Regime Change in Iran: Been There, Done That By----- Philip Giraldi American Free Press | May 27, 2019 The failed coup attempt in Caracas in early May brings to mind the techniques used by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and British intelligence in Iran in 1953 to overthrow the Mohammad Mossadeq government. It is quite astonishing how that regime-change long-ago operation parallels what is currently taking place in Venezuela and also with regards to Iran yet again. Mossadeq was the democratically elected prime minister of Iran beginning in 1951, serving in a government in which the Shah with limited authority was the head of state presiding over a parliamentary system. Iran was nominally independent at the time, but it was heavily influenced by the neighboring Soviet Union, which retained control over several Iranian provinces after the Second World War ended, and Great Britain, which exploited the country’s oil resources through the mechanism of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Com
Blog is interested in strategic thinking and planning for peace and the dissemination of a culture of coexistence and cultural knowledge and news review. The Code is concerned with the various fields of reporting, cultural support and communication in the field of systematic analysis Edited by Hatem Babeker Awad Al-Karim and others