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When America Attacked Iran Last Time, (Or Why Iran Needs a Nuclear Bomb)

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The Last Time the U.S. Attacked Iran


“I put my trust in the support of the Iranian people. That is all.” -


Dr. Mossadegh


Mohammad Mossadegh was born June 16, 1882 in Tehran. His father, Mirza
Hedayat Ashtiani, was Iran’s Minister of Finance, and his mother, Najm al-Saltaneh,
was closely related to the ruling Qajar dynasty. At age 10 his father died, leaving
him and his only sibling, a younger sister, to be raised by his mother. 



In recognition of his late father’s service to the crown, the monarch Nasir al-Din
Shah gave him the title of “Mossadegh al-Saltaneh”. Years later, when a
national identity card system was introduced in Iran, he chose the surname of
 Mossadegh for himself, which means “true and authentic”. 
Mossadegh’s career started at the unusually young age of 15 when he was
appointed, again in honor of his father, to Mostofi (Chief of Finance) of
Khorasan Province. As a young man, in addition to pursuing his interest in
modern science, he took part in various sports, and learned to play Tar, a
traditional Persian string instrument. 

 
At 19, he married Zia al-Saltaneh, a Qajar princess; whom he considered “my
most cherished person after my mother”. The couple would have three daughters-
Zia Ashraf, Mansoureh and Khadijeh; and two sons, Ahmad and Gholam-Hossein. 


Mossadegh was only 21 years old when the people of Esfahan elected him to the Majles
(Iranian Parliament) as their representative. However, because he did not meet the legal
age requirement, he withdrew his name from consideration. During the constitutionalist
movement of 1905-1911, Mossadegh actively participated in the events which led to the
establishment of a Constitutional Monarchy in place of arbitrary monarchial rule. 
Mossadegh studied political science in Tehran and in 1909, continued his education in
Paris. While in Paris he began to experience extreme weakness and fatigue and was
forced to quit school and return to Iran. Throughout his life he was burdened by this
persistent problem, better known today as “Chronic Fatigue Syndrome”. Later, he
returned to Europe and studied Law at the University of Neuchatel in Switzerland. In
June 1913 he became the first Iranian to receive a Doctorate in Law, and returned to Iran
only a day before the start of World War I. 


Soon after his return to Iran, Mossadegh became the subject of a malicious accusation by a
political rival. The unfounded accusation made him so upset that he became sick and
developed a fever. His mother, who is best known for founding Najmiehcharity hospital in
Tehran, noticed how miserable he was and told him that she wished he had studied
medicine rather than law. Anyone who studies law and enters politics should be ready to
suffer all types of slander and insults, she told him, yet “A person’s worth in society is
dependent on how much one endures for the sake of the people”. In his memoirs,
Mossadegh wrote that those words of wisdom prepared him for the life he chose and from
then on the more hardship and insults he faced, the more prepared he became to serve the
country. 
Mossadegh accepted a job in the government as Deputy Secretary of Ministry of Finance
where he tried to combat corruption and brought convictions to several individuals. In 1919
he chose self-exile in Switzerland in protest over an agreement between the government
and Britain that he found very disturbing. The main provision of this agreement was
handing over to British advisers the supervision of Iran’s army and financial systems.
Fearing the worst for Iran he feverishly campaigned against it in Europe and wrote to the
League of Nations asking for help in this matter. Mossadegh returned to Iran after the
agreement was rejected in the Majles.


Mossadegh’s reputation as an honest, just and concerned politician preceded him upon his
return to Iran. As he travelled throughout Fars province, he was greeted warmly by locals
and received an offer to become their governor, which he accepted. After a few months,
he resigned this post in protest of the 1920 British inspired coup in Tehran that ultimately
led to the establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty in 1925. He, however, served as Minister
of Justice in Prime Minister Ghavam’s government, and later became the Minister of
Foreign Affairs. In 1923, Mossadegh was elected to the 5th Majles and began his historic
opposition to the establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty by British supported Reza Khan,
who was at that time the Prime Minister of Iran. He foresaw the return to dictatorship in
Iran when “..one man was to be king, Prime Minister and magistrate!” 

(It should be noted that the amount of oil the British took from Iran in one year exceeded all income 
England has paid to Iran in the previous 50 years.  The British enjoyed a prosperous society as Iran
remained one on the poorest in the world.  This British prosperity came at the direct expense of the Iranians.)



As Mossadegh predicted, life under the tyrannical reign of Reza Shah was harsh and
oppressive; in fact the political climate became so unbearable that he had good reason to
fear for his life. In 1928, he voluntarily withdrew from social and political activism and
retreated to his village of Ahmad-Abad located about 100 kilometers outside of Tehran.
During this period, which lasted over a decade, he occupied his time reading and farming;
conducting experiments to improve crop production and sharing the knowledge he acquired with other farmers 
in the village. 



On July 26, 1940, Reza Shah’s police squad unexpectedly arrived at Mossadegh’s residence, searching
and ransacking his house. Although no incriminating evidence against him was found, he was
taken to the central prison in Tehran. Mossadegh was interrogated and, without being
informed of any charges against him, transferred to a prison citadel in Birjand
(a city in northeast Iran). Well aware of the fate of many others who dared to oppose
Reza Shah’s arbitrary rule, he expected to be killed. 
The harshest blow to Mossadegh resulting from his imprisonment was the
effect it had on his 13 year old daughter, Khadijeh, who had witnessed her
father’s brutal arrest and forced transfer to Birjand prison. The highly sensitive
Khadijeh was deeply traumatized and spent the rest of her life in psychiatric
hospitals. Mossadegh later said that this tragedy was the cruelest punishment
that could have ever been inflicted on him.
Reza Shah released Mossadesh from Birjand prison in November 1940,  
transferring him to Ahmad-Abad; “to live there, until he dies”. A year later his
house arrest ended when the British forced the abdication of Reza Shah, and
his 22 year-old son, Mohammad Reza, ascended to the throne. 
Having returned to political activities, Mossadegh was elected with overwhelming
support to represent Tehran to the 14th Majles in 1944. During his tenure in the
Majles, Mossadegh passionately fought for Iran’s political and economic
independence from foreigners, including addressing the highly unfair oil
agreement with the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, a goal for which he received
overwhelming popular support.

The contemporary history of Iran had been intertwined with oil, a highly
sought after energy source by the west, since 1901 when a 60 year exclusive
rights were given to William Knox D’Arcy, a British subject, for oil exploration
and exploitation in Iran’s southern provinces. In 1908, oil was struck and
The Anglo-Persian Oil Company was established. Just before the start of
World War I in 1914, the British government purchased 51% of the company’s
shares. The British thus created a beachhead and practically colonized the
southern west corner of Iran, directly and indirectly interfering in the political
affairs of the entire country. APOC cheated on the meager 16% payment to
Iran and treated Iranian oil workers with contempt and racism in their own
land. It all came to a head in July 1946 when about 6,000 Iranian oil workers
went on a strike in Agajari. Their clash with the government troops resulted in
more that 200 dead and wounded workers.



Mossadegh envisioned an Iran that was independent, free and democratic.
He believed no country could bepolitically independent and free unless it first
achieved economic independence. As he put it, “The moral aspect of oil
nationalization is more important than its economic aspect.” 
He sought to renegotiate and reach an equitable and fair restitution of rights of
Iran but was faced with intransigence by the company. To put an end to 150
years of British political interference, economic exploitation and plundering of
Iran’s national resources, Mossadegh engineered the nationalization of the oil
industry. 


Mossadegh first presented the idea of nationalization to the Majles mandated
“Oil Commission” on March 8, 1951. The following day the National Front, a
coalition of several parties, held a huge rally in Baharestan square in front of the
Majles in support of oil nationalization. On the eve of the Iranian New Year, on
March 20, 1951 [29 Esfand, 1329] the National Front bill for oil nationalization
received the final approval from the Senate, only a few days after unanimously
being approved by the Majles deputies. A month later, Dr. Mohammad
Mossadegh was nominated for the position of Prime Minister, which he won by votes of nearly 90% of the representatives present. 


The dispute between Iran and the disbanded Anglo-Iranian Oil Company
(AIOC) continued with no resolution on the horizon, increasing tension
between Iran and Britain. The British government imposed economic sanctions
on Iran and threatened Iran with a military attack. In June 1951, the Iranian
government discovered a British spy network that revealed subversive activities
by a large number of Iranian politicians and journalists, including communists

who were receiving bribes from the British government and the AIOC. 
In response, the Iranian government closed the British consulate. The British
government reacted by calling their ambassador, Francis Shepherd, back to
London. In October 1951, Premier Mohammad Mossadegh traveled
to New York to personally defend Iran’s right to nationalize its oil industry
before the UN Security Council. The British government, looking for support,
had taken their case to the United Nations for a hearing. Mossadegh gave a
dramatic and successful presentation, demonstrating that Britain’s oil profits in
1950 alone were more than what it paid to Iran during the previous half century
Mossadegh then headed for Washington, DC where he met with President
Harry S. Truman. His visit was covered widely in newspapers, magazines,
television, and theatrical newsreels. On his return to Iran in November 1951,
he stopped at Farouk airport in Cairo, Egypt and was greeted by thousands of
admirers who chanted “LONG LIVE MOSSADEGH” and “LONG LIVE IRAN.”
During his four day visit, the Egyptian King, Premier, Cabinet and other
dignitaries honored Mossadegh personally, and a gala dinner was given in his
honor by the municipality of Cairo. By January 1952, Mossadegh
was named Time magazine’s Man of the Year, his second Time cover in a span
of 7 months. 
In June 1952, Mossadegh traveled to the Hague, Netherlands and presented
nearly 200 documents to the International Court regarding the highly
exploitative nature of the AIOC and the extent of its political intervention into
the Iranian political system. “There is no political or moral yardstick by which
the court can measure its judgment in the case of nationalization of the oil
industry in Iran”, he argued, and “under no condition we will accept the
jurisdiction of the court on the subject. We cannot put ourselves in the
dangerous situation which might arise out of the court’s decision.” The verdict
was to be announced later, and Mossadegh returned to Tehran having won the
respect of the judges. 


Back in Iran, economic and security conditions were deteriorating rapidly,
worsened by increasing subsersive activities of foreign powers and their agents.
In a July 1952 meeting with the young monarch Mohammad Reza Shah,
who headed the military, Mossadegh requested control of the armed forces but
was refused. In response, Mossadegh immediately submitted his resignation as
Prime Minister. 


The following day, the Shah, at the behest of the British and American
governments, appointed Ghavam Saltaneh as Prime Minister. Ghavam Saltaneh
took a hard line, further angering the people who had come out to the streets in
support of Mossadegh. In the largest street protest onJuly 20, 1952 (30 Tir, 13
31) security forces clashed violently with the demonstrators, resulting in
hundreds of casualties. The Shah, witnessing the depth of the people’s support
for Mossadegh, became highly alarmed and changed course. He appointed
Mossadegh to the dual role of Prime Minister and Minister of Defense, as
permitted by the Constitution. On the same day the International Court at the
Hague voted in favor of Iran, holding that it had no jurisdiction in the oil dispute
case. This was soon followed by the U.N. Security Council rejection of the
British complaint against Iran. Mossadegh was at the height of his power and
popularity, hailed as a hero not only in Iran, but in the greater Middle East. 
As leader of Iran, Mossadegh sponsored laws for a “clean government” and
independent court systems, defended freedom of religion and political
affiliations, and promoted free elections. He implemented many social reforms
and fought for the rights of women, workers, and peasants. A fund was createdo pay for rural development projects and give assistance to farmers. According to his policy of
‘Negative equilibrium’, an idea that helped the formation of the non-allied
nations, Mossadegh also refused to grant an oil concession to the Soviet Union.
Most importantly, Mossadegh helped to foster a national self-sufficiency that
remains unduplicated in Iran since his tenure: balancing the budget, increasing
non-oil productions and creating a trade balance. His policies were frequently
opposed by the Shah, army generals, leading clerics, land owners, the Tudeh
(Communist) party, and the governments of Britain and America. Nevertheless,
Mossadegh could always rely upon the support of the people. 



Meanwhile, the British continued to undermine Mossadegh’s authority by
inciting division in the country, tightening the worldwide embargo on the
purchase of Iranian oil, freezing Iranian assets and threatening Iran with
invasion by amassing a Naval force in the Persian Gulf. When all attempts
failed, Britain concluded that “Mossadegh must go” by any means necessary.
Working jointly with the American CIA, they plotted a coup to overthrow his
democratically elected government. 


On August 15, 1953, with participation of the Shah and their Iranian collaborators
, a CIA drafted plan codenamed Operation Ajax, headed by Kermit Roosevelt,
went into action, but it failed to dislodge Mossadegh from power. In the second
attempt on August 19, 1953, [28 Mordad 1332] the violent overthrow of the
government was accomplished. Mossadegh escaped capture, but his home was
invaded, looted and burned to the ground. The following day Mossadegh
surrendered to authorities and was imprisoned. During this bloody episode,
many hundreds were killed or wounded. Followers of Mossadegh were arrested,
imprisoned, tortured or even murdered. Mossadegh’s Foreign Minister, Dr.
Hossein Fatemi went into hiding but was captured a few months later. He was
beaten, stabbed and, after a show trial, executed by a firing squad. The reign of
terror had begun. 
Tried as a traitor in a military court, on December 19, 1953, Mossadegh
pronounced: 

“Yes, my sin — my greater sin… and even my greatest sin is that I
nationalized Iran’s oil industry and discarded the system of political
and economic exploitation by the world’s greatest empire. …This at
the cost to myself, my family; and at the risk of losing my life, my
honor and my property. …With God’s blessing and the will of the
people, I fought this savage and dreadful system of international

espionage and colonialism. 
…I am well aware that my fate must serve as an example in the
future throughout the Middle East in breaking the chains of slavery
and servitude to colonial interests.” 



Mossadegh was convicted of treason. He was placed in solitary confinement for
three years followed by house arrest for the remainder of his life in his ancestral
village of Ahmad Abad. On March 5th, 1967, Mohammad Mossadegh died at
age 85, one year after the passing of his beloved wife of 64 years. 
“If I sit silently, I have sinned.”

 

 

                                                    Why Iran Needs a Nuclear Bomb

Much has been written about why Iran should not be allowed a nuclear bomb. Israel and

the U.S. have come up with a million excuses, all lies, as to why Iran should not be
allowed to have a nuclear deterrent. The Israelis have said Iran would “wipe them off the
map” if Iran had a bomb, but the leadership in Iran has proven itself much more stable, sane, logical, and peaceful
than the Zionist regime Iran would like to see “vanish from the pages of time”.

I use the two quotes in the previous paragraph because one is a quote Ahmajinadad repeated and the other is the

one the pro-Zionist U.S. media lied about and accused him of stating

What Ahmadinejad actually said, to quote his exact words in Farsi:

“Imam ghoft een rezhim-e ishghalgar-e qods bayad az safheh-ye ruzgar mahv shavad.”

That passage might not mean much to pro-Zionists trying to manufacture a casus belli,

but one word might stick out: rezhim-e. It is the word “regime.” pronounced just like the
English word with an extra “eh” sound at the end. Ahmadinejad did not refer to Israel
the country or Israel the land mass, or to Jews, but to the Israeli regime. This is
a vastly significant distinction, as one cannot wipe a regime off the map. Ahmadinejad
does not even refer to Israel by name, he instead uses the specific phrase “rezhim-e
ishghalgar-e qods” (regime occupying Jerusalem).

So this raises the question.. what exactly did he want “wiped from the map”? The answer

is: nothing. That’s because the word “map” was never used. The Persian word for
map, “nagsheh” is not contained anywhere in his original Farsi quote, or, for that
matter, anywhere in his entire speech. Nor was the western phrase “wipe out” ever
said. Yet we are led to believe that Iran’s president threatened to “wipe Israel off the
map.” despite never having uttered the words “map.” “wipe out” or even “Israel.”

Here is the full quote translated directly to English:

“The Imam said this regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time.”

Word by word translation:

Imam (Khomeini) ghoft (said) een (this) rezhim-e (regime) ishghalgar-e (occupying) qods

(Jerusalem) bayad (must) az safheh-ye ruzgar (from page of time) mahv shavad (vanish
from).

Here is the full transcript of the speech in Farsi, archived on Ahmadinejad’s web site.

You can copy the text and go to the Google translator that will translate the entire
speech from its original Farsi text. You would think a nation would take the time to
research this fact before promoting the waging of nuclear war against a non-nuclear
power as the U.S. has threatened to do.

While the “wiped off the map” misquote has been attributed repeatedly without
verification, Ahmadinejad’s full speech and its context are ignored. Given the importance
placed on specific key words, it would make sense to translate his speech in its full context
so as to get his true meaning. What his speech called for was a “world without Zionism.”
While Zionist Jews may not like his rhetoric, the suffering and misery Israel has
inflicted on millions of Palestinians begs otherwise.

Furthermore, this quote is not even attributable to Ahmadinejad. He was quoting

someone else and even attributed the quote. The misquote was purposely mistranslated
and then magnified a million times in the U.S. Zionist-pandering media.

Here is what a former presidential candidate and Americans statesman, Patrick

Buchanan has to say about the Iranian nuclear program and whether the U.S. ought to
go to war over it: buchanan.org/blog/fool-me-twice-3179 .

Iran has kept components of its nuclear program secret, but it was still within the IAEA

framework. Iran has built building for its program, but the facilities do not have to
be disclosed until a designated time before nuclear enrichment begins and nuclear
material is introduced. If nuclear enrichment is not scheduled to be taking place within a
specified period, nor any nuclear material introduced within a specified timeframe, then
the facility does not have to be disclosed according to IAEA protocols and international
law. Moreover, why would a country disclose everything about its program when the U.S.
has stated it would bomb Iran for exercising its inalienable rights?

It is the U.S. that has shown it refuses to abide by the IAEA. The U.S. has decided to

violate the Geneva Convention with respect to perpetrating regime change, waging
aggressive war, engaging in torture and murder, and conducting extraordinary renditions.
For every law the U.S. has broken it feels its rationalizations provide it absolute
justification. If Americans went in front of a U.S. court using the logic and arguments the
U.S. uses to excuse its murder, they would be given the electric chair in a fortnight. Image
if a citizen used the arguments the U.S. uses to preempt police violence Americans
regularly suffer at the hands of “law enforcement”.

So, let’s consider what crimes Iranians had to suffer at the hands of America. All the

way back in 1953, Operation TP-Ajax resulted in the CIA supporting the bombing of
mosques in order to blame the crimes on the government of Mohammed Mossadegh.
This resulted in the overthrow of his government and the execution of his cabinet
ministers, not to mention the hundreds of deaths of innocent civilians. Our government
felt this murder of foreigners was nothing more than the implementation of foreign policy.
We as Americans accepted as rational and reasonable something that would be so
horrible and grotesque it would be a crime that should never to be forgotten and would
rightfully serve as a rallying point for all patriots for all time.

This was not the last of the crimes Iranians suffered at the hands of Americans. The

U.S. then installed the Shah of Iran whose SAVAK then exterminated all political
opposition from 1953 to 1979 when the people finally decided they could no longer
suffer the tyrant and overthrew him.  But, not before the CIA had bombed
mosques, blamed it on Mohammed Mossadesh’s government, imprisoned him for life and
executed his entire cabinet.

Instead of America being ashamed of what it had done to a country that had not waged

an aggressive war in hundreds of years, the U.S. decided to encourage, support, and
provide economic and military assistance to Saddam to wage a war of aggression against
Iran that would cost Iran a million lives. The U.S. actually gave Saddam the chemical
weapons and production capabilities, money and intelligence he used to slaughter
Iranians, Iraqi Shiites, and Iraqi Kurds. Not once did the U.S. mention the U.N.,
international law, or Iraqi WMDs during the 7-year Iraq-Iran War. Then the U.S.
decided to atomize the very country for allegedly having the weapons the U.S. gave it,
knowing full well the weapons had already been destroyed. If Saddam had WMDs he
would be as safe and secure as Kim Jong-il’s North Korea, or Pakistan and India. Also, it
would be under no more obligation to follow international law than the U.S. or Israel.
Speaking of Israel, look what their illegal nuclear program conducted in absolute
secrecy in violation of international law and IAEA protcols has allowed it to do. The
Israeli nuclear program has allowed Israel to unilaterally make priacy, ethnic cleansing,
and genocide legal, acceptable, and tolerable to the powerful nations of the world.

After the Shah was deposed, and the U.S goaded Saddam to attack Iran, the U.S. decided

it wanted to test its new anti-aircraft weapon systems. It proceeded to blast an Iranian
airliner out of the sky knowing full well it was a commercial aircraft. Here is the whole
history of that episode hidden from the American people:

www.lewrockwell.com/orig9/fayazmanesh1.html

Right now the U.S. and Israel are engaged in a terror and assassination campaign
against Iran and have funded the MEK, PPK and Jundullah to wage war against Iran,
terrorize its citizens and assassinate its scientists and even torture and kill its
retired military officers travelling abroad to gain intelligence.

Not only do the U.S. people not want to know the truth, they would refuse to believe no
matter what facts are presented. They literally believe the U.S. would never do
something as heinous as engaging in terrorism, but wishful thinking does not create reality.

The fact is that if the U.S. inspects a nation and finds it has no means of resistance, it

will then conduct its attack to get its way. It is a nation’s failure to have a nuclear
deterrent that creates a destabilizing situation. If Iran had nukes it would stand no
chance of attack and would have the power to execute its foreign policy as an equal
among equals. Of course this means the U.S. could not treat Iran as its next rape victim.
U.S. policy amounts to it being a serial rapist whereby it tells a country to lie still and try to
enjoy it.

There will only be stability when all the Middle East has nuclear weapons and countries

have to compromise. Everyone wants peace, it’s just that America wants a peace that
means a war whereby a country has no means to resist if the U.S. does not get what it
wants. This peace is achieved only through the U.S. ability to force other nations to accept their rape by the U.S. and then call it peace.

All the things I have mentioned in this article are all on the CIA website, in 

Wikipedia, and common knowledge for people who seriously research American foreign
policy. It is accepted fact throughout the political spectrum from Ron Paul on one side to
Noam Chomsky on the other. In reference to the suppositions posited here, there is no
argument by those who seriously dissect and study American foreign policy and its impact on the world.

It is the fact is that Americans are so stupid and gullible that they will believe any pro
-Zionist U.S. imperial propaganda amplified in the media. These same people are so
intellectually lazy that they can’t take the time to cut and paste a speech into Google
Translator to get at the truth of a matter; moreover, they would rather not get at the
truth. The success of American propaganda is in it keeping the top 20% of the population
misinformed as the other 80% are enamored by sports, celebrity, political divisiveness,
and the numerous other distractions that keep people from understanding the plans and
actions of the power elite

In short, I have no faith in the U.S. and its foreign policy. Its foreign policy abuses are

being mirrored in its domestic policy, criminal justice system, tax code, and
failure to abide by the Constitution. It is a matter of time now before the U.S. destroys
itself after it inflicts the misery, it has until now exported, on its own people. I can’t say
we don’t deserve it. We are as responsible for what our government does as any
other nation is for its government.

Lastly, if Iran had a nuclear bomb, the power elite would suddenly find war unthinkable

as they could end up dying as easily as some stupid private who fell for the lies of our
politicians and decide to enlist for their imperial wars of aggression based on lies and an
ignorant, uniformed and uneducated citizenry of the United States.




 



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