PoliticalChic
Diamond Member
- Thread starter
- #41
When did the US topple Iran's duly elected govt again? The 50's?The plan was to create a North Korea-like nuclear state that the West would be unable to prevent from it's global terrorist campaign.
Obama paid for their terrorism, and guaranteed Iran nuclear weapons while not restricting their missile program or even admitting that Iran used North Korea as their nuclear laboratory.
The 'deal' had no real inspection program, as we are learning daily:
"Iran Enriching at Fordow, IAEA Confirms, as Enriched Uranium Stock Grows"
Iran Enriching at Fordow, IAEA Confirms, as Enriched Uranium Stock Grows
And the question no Obama supporter has ever been able to answer:
What benefit did America, or the world, accrue by Obama's guaranteeing nuclear weapons to the world's worst state sponsor of terrorism?
You're aware we sold NK nuclear reactors right? Two years before we decided they were part of an "axis of evil". From a company Rumfeld once sat bn the board of directors of?
"When did the US topple Iran's duly elected govt again? The 50's?"
Never.
It's one of those fables fools like you gobble up.
Good thing you dropped by for a lesson.....not a moment too soon.
1. The Shah was in power between 1941 and 1979. The true explanation of the Mossadeq unseating is neither that of the Royalists who claimed it was due to a national uprising, nor was it, as Mossadeqâs followers claimed, a CIA plot.
a. Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, then Shah of Iran, had first come to power in 1941, and was restored to his throne with American and British help in a 1953 coup against Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq. http://bostonreview.net/BR32.6/milani.php
b. âThe clergy who rule Iran today had far more to do with Mossadeqâs downfall than the CIA ever did!â When the clergy sided with Mossadeq, the balance of the other forces in Iran shifted against him.
2. Due to the unrest and criticisms, Mossadeq decided to dismiss the parliament; without any constitutional or legal basis. His supporters warned him that this would allow the Shah to make recess appointments, including the Prime Ministers. He didnât believe that the Shah would do itâŚ.he was wrong. On August 13th, 1953 the Shah signed the decree which removed Mossadeq with General Fazollah Zehedi. âWhen pro-Shah soldiers went to arrest Mossadegh, they instead were captured.â http://coat.ncf.ca/our_magazine/links/issue51/articles/51_14-15.pdf
Dr. Abbas Milani is he Director of the Iranian Studies Program at Stanford University. His recent book is âThe Shah,â is based on ten years studying the archives of the United States and of Britain.
Now it's time for you to get lost.