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 Nov-17-2011 15:41 ![]()  TweetFollow @OregonNews 
		
			Apologise? Hell no...Stuart Littlewood Salem-News.comLet’s demonise Iran! 
 (LONDON) - When new recruits join British Petroleum  (BP) they are fed romantic tales about how the company came into being.  William Knox D'Arcy, a Devon man, studied  law and, after emigrating to Australia, made a fortune from the Mount  Morgan gold-mining operations in the 1880s. Returning to England he  agreed to fund a search for oil and minerals in Persia and negotiations  with the Mozaffar al-Din Shah Qajar began in 1901. A sixty year concession  to explore for oil gave D'Arcy the oil rights to the entire country  except for five provinces in Northern Iran. The Iranian government would  receive16% of the oil company's annual profits.   Mozzafar ad-Din, seldom consulted on  matters of state by his father, was naive in business matters and unprepared  for kingship when the time came. He borrowed heavily from the Russians  in order to finance his extravagant personal lifestyle and the costs  of the state, and in order to pay off the debt he signed away control  of many Iranian industries and markets to foreigners. The deal D'Arcy  cut was too sharp by far and would eventually lead to trouble.  He sent an exploration team headed by  geologist George B Reynolds. In 1903 a company was formed and D'Arcy  had to spend much of his fortune to cover the costs. Further financial  support came from Glasgow-based Burmah Oil in return for a large share  of the stock.  Drilling in southern Persia at Shardin  continued until 1907 when the search was switched to Masjid-i-Souleiman.  By1908 D'Arcy was almost bankrupt. Reynolds received a last-chance instruction:  "Drill to 1,600 feet and give up". On 26 May at 1,180 feet  he struck oil.   It was indeed a triumph of guts and determination.  The Anglo-Persian Oil Company was soon up and running and in 1911 completed  a pipeline from the oilfield to its new refinery at Abadan. But the  company was in trouble again by 1914.  The golden age of motoring  had not yet arrived and the industrial oil markets were sewn up by American  and European interests. The sulphurous stench of the Persian oil, even  after refining, ruled it out for domestic use, so D'Arcy had a marketing  problem.  Luckily Winston Churchill, then First  Lord of the Admiralty, was an enthusiast for oil and wanted to convert  the British fleet from coal especially now that a reliable oil source  was secured. He famously told Parliament: “Look out upon the wide  expanse of the oil regions of the world!” Only the British-owned Anglo-Persian  Oil Company, he said, could protect British interests. His resolution  passed and the British Government took a major shareholding in the company.  Just in time too, for World War One started a few weeks later.  During the war the government seized  the assets of a German company calling itself British Petroleum in order  to market its products in Britain. Anglo-Persian acquired the assets  from the Public Trustee complete with a ready-made distribution network  with hundreds of depots, railway tank wagons, road vehicles, barges  and so forth. This enabled Anglo-Persian to rapidly expand sales in  petroleum-hungry Britain and Europe after the war.  In the inter-war years Anglo-Persian  profited handsomely from paying the Iranians a measly 16%, and an increasingly  angry Iran tried to renegotiate the terms. Getting nowhere, the Iranians  cancelled the D'Arcy agreement and the matter ended up at the Permanent  Court of International Justice at The Hague. A new agreement in 1933  provided Anglo-Persian with a fresh 60-year concession but on a smaller  area. The terms were an improvement for the Iranians but still didn’t  amount to a square deal.   Anglo-Persian changed its name to Anglo-Iranian  Oil Company in 1935. By 1950 Abadan was the biggest oil refinery in  the world and Britain, with its 51% holding in Anglo-Iranian, had affectively  colonised part of southern Iran.  Iran's small share of the profits became  a big issue and so did the treatment of its oil workers. 6,000 withdrew  their labour in 1946 and the strike was violently put down with 200  dead or injured. In 1951 Anglo-Iranian declared £40 million profit  after tax but gave Iran only £7 million. Meanwhile Arabian American  Oil was sharing profits with the Saudis on a 50/50 basis. Calls for  nationalisation were intensifying.  Iran nationalised  its oil to achieve economic and political independence and  combat poverty  In March 1951 the Iranian Majlis and  Senate voted to nationalise Anglo-Iranian, which had controlled Iran's  oil industry since 1913 under terms disadvantageous to Iran. Respected  social reformer Dr Mohammad Mossadeq was named prime minister the following  month by a 79 to 12 majority. On 1 May Mossadeq carried out his government's  wishes, cancelling Anglo-Iranian’s oil concession due to expire in  1993 and expropriating its assets.   His explanation, given in a speech in  June 1951 (M. Fateh, Panjah Sal-e Naft-e Iran, p. 525), ran as  follows...  “Our long years of  negotiations with foreign countries… have yielded no results this  far. With the oil revenues we could meet our entire budget and combat  poverty, disease, and backwardness among our  people. Another important consideration is that by the elimination of  the power of the British company, we would also eliminate corruption  and intrigue, by means of which the internal affairs of our country  have been influenced. Once this tutelage has ceased, Iran will have  achieved its economic and political independence.  “The Iranian state prefers to take over the production of petroleum itself. The company should do nothing else but return its property to the rightful owners. The nationalization law provides that 25% of the net profits on oil be set aside to meet all the legitimate claims of the company for compensation… It has been asserted  abroad that Iran intends to expel the foreign oil experts from the country  and then shut down oil installations. Not only is this allegation absurd;  it is utter invention…”  For this he was eventually removed in  a coup by MI5 and the CIA, imprisoned for 3 years then put under house  arrest until his death.  In the meantime Britain orchestrated  a world-wide boycott of Iranian oil, froze Iran’s stirling assets  and threatened legal action against anyone purchasing oil produced in  the formerly British-controlled refineries. It even considered invading.  The Iranian economy was soon in ruins. Attempts by the Shah to replace  Mossadeq failed and he returned with more power, but his coalition was  slowly crumbling under the hardships imposed by the British blockade.   At first America was reluctant to join  Britain’s destructive game but Churchill let it be known that Mossadeq  was turning communist and pushing Iran into Russia's arms at a time  when Cold War jumpiness was high. It was enough to get America's new  president, Eisenhower, on board and plotting with Britain to bring Mossadeq  down  Chief of the CIA's Near East and Africa  division, Kermit Roosevelt Jr, arrived to play the leading role in an  ugly game of provocation, mayhem and deception. An elaborate campaign  of disinformation began, and the Shah signed two decrees, one dismissing  Mossadeq and the other nominating the CIA's choice, General Fazlollah  Zahedi, as prime minister. These decrees were written as dictated by  Donald Wilbur the CIA architect of the plan  The Shah fled to Rome. When it was judged  safe to do so he returned on 22 August 1953. Mossadeq was arrested,  tried, convicted of treason by the Shah's military court and sentenced  to death.   Mossadeq remarked http://www.mohammadmossadegh. “My greatest sin is  that I nationalised Iran’s oil industry and discarded the system of  political and economic exploitation by the world’s greatest empire…  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.”  The sentence was later commuted to three  years' solitary in a military prison, followed by house arrest until  he died on 5 March 1967. Mossadeq's supporters were rounded up, imprisoned,  tortured or executed.   Zahedi's new government soon reached  an agreement with foreign oil companies to form a consortium to restore  the flow of Iranian oil, awarding the US and Great Britain the lion's  share - 40% going to Anglo-Iranian. The consortium agreed to share profits  on a 50-50 basis with Iran but, tricky as ever, refused to open its  books for inspection or verification by Iranian auditors or allow Iranians  to sit on the board.   Anglo-Iranian changed its name to British  Petroleum in 1954.  A grateful US massively funded the Shah's  government, including his army and secret police force, SAVAK.  The West's fun came to an abrupt halt  with the Islamic Revolution of 1979 and the book closed on a chapter  in British enterprise that started heroically, turned nasty and ended  in tears.  The US is still hated today for reinstating  the Shah and his vicious SAVAK, and for demolishing the Iranians’  democratic system of government, which the Revolution unfortunately  didn’t restore. Britain, as the instigator and junior partner in the  sordid affair, is similarly despised.  On top of that, Iran harbours great resentment  at the way the West, especially the US, helped Iraq develop its chemical  weapons arsenal and armed forces, and how the international community  failed to punish Iraq for its use of chemical weapons against Iran in  the Iran-Iraq war. The US, and eventually Britain, tilted strongly towards  Saddam in that conflict and the alliance enabled Saddam to more easily  acquire or develop forbidden chemical and biological weapons. At least  100,000 Iranians fell victim to them.  This is how John King, writing in 2003 http://www.iranchamber.com/ “The United States  used methods both legal and illegal to help build Saddam's army into  the most powerful army in the Mideast outside of Israel. The US supplied  chemical and biological agents and technology to Iraq when it knew Iraq  was using chemical weapons against the Iranians. The US supplied the  materials and technology for these weapons of mass destruction to Iraq  at a time when it was know that Saddam was using this technology to  kill his Kurdish citizens. The United States supplied intelligence and  battle planning information to Iraq when those battle plans included  the use of cyanide, mustard gas and nerve agents. The United States  blocked UN censure of Iraq's use of  chemical weapons. The United States did not act alone in this effort.  The Soviet Union was the largest weapons supplier, but England, France  and Germany were also involved in the shipment of arms and technology.”  Which brings us to today… Why are we  hearing non-stop, loud-mouthed sabre-rattling against Iran when we should  be extending the hand of friendship and reconciliation?   David Cameron (b. 1966) wasn’t even  a twinkle in his father’s eye when Britain crushed Iran’s democracy,  and was probably carousing with his Bullingdon Club pals at Oxford while  Iranians were dying in their thousands from Saddam’s poison gases.  What does he know?  William Hague (b. 1961) seems similarly  oblivious to the dirty tricks previous British foreign secretaries pulled  on Iran.  Obama (b. 1961)? He was a community organiser  in Chicago while the Iranians were being mustard-gassed by chemicals  his country supplied to Saddam. What does he know?  As for Mrs Clinton (b. 1947), she’s  old enough to know better.  So why are they demonising Iran instead  of righting the wrongs? Why not live and let live?  Because the political establishment is  still smarting.   They are the new-generation imperialists,  the political spawn of those Dr Mossadeq and many others struggled against.   They haven’t learned from the past,  and they won’t lift their eyes to a better future. It’s so depressing.  ___________________________________ 
 
 
 
 
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