Jimmy Carter and the Shaw of Iraq
an article from 2004,worth reading...who knows.
Strong
intelligence has begun to emerge that US President Jimmy Carter attempted to
demand financial favors for his political friends from the Shah of Iran. The
rejection of this demand by the Shah could well have led to Pres. Carter’s
resolve to remove the Iranian Emperor from office. 1 GIS. The linkage between
the destruction of the Shah’s Government — directly attributable to Carter’s
actions — and the Iran-Iraq war which cost millions of dead and injured on both
sides, and to the subsequent rise of radical Islamist terrorism makes the new
information of considerable significance. Pres. Carter’s anti-Shah feelings
appeared to have ignited after he sent a group of several of his friends from
his home state, Georgia, to Tehran with an audience arranged with His Majesty
directly by the Oval Office and in Carter’s name. At this meeting, as reported
by Prime Minister Amir Abbas Hoveyda to some confidantes, these businessmen told
the Shah that Pres. Carter wanted a contract. previously awarded to Brown &
Root to build a huge port complex at Bandar Mahshahr, to be cancelled and as a
personal favor to him to be awarded to the visiting group at 10 percent above
the cost quoted by Brown & Root. The group would then charge the 10 percent
as a management fee and supervise the project for Iran, passing the actual
construction work back to Brown & Root for implementation, as previously
awarded. They insisted that without their management the project would face
untold difficulties at the US end and that Pres. Carter was “trying to be
helpful”. They told the Shah that in these perilous political times, he should
appreciate the favor which Pres. Carter was doing him. According to Prime
Minister Hoveyda, the Georgia visitors left a stunned monarch and his bewildered
Prime Minister speechless, other than to later comment among close confidantes
about the hypocrisy of the US President, who talked glibly of God and religion
but practiced blackmail and extortion through his emissaries. The multi-billion
dollar Bandar Mahshahr project would have made 10 percent “management fee” a
huge sum to give away to Pres. Carter’s friends as a favor for unnecessary
services. The Shah politely declined the “personal” management request which had
been passed on to him. The refusal appeared to earn the Shah the determination
of Carter to remove him from office. Carter subsequently refused to allow tear
gas and rubber bullets to be exported to Iran when anti-Shah rioting broke out,
nor to allow water cannon vehicles to reach Iran to control such outbreaks,
generally instigated out of the Soviet Embassy in Tehran. There was speculation
in some Iranian quarters — as well as in some US minds — at the time and later
that Carter’s actions were the result of either close ties to, or empathy for,
the Soviet Union, which was anxious to break out of the longstanding US-led
strategic containment of the USSR, which had prevented the Soviets from reaching
the warm waters of the Indian Ocean. Sensing that Iran’s exports could be
blocked by a couple of ships sunk in the Persian Gulf shipping lanes, the Shah
planned a port which would have the capacity to handle virtually all of Iran’s
sea exports unimpeded. Contrary to accusations leveled at him about the huge,
“megalomaniac” projects like Bandar Mahshahr, these served as a means to provide
jobs for a million graduating high school students every year for whom there
were no university slots available. Guest workers, mostly from Pakistan and
Afghanistan were used to start and expand the projects and Iranians replaced the
foreigners as job demand required, while essential infrastructure for Iran was
built ahead of schedule. In late February 2004, Islamic Iran’s Deputy Minister
of Economy stated that the country needed $18-billion a year to create
one-million jobs and achieve economic prosperity. And at the first job creation
conference held in Tehran’s Amir Kabir University, Iran’s Student News Agency
estimated the jobless at some three-million. Or a budget figure of $54-billion
to deal with the problem. Thirty years earlier, the Shah had already taken steps
to resolve the same challenges, which were lost in the revolution which had been
so resolutely supported by Jimmy Carter. A quarter-century after the toppling of
the Shah and his Government by the widespread unrest which had been largely
initiated by groups with Soviet funding — but which was, ironically, to bring
the mullahs rather than the radical-left to power — Ayatollah Shariatmadari’s
warning that the clerics were not equipped to run the country was echoed by the
Head of Islamic Iran’s Investment Organization, who said: “We are hardly
familiar with the required knowledge concerning the proper use of foreign
resources both in State and private sectors, nor how to make the best use of
domestic resources.” Not even after 25 years. Historians and observers still
debate Carter’s reasons for his actions during his tenure at the White House,
where almost everything, including shutting down satellite surveillance over
Cuba at an inappropriate time for the US, seemed to benefit Soviet aims and
policies. Some claim he was inept and ignorant, others that he was allowing his
liberal leanings to overshadow US national interests. The British Foreign &
Commonwealth Office had enough doubts in this respect, even to the extent of
questioning whether Carter was a Russian mole, that they sent around 200
observers to monitor Carter’s 1980 presidential campaign against Ronald Reagan
to see if the Soviets would try to “buy” the presidency for Carter. In the
narrow aspect of Carter setting aside international common sense to remove the
US’ most powerful ally in the Middle East, this focused change was definitely
contrary to US interests and events over the next 25 years proved this.
According to Prime Minister Hoveyda, Jimmy Carter’s next attack on the Shah was
a formal country to country demand that the Shah sign a 50-year oil agreement
with the US to supply oil at a fixed price of $8 a barrel. No longer couched as
a personal request, the Shah was told he should heed the contract proposal if he
wished to enjoy continued support from the US. In these perilous, political
times which, could become much worse. Faced with this growing pressure and
threat, the monarch still could not believe that Iran, the staunchest US ally in
the region, other than Israel, would be discarded or maimed so readily by
Carter, expecting he would be prevailed upon by more experienced minds to avoid
destabilizing the regional power structure and tried to explain his position.
Firstly, Iran did not have 50-years of proven oil reserves that could be covered
by a contract. Secondly, when the petrochemical complex in Bandar Abbas, in the
South, was completed a few years later, each barrel of oil would produce $1,000
worth of petrochemicals so it would be treasonous for the Shah to give oil away
for only $8. Apologists, while acknowledging that Carter had caused the
destabilization of the monarchy in Iran, claim he was only trying to salvage
what he could from a rapidly deteriorating political situation to obtain maximum
benefits for the US. But, after the Shah was forced from the throne, Carter’s
focused effort to get re-elected via the Iran hostage situation points to less
high minded motives. Rumor has always had it that Carter had tried to negotiate
to have the US hostages, held for 444 days by the Islamic Republic which he had
helped establish in Iran, released just before the November 1980 election date,
but that opposition (Republican) candidate Ronald Reagan had subverted, taken
over and blocked the plan. An eye-witness account of the seizure by “students”
of the US Embassy on November 4, 1979, in Tehran confirms a different scenario.
The mostly “rent-a-crowd” group of “students” organized to climb the US Embassy
walls was spearheaded by a mullah on top of a Volkswagen van, who with a two-way
radio in one hand and a bullhorn in the other, controlled the speed of the march
on the Embassy according to instructions he received over the radio. He would
slow it down, hurry it up and slow it down again in spurts and starts,
triggering the curiosity of an educated pro-Khomeini vigilante, who later told
the story to a friend in London. When asked by the vigilante for the reason of
this irregular movement, the stressed cleric replied that he had instructions to
provide the US Embassy staff with enough time to destroy their most sensitive
documents and to give the three most senior US diplomats adequate opportunity to
then take refuge at the Islamic Republic Foreign Ministry rather than be taken
with the other hostages. Someone at the Embassy was informing the Foreign
Ministry as to progress over the telephone and the cleric was being told what to
do over his radio. The vigilante then asked why the Islamic Government would
bother to be so accommodating to the Great Satan and was told that the whole
operation was planned in advance by Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan’s
revolutionary Government with Pres. Carter in return for Carter having helped
depose the Shah and that this was being done to ensure Carter got re-elected.
“He helped us, now we help him” was the matter-of-fact comment from the cleric.
In 1978 while the West was deciding to remove His Majesty Mohammad Reza Shah
Pahlavi from the throne, Shariatmadari was telling anyone who would listen not
to allow “Ayatollah” Ruhollah Khomeini and his velayat faghih (Islamic jurist)
version of Islam to be allowed to govern Iran. Ayatollah Shariatmadari noted:
“We mullahs will behave like bickering whores in a brothel if we come to power
... and we have no experience on how to run a modern nation so we will destroy
Iran and lose all that has been achieved at such great cost and effort.” 2.
Pres. Carter reportedly responded that Khomeini was a religious man — as he
himself claimed to be — and that he knew how to talk to a man of God, who would
live in the holy city of Qom like an Iranian “pope” and act only as an advisor
to the secular, popular revolutionary Government of Mehdi Bazargan and his group
of anti-Shah executives, some of whom were US-educated and expected to show
preferences for US interests. Carter’s mistaken assessment of Khomeini was
encouraged by advisors with a desire to form an Islamic “green belt” to contain
atheist Soviet expansion with the religious fervor of Islam. Eventually all 30
of the scenarios on Iran presented to Carter by his intelligence agencies proved
wrong, and totally misjudged Khomeini as a person and as a political entity.
Today, Iranian-born, Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, the dominant Shia leader in
Iraq faces Shariatmadari’s dilemma and shares the same “quietist” Islamic
philosophy of sharia (religious law) guidance rather than direct governing by
the clerics themselves. Sistani’s “Khomeini” equivalent, militant Ayatollah
Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr, was gunned down in 1999 by then-Iraqi Pres. Saddam
Hussein’s forces. Sadr’s son, 30-year-old Muqtada al-Sadr, lacks enough
followers or religious seniority/clout to immediately oppose Sistani but has a
hard core of violent followers biding their time. According to all estimates,
the young Sadr waits for the June 2004 scheduled handover of power in Iraq,
opening the way for serious, militant intervention on his side by Iranian
clerics. The Iranian clerical leaders, the successors to Khomeini, see, far more
clearly than US leaders and observers, the parallels between 1979-80 and 2004:
as a result, they have put far more effort into activities designed to ensure
that “Reagan’s successor”, US Pres. George W. Bush, does not win power.
Footnotes: 1. © 2004 Alan Peters. The name “Alan Peters” is a nom de plume for a
writer who was for many years involved in intelligence and security matters in
Iran. He had significant access inside Iran at the highest levels during the
rule of the Shah, until early 1979. 2. See Defense & Foreign Affairs Daily,
March 2, 2004: Credibility and Legitimacy of Ruling Iranian Clerics Unraveling
as Pressures Mount Against Them; The Source of Clerical Ruling Authority Now
Being Questioned. This report, also by Alan Peters, details the background of
“Ayatollah” Khomeini, the fact that his qualifications for his religious title
were not in place, and the fact that he was not of Iranian origin.
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