values, because stable and free nations do
not breed ideologies of murder. They encourage the peaceful pursuit of
a better life.'"
Now, if we only had a nickel for every time Bush, or Rice, or Colin
Powell, or Paul Wolfowitz or Dick Cheney or Richard Perle or Donald
Rumsfeld talked about bringing democracy to the Middle East.
Talk, talk, talk.
Here's something you can bet on: Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz will not hold
a press conference this month to commemorate the 50th anniversary of
the U.S.-led coup of the democratically elected leader of Iran --
Mohammed Mossadegh.
Rice and Powell won't hold a press conference to celebrate Operation
Ajax, the CIA plot that overthrew the Mossadegh.
That was 50 years ago this month, in August 1953.
That's when Mossadegh was fed up with the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company --
now BP -- pumping Iran's oil and shipping the profits back home to the
United Kingdom.
And Mossadegh said -- hey, this is our oil, I think we'll keep it.
And Winston Churchill said -- no you won't.
Mossadegh nationalized the company -- the way the British were
nationalizing their own vital industries at the time.
But what's good for the UK ain't good for Iran.
If you fly out of Dulles Airport in Virginia, ever wonder what the
word Dulles means?
It stands for the Dulles family -- Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles and his brother, the CIA director, Allen Dulles.
They were responsible for the overthrow of the democratically elected
leader of Iran.
As was President Theodore Roosevelt's grandson, Kermit Roosevelt, the
CIA agent who traveled to Iran to pull off the coup.
Now why should we be concerned about a coup that happened so far away
almost 50 years ago this month?
New York Times reporter Stephen Kinzer puts it this way:
"It is not far-fetched to draw a line from Operation Ajax through the
Shah's repressive regime and the Islamic revolution to the fireballs
that engulfed the World Trade Center in New York."
Kinzer has written a remarkable new book, All the Shah's Men: An
American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror (Wiley, 2003).
In it, he documents step by step, how Roosevelt, the Dulles boys and
Norman Schwarzkopf Sr., among a host of others, took down a
democratically elected regime in Iran.
They had freedom of the press. We shut it down.
They had democracy. And we crushed it.
Mossadegh was the beacon of hope for the Middle East.
If democracy were allowed to take hold in Iran, it probably would have
spread throughout the Middle East.
We asked Kinzer – what does the overthrow of Mossadegh say about the
United States respect for democracy abroad?
"Imagine today what it must sound like to Iranians to hear American
leaders tell them -- 'We want you to have a democracy in Iran, we
disapprove of your present government, we wish to help you bring
democracy to your country.' Naturally, they roll their eyes and say --
"We had a democracy once, but you crushed it,'" he said. "This shows
how differently other people perceive us from the way we perceive
ourselves. We think of ourselves as paladins of democracy. But
actually, in Iran, we destroyed the last democratic regime the country
ever had and set them on a road to what has been half a century of
dictatorship."
After ousting Mossadegh, the United States put in place a brutal Shah
who destroyed dissent and tortured the dissenters.
And the Shah begat the Islamic revolution.
During that Islamic revolution in 1979, Iranians held up Mossadegh's
picture, telling the world – we want a democratic regime that resists
foreign influence and respects the will of the Iranian people as
expressed through democratic institutions.
"They were never able to achieve that. And this has led many Iranians
to react very poignantly to my book," Kaizer told us. "One woman sent
me an e-mail that said – 'I was in tears when I finished your book
because it made me think of all we lost and all we could have had.'"
Of course, the overthrow of Mossadegh was only one of the first U.S.
coups of democratically elected regime. (To see one in movie form,
pick up a copy of Raoul Peck's Lumumba, now on DVD.)
Kinzer's previous books include Bitter Fruit: The Story of the
American Coup in Guatemala.
He's thinking of putting together a boxed set of his books on American coups.
Get copies of Bitter Fruit and All The Shah's Men.
Read them.
And the next time a politician talks about spreading democracy around
the globe, ask them about Mohammed Mossadegh in Iran, Patrice Lumumba
in the Congo, and Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala.
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