How Our Involvement In Iran Brought The Islamic Clergy To Power
- Right America Media

- 6 hours ago
- 2 min read

On Aug. 19, 2013, the CIA publicly admitted for the first time its involvement in the 1953 coup against Iran's legitimately elected Prime Minister, Mohammad Mossadegh. The declassified documents provided details of the CIA's plan at the time, which was led by senior CIA officer, Kermit Roosevelt Jr., the grandson of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt.
Over the course of four days in August of 1953, Roosevelt would orchestrate not one, but two attempts to destabilize the government of Iran, forever changing the relationship between the country and the U.S. but why?
Mohammad Mossadegh was a beloved figure in Iran. During his tenure, he introduced a range of social and economic policies, the most significant being the nationalization of the Iranian oil industry. Great Britain had controlled Iran's oil for decades through the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. After months of talks, the Prime Minister broke off negotiations and denied the British any further involvement in Iran's oil industry.
Britain then appealed to the United States for help, which led the CIA to orchestrate the overthrow of Mossadegh and restore power to Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran.
Roosevelt quickly seized control of the Iranian press by buying them off with bribes and circulating anti-Mossadegh propaganda. He recruited allies among the Islamic clergy, and he convinced the Shah that Mossadegh was a threat. The last step entailed a dramatic attempt to apprehend Mossadegh at his house in the middle of the night. But the coup failed. Mossadegh learned of it and fought back. The next morning, he announced victory over the radio.
Mossadegh thought he was in the clear, but Roosevelt hadn't given up. He orchestrated a second coup, which succeeded. Mossadegh was placed on trial and spent his life under house arrest. The Shah returned to power and ruled for another 25 years until the 1979 Iranian Revolution. The 1953 coup was later invoked by students and the political class in Iran as a justification for overthrowing the shah.
Fast forward now forty six years and the 1979 Iranian Revolution was a significant intelligence failure for the CIA, which failed to predict the Shah’s ouster or the rise of Ayatollah Khomeini. Intelligence officials had failed to understand the strength of Islamic fundamentalism, with some analysts dismissing it as irrelevant while believing the regime stable. Subsequently, the U.S. ignored the growing opposition, leading to the 444-day hostage crisis.
The 1953 coup and the 1979 intelligence failure are considered one of the worst mistakes in American foreign policy, fundamentally altering geopolitical dynamics in the Middle East and here we are today.






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