The US Empire’s 72-Year War on Iran
by Sheldon Richman | Jul
2, 2025 |
https://original.antiwar.com/srichman/2025/07/01/the-us-empires-72-year-war-on-iran/
The likely temporary
Israel-Iran ceasefire notwithstanding, if you need proof of how despicable
Donald Trump is, consider this:
When asked last week if he
would ask Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to stop bombing Iran, which had
already said it would stop retaliating for Israeli attacks, Trump said, “I think
it’s very hard to make that request right now. If somebody is winning, it’s a
little bit harder to do that [than] if somebody’s losing. But we’re ready,
willing and able, and we’ve been speaking to Iran. Israel is doing well, in
terms of war, and… Iran is doing less well. It’s a little bit hard to get
somebody to stop.”
Of course, Trump could have
done more than request. He could have told Netanyahu that the transfer of
American tax money, bombs, missiles, planes, arms, and spare parts would end at
once if he did not stop the war. Trump did not do that. Instead, he made light
of the question. That’s despicable.
To say the least, Trump has a
thing about Iran. That is likely explained in part by the 1979 Islamic
revolution, which overthrew the American- and Israeli-backed dictator-monarch,
and the taking of hostages in the American embassy. However, history did not
begin in 1979. The U.S. government had helped abuse the Iranians long before
that. A more suitable date on which to begin the story is August 15, 1953. That
is when the CIA and British operatives ousted the democratically elected prime
minister, Mohammad
Mosaddegh, and restored the autocratic Shah of Iran to power. Mosaddegh,
among other things, had nationalized the oil industry to the detriment of
British oil interests.
It so happens that in 2014,
when the Obama administration was negotiating a nuclear deal with Iran
(the JCPOA)
and congressional Democrats and Republicans were trying to undermine the
interim agreement that had been agreed to, my old friend Marc Joffe and I wrote
an article in the Guardian detailing the U.S. government’s
long abuse of Iran. Here are highlights from that article.
Congressional hostility toward
Iran is rooted in a black-and-white worldview that runs as follows: the United
States and Israel are liberal democracies that defend individual rights and
human dignity, whereas Iran is a despotic theocratic regime that sponsors
terrorism and would do anything within its power to wipe Israel off the map.
The world is rarely black and
white, and conflicts are usually not resolved until each side understands the
other’s point of view. With that in mind, it may be worth pondering some
inconvenient truths that would cause a fair-minded Iranian to doubt congressional
wisdom.
The assertion that US policies
are driven by a concern for human rights is not consistent with the history of
US-Iran relations.
That may have been (and still
may be) news to many Americans, but it should not have been. It wasn’t news to
the Iranians. The U.S. government has been aligned with brutal regimes all over
the world for a long time. You can look it up. No need to go through the larger
record here. The history of U.S.-Iran relations makes the point.
As the CIA now admits,
[the U.S. government] overthrew a democratically elected Iranian government in
1953 and restored Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to power. For the next quarter
century, until the 1979 Islamic revolution, the US government supported the
autocratic Shah – whose regime also enjoyed close relations with Israel.
The Shah’s secret police –
Savak – became increasingly brutal, ultimately detaining without trial and
torturing tens of thousands of Iranian citizens. By the 1970s, the regime’s
brutality had been well documented in the west.
In 1976 the International
Commission of Jurists in Geneva reported: “There is abundant evidence showing
the systematic use of impermissible methods of psychological and physical
torture of political suspects during interrogation.”
Yet successive US
administrations supported the Shah until the very end and then shielded him
from prosecution after his overthrow.
Not only did the United States
impose and support a regime that tortured innocent Iranians, there is also
evidence that the CIA assisted Savak. A 1980 report on
CBS’s 60 Minutes documented close ties between these two organizations.
Joffe and I pointed out that
this “adds perspective to the US embassy hostage-taking drama that stretched
over the last 444 days of the Carter administration. Many in Iran believed that
US embassy staff had aided and abetted Savak and were thus fair targets for
retaliation. One need not condone the hostage-taking to understand that it was
not merely an unprovoked, sadistic act.” The 66 American embassy personnel were
not seized by militant students until months after the revolution, when
President Jimmy Carter admitted the Shah to the United States for medical
treatment and presumably political refuge. The students were backed by the new
ruler, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
That was not the end of the
story. Americans might have forgotten the U.S. role in Iraq’s savage war on
Iran.
It is now well known that the
Reagan administration helped Iraq with “intelligence and military
support” after Saddam Hussein attacked Iran in 1980 and launched a brutal
eight-year war. “[I]t was the express policy of Reagan to ensure an Iraqi
victory in the war, whatever the cost,” Shane Harris and Matthew M Aid wrote in
Foreign Policy magazine last year. With the administration’s knowledge,
Note well: “Iraq used chemical
weapons against Iranian forces, killing thousands. Declassified government
records show that the Reagan administration, represented by special envoy
Donald Rumsfeld, helped Saddam’s military produce and deploy these awful
weapons of mass destruction, which included biological as well as chemical
agents.”
Got that? The U.S. government
provided WMD to Saddam Hussein for use against Iran. Iran’s ruler refused to
permit his military to produce chemical weapons for retaliation. (In 2003 the
U.S. military invaded Iraq supposedly over WMD that Saddam had gotten rid of
years earlier.)
To add injury to injury:
In 1988, while the war was in
progress, a US warship, the USS Vincennes, shot down an Iranian civilian
aircraft over the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 aboard, including 66 children.
The captain of the ship said it was under assault by Iranian gunboats at the
time and that the Airbus A300 was misidentified as an attacking F-14 Tomcat.
Iran countered that flight 655 left Iran the same time every day. Witnesses
with Italy’s navy and on a nearby US warship said that at the time it was shot
down, the airliner was climbing. In 1996 the United States settled an
Iranian claim against it at the International Court of Justice for $131.8m.
While it was appropriate for the US government to accept responsibility, it
could not make up for the Iranian people’s losses: more innocent lives were
snuffed out by this attack than were killed in the Pan Am 103 bombing over
Lockerbie, Scotland.
President George H. W. Bush,
however, refused to apologize for the tragedy. As Bush I put it: “I’ll never
apologize for the United States of America, ever. I don’t care what the facts
are.” Sensitive, yes?
The new century signaled no
diminution in American belligerence toward Iran—not even after the 9/11
attacks, which presented an opportunity for rapprochement with the Islamic
Republic.
Despite Iran’s efforts to
cooperate with the United States after 9/11 (the Shiite regime opposed both the
Sunni Taliban and al-Qaida in next-door Afghanistan to the east), President
[George W.] Bush in 2002 included Iran as a member of the “axis of evil” along
with North Korea and Iraq. The following year, the United States overthrew
Saddam Hussein and occupied Iraq – placing US forces on both Iran’s western and
eastern flanks. Finally, in 2011, Iranian forces captured a US surveillance
drone that was flying well within its air space – about 140 miles from the
Afghanistan border.
Thus, “far from being
innocent, US policy toward Iran appears downright hostile when viewed from the
other side. Rather than continuing to tell ourselves tales, it is time we
embrace the truth about our relations with Iran, which even American and Israeli intelligence
agencies say is not building a nuclear weapon. We have a historic chance to end
the destructive cold war with Iran, which, like it or not, will remain a major
power in the Middle East. It would be a tragedy if Congress were to sabotage
this opportunity.”
Congressional obstruction
notwithstanding, Obama, working with the other Security Council members,
Germany, and the rest of the European Union, finalized the nuclear agreement
with Iran, which imposed an additional inspections regime along with other restrictions
and seemed to take war off the table. In return, Western sanctions were to be
lifted, and Iran was to rejoin the world economy. In the 1990s, Iran’s second
and current “Supreme Leader,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, issued a fatwa forbidding
the procurement, production, or use of nuclear weapons.
Unfortunately, Trump tore up
the agreement in 2018. President Joe Biden did precious little to revive his
old boss’s deal, but Trump presumably would have torn that up too when he
returned to office this year. The U.S. government’s shameful record concerning
Iran continues to haunt the world. It’s not over yet, no matter what Trump
says.