Posted on 12/16/2001 1:25:27 PM PST by Chuckmorse
Carter Sold out Iran 1977-1978
As if a light were switched off, the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlevi, portrayed for 20 years as a progressive modern ruler by Islamic standards, was suddenly, in 1977-1978, turned into this foaming at the mouth monster by the international left media.
Soon after becoming President in 1977, Jimmy Carter launched a deliberate campaign to undermine the Shah.
The Soviets and their left-wing apparatchiks would coordinate with Carter by smearing the Shah in a campaign of lies meant to topple his throne.
The result would be the establishment of a Marxist/Islamic state in Iran headed by the tyrannical Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
The Iranian revolution, besides enthroning one of the worlds most oppressive regimes, would greatly contribute to the creation of the Marxist/Islamic terror network challenging the free world today.
At the time, a senior Iranian diplomat in Washington observed, President Carter betrayed the Shah and helped create the vacuum that will soon be filled by Soviet-trained agents and religious fanatics who hate America.
Under the guise of promoting human rights, Carter made demands on the Shah while blackmailing him with the threat that if the demands werent fulfilled, vital military aid and training would be withheld.
This strange policy, carried out against a staunch, 20 year Middle East ally, was a repeat of similar policies applied in the past by US governments to other allies such as pre Mao China and pre Castro Cuba.
Carter started by pressuring the Shah to release political prisoners including known terrorists and to put an end to military tribunals.
The newly released terrorists would be tried under civil jurisdiction with the Marxist/Islamists using these trials as a platform for agitation and propaganda.
This is a standard tactic of the left then and now.
The free world operates at a distinct dis-advantage to Marxist and Islamic nations in this regard as in those countries, trials are staged to show the political faith of the ruling elite.
Fair trials, an independent judiciary, and a search for justice is considered to be a western bourgeois prejudice.
Carter pressured Iran to allow for free assembly which meant that groups would be able to meet and agitate for the overthrow of the government.
It goes without saying that such rights didnt exist in any Marxist or Islamic nation.
The planned and predictable result of these policies was an escalation of opposition to the Shah, which would be viewed by his enemies as a weakness.
A well-situated internal apparatus in Iran receiving its marching orders from the Kremlin egged on this growing opposition.
By the fall of 1977, university students, working in tandem with a Shiite clergy that had long opposed the Shahs modernizing policies, began a well coordinated and financed series of street demonstrations supported by a media campaign reminiscent of the 1947-1948 campaign against Chinas Chiang Ki Shek in favor of the agrarian reformer Mao tse Tung.
At this point the Shah was unable to check the demonstrators, who were instigating violence as a means of inflaming the situation and providing their media stooges with atrocity propaganda.
Rumors were circulating amongst Iranians that the CIA under the orders of President Carter organized these demonstrations.
In November 1977, the Shah and his Empress, Farah Diba, visited the White House where they were met with hostility.
They were greeted by nearly 4,000 Marxist-led Iranian students, many wearing masks, waving clubs, and carrying banners festooned with the names of Iranian terrorist organizations.
The rioters were allowed within 100 feet of the White House where they attacked other Iranians and Americans gathered to welcome the Shah.
Only 15 were arrested and quickly released.
Inside the White House, Carter pressured the Shah to implement even more radical changes.
Meanwhile, the Soviets were mobilizing a campaign of propaganda, espionage, sabotage, and terror in Iran.
The Shah was being squeezed on two sides.
In April 1978, Moscow would instigate a bloody coup in Afghanistan and install the communist puppet Nur Mohammad Taraki.
Taraki would proceed to call for a jihad against the Ikhwanu Shayateen which translates into brothers of devils, a label applied to opponents of the new red regime in Kabul and to the Iranian government.
Subversives and Soviet-trained agents swarmed across the long Afghanistan/Iran border to infiltrate Shiite mosques and other Iranian institutions.
By November 1978, there was an estimated 500,000 Soviet backed Afghanis in Iran where, among other activities, they set up training camps for terrorists.
Khomeini, a 78-year-old Shiite cleric whose brother had been imprisoned as a result of activities relating to his Iranian Communist party affiliations, and who had spent 15 years in exile in Bath Socialist Iraq, was poised to return.
In exile, Khomeini spoke of the creation of a revolutionary Islamic republic, which would be anti-Western, socialist, and with total power in the hands of an ayatollah.
In his efforts to violently overthrow the government of Iran, Khomeini received the full support of the Soviets.
Nureddin Klanuri, head of the Iranian Communist Tudeh Party, in exile in East Berlin, stated, The Tudeh Party approves Ayatollah Khomeinis initiative in creating the Islamic Revolutionary Council. The ayatollahs program coincides with that of the Tudeh Party.
Khomeinis closest advisor, Sadegh Ghothzadeh, was well known as a revolutionary with close links to communist intelligence.
In January 1998, Pravda, the official Soviet organ, officially endorsed the Khomeini revolution.
American leaders were also supporting Khomeini.
After the Pravda endorsement, Ramsey Clark, who served as Attorney General under President Lyndon B. Johnson, held a press conference where he reported on a trip to Iran and a Paris visit with Khomeini.
He urged the US government to take no action to help the Shah so that Iran could determine its own fate.
Clark played a behind the scenes role influencing members of Congress to not get involved in the crisis.
Perhaps UN Ambassador Andrew Young best expressed the thinking of the left at the time when he stated that, if successful, Khomeini would eventually be hailed as a saint.
Khomeini was allowed to seize power in Iran and, as a result, we are now reaping the harvest of anti-American fanaticism and extremism.
Khomeini unleashed the hybrid of Islam and Marxism that has spawned suicide bombers and hijackers.
President Jimmy Carter, and the extremists in his administration are to blame and should be held accountable.
Chuck Morse Is the author of Why Im a Right-Wing Extremist www.chuckmorse.com
As opposed to Catholic Sunday School?
The Shah, was accused of being an authoritarian rigime. In reality, he was put in an impossible situation. There were constant internal civil wars between Islamic religious factions. The turbulence was supported by the communists from outside. To step between the factions in order to keep them from killing each other was to incur the wrath of both factions after which they would attempt to kill the Shah in an attempt to get to each other and kill each other. The Shah had little choice but to keep clubbing heads in order to keep organizations from killing him and each other. This was eagerly interpreted as oppression by the radical left, including Carter.
My view of the middle East is still the same after 30 years. If someone were to make me Shah, King, Premier, or whatever, I'd stick around just long enough to pocket a few million dollars, leave to a quiet house on the New England seashore, then tell may former subjects they were on their own and free to kill each other. That the Shah stuck it out as long as he did was an enormous sacrifice and a miracle that should have earned him understanding and respect.
We can thank Jimmy Carter for three (3) foreign policy disasters:
1) The Iranian Revolution.
2) The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (indirectly).
3) The communist takeover of Nicaragua.
We are still paying the price for the first two, and there may be others.
If still remember when Carter kicked the Shah out of the U.S. while he getting cancer treatments. At about that time CBS on 60 minutes did glowing report on Khomenini. Khomenini was in Paris and CBS played him as a gentle loving devout Muslim deeply interested in the welfare of the people of Iran. The viewer was intended to draw the conclusion that Iran been so badly repressed by the Shah and it would have a new rebirth of freedom under Khomeini.
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