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U.S. Military Forces–Iran Status of Forces Agreement / “Capitulation Law” (1964)
My Memory | 03/03/2026 | CharlesOconnell

Posted on 03/03/2026 10:07:09 PM PST by CharlesOConnell

Prior to the 1979 Iranian Revolution, when American military bases were hosted by the Shah, there was a separate tier of justice, like the difference between Sharia and Rum courts, to which American military criminal justice cases were referred.

[The "Rum" (Orthodox Christians) under eastern Muslim governments, were generally governed by their own religious laws in civil matters. They were considered a minority protected under the millet-like system that allowed communal, self-governing ecclesiastical courts, particularly in religious, matrimonial, and inheritance cases, rather than strict Islamic Sharia. A similar system under British occupation was the Irish "Breton Law" courts in which, for instance, a homicide perpetrator did not necessarily receive capital punishment, but his clan leaders had to support the victim's widow.]

This separate criminal court system apparently occasioned one of the most important grievances that underlay the 1979 Iranian Revolution. This agreement between the American Military and the Imperial Iranian government was known as Status of Forces Agreement.

(SOFA) agreement was similar in scope to agreements with other nations in which U.S. Military bases were hosted. But in Iran it became famous under a more politically charged name: The “Capitulation Law” (1964).

In 1964, the Shah’s government granted legal immunity to U.S. military personnel and their dependents in Iran under an amendment connected to U.S. military assistance agreements. This arrangement effectively meant:

Why it became politically explosive

In Iran the law was widely denounced as “capitulation”, a term historically associated with imperial-era extraterritorial privileges. Many Iranians viewed it as a loss of sovereignty and proof that the Shah was subordinating Iran to the United States.

Role in the revolutionary narrative

The law became especially prominent after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini denounced it in October 1964. The Shah’s regime then arrested and exiled him, a turning point that later revolutionary movements treated as foundational.

In short: it was the 1964 U.S.–Iran Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), often referred to in Iran as the “Capitulation Law.”


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Like Muammar Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini received significant monetary payments from the U.S.

It happened like this: After the Church Hearings revealed significant CIA misbehavior, President Jimmy Carter decided to cashier 2,000 CIA agents.

(Carter was a Rockefeller creature, as witnessed by "Jimmy Carter Revealed: He's a Rockefeller Republican". In this conflict with the Bush dynasty, it appears that the timing was important, of the passing of Nelson and John D. Rockefeller III at the end of the 1970s, with Carter only able to rely on the patronage of David, who only died decades later, in 2017.)

Bush 41 had headed the CIA. https://www.cia.gov/stories/story/george-h-w-bush-the-11th-director-of-central-intelligence/ . He ran an operation against Carter, by giving $43 million to Ayatollah Khomeini to keep the American diplomatic staff who had been held hostage, as it happened, until hours after George H.W. Bush was inaugurated Vice-President of the U.S.

Thus, the Iranians played willing pawns in American Presidential politics, despite various spin currents in the news.

1 posted on 03/03/2026 10:07:09 PM PST by CharlesOConnell
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