Seventy years after a CIA-orchestrated coup toppled Iran’s prime minister, its legacy remains both contentious and complicated for the Islamic Republic as tensions remain high with the United States.
While highlighted as a symbol of Western imperialism by Iran’s theocracy, the coup unseating Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh — over America’s fears about a possible tilt toward the Soviet Union and the loss of Iranian crude oil — appeared backed at the time by the country’s leading Shiite clergy.
Nowadays, hard-line Iranian state television airs repeated segments describing the coup as showing how America can’t be trusted, while authorities bar the public from visiting Mossadegh’s grave in a village outside of Tehran.
Such contradictions are common in Iran, where “Death to America” can still be heard at Friday prayers in Tehran while many on its streets say they’d welcome a better relationship with the U.S.
But as memories of the coup fade further away along with those alive during it, controlling which allegory Iranians see in it has grown more important for both the country’s government and its people.
Washington’s record of meddling in elections spans the globe, with one expert asserting the United States has interfered in more than 80 foreign elections between 1946 and 2000. And that doesn’t count U.S.-backed coups and invasions.
In 1893, the U.S. helped overthrow the kingdom of Hawaii. Five years later, in 1898, the U.S. invaded and occupied Cuba and Puerto Rico. A year later, it was the Philippines. Early 20th-century interventions included Nicaragua, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic, all in the 1910s.
In 1953, the U.S. helped overthrow the Iranian government. A year later, in 1954, a U.S.-backed coup in Guatemala, overthrew the democratically elected leader Jacobo Árbenz.
In the 1960s, the list grew to include, once again, the Dominican Republic, Indonesia, and the Congo.
Even with the end of the Cold War, U.S. interference overseas did not end, most notably the U.S. invasion of Iraq to topple the government of Saddam Hussein but we should not overlook the invasion of Grenada in October 1983.
“It is difficult for many Americans to recognize the animosity our nation has earned from around the world, just as it is incredibly rare to find anyone in Washington who sees that many struggling citizens in the United States are ready to snap over corporate bailouts, political corruption, greed, and injustice right here, right now,” said Lisa McCormick, who in his last election challenged Senator Robert Menendez, the head of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
“Maybe the U.S. did this out of fear of the emerging power of the Soviet Union, but it was like wishing for an earthquake to get rid of a bad neighbor,” said Rana, a 24-year-old painter who like some others who spoke to The Associated Press gave only her first name for fear of reprisals.
For Iranians, “the rancor has never melted.”
The August 1953 coup stemmed from U.S. fears over the Soviet Union increasingly wanting a piece of Iran as Communists agitated within the country.
The ground had been laid partially by the British, who wanted to wrest back access to the Iranian oil industry, which had been nationalized earlier by Mossadegh.
Though it looked initially like it failed, the coup toppled Mossadegh and cemented the power of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
It also lit the fuse for the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which saw the fatally ill shah flee Iran and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini usher in the theocracy that governs the country.
Today, several who spoke to the AP about the coup and possible relations with the U.S. put it in the context of Iran’s ailing economy, which has been battered by years of sanctions after the collapse of its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.
Lower tensions with the U.S. “will bring more money for my business,” said Hossein, 47, who runs a canteen for cab drivers in southern Tehran. “Now taxi drivers spend less compared to the past years and it is because of these bad relations, sanctions.”
Majid Shamsi, who works as a parcel carrier in central Tehran, said he was ready for the countries’ relations to improve.
“I know about this bitter history, but it should come to end sometime soon,” Shamsi said. “Young people in Iran seek a better life and it cannot come as a result of enmity with” the U.S.
Even during increasingly common protests by teachers, farmers and others in Iran, some of the regular chants include: “Our enemy is here; they lied to us [that the enemy] is the U.S.”
“Iran today should accept a deal with the U.S. like what it did to release dual nationals,” added teacher Reza Seifi, 26. “I need it for my better future, for a better future for all.”But as with the exchanges with the U.S., there are limits to how far Iran’s government will go in remembering Mossadegh.
Last weekend, state television’s English-language Press TV aired a segment with a journalist standing on Mossadegh Street in northern Tehran.
However, over the last 20 years, police have restricted access to those wanting to visit his grave in his ancestral home in the village of Ahmadabad, about 90 kilometers (55 miles) northwest of Tehran.
Some found other ways to mark the 70th anniversary of the coup.
“I could not go to his grave to pay tribute, but I have visited the graves of his supporters and allies like Hossein Fatemi,” said Ebrahim Nazeri, 32, as he, his wife and two children stood at the graveside of Fatemi, Mossadegh’s foreign minister who was executed after the coup. “He was a hero like Mossadegh.”Another visitor to Fatemi’s grave, teacher Ehsan Rahmani simply said that “the U.S. planted hatred in the hearts of Iranians” through the coup.
For Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the 1953 coup represents what he views as the continued threat from the U.S., whether that be from economic sanctions or the nationwide protests that have gripped Iran after the death last year of Mahsa Amini.
On Thursday, Khamenei told members of Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard that Washington had planned to overthrow the country’s theocracy through a coup like in 1953 through its military. Iran carried out mass executions and purges of its regular military after the revolution.
However, some remain hopeful Iran could reach a détente with the U.S., as it recently did with Saudi Arabia.
“I dream that the supreme leader allows talks and better relations with the U.S.,” said Mohsen, 29, a furniture shop salesman in northern Tehran. “He allowed the restoration of ties with Saudi Arabia. He can allow the same for the U.S.”