Posted on 07/22/2016 | 4
Comments

(Excerpted from Chapter
1: David Rockefeller & the Shah of Iran: Big
Oil & Their Bankers…)
Wherever the Four Horsemen (Exxon Mobil, Chevron
Texaco, BP Amoco & Royal Dutch/Shell) gallop the CIA is close behind.
Iran was no exception. By 1957 the Company, as intelligence insiders know
the CIA, created one of its first Frankensteins – the Shah of Iran’s brutal
secret police known as SAVAK.
Kermit Roosevelt, the Mossadegh coup-master turned Northrop salesman,
admitted in his memoirs that SAVAK was 100% created by the CIA and Mossad, the
Israeli intelligence agency that acts as appendage of the CIA. For the next
20 years the CIA and SAVAK were joined at the hip when it came to matters of
Persian Gulf security.
Three hundred fifty SAVAK agents were shuttled each
year to CIA training facilities in McLean, Virginia, where they learned the
finer arts of interrogation and torture. Top SAVAK brass were trained
through the US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Public Safety
Program, until it was shut down in 1973 due to its reputation for turning out
some of the world’s finest terrorists.
In 1963 when JFK was assassinated SAVAK Chief Hassan
Pakravan joined the Shah in Tehran to celebrate Kennedy’s death. CIA, MI6
and Mossad supported 30 paramilitary groups in Iran and provided support to
Shah-loyalist groups.
Popular anger towards Big Oil, the Shah and his new
police state resulted in mass protests. The Shah dealt with the peaceful
demonstrations with sheer brutality and got a wink and nod from Langley.
From 1957-79 Iran housed 125,000 political prisoners. SAVAK “disappeared”
dissenters, a strategy replicated by CIA surrogate dictators in Argentina and
Chile.
SAVAK’s campaign of terror reached its nadir on June
15th, 1963. That day over 1,000 people were butchered by SAVAK forces, in
what became known as the 15th of Khordad Massacre. In 1974 the director
of Amnesty International declared that no country had a worse human rights
record than Iran. The CIA responded by increasing its support for SAVAK.
A small group of elite families close to the Shah
assumed total control of the Iranian economy. The Aalam, Sadri,
Bakhtiyari and Eqbal families were part of this tiny but powerful aristocracy,
as were the Rafsanjanis, who owned thousands of hectares of pistachio groves
and whose son Hashemi would later become Iran’s President.
Under the Shah’s reign, the Rafsanjanis made
millions in real estate transactions, selling much of their land to the throngs
of multinational corporations who flocked to Tehran, where they were awarded
tax holidays, exemptions of duties on imported machinery and low-interest
US-taxpayer-guaranteed Export-Import Bank loans.
In 1971 the Shah held an extravagant coronation to
celebrate the 2,500-year anniversary of the Peacock Throne. Guests included
Chase Manhattan insider John McCloy and George Ball, the long-time State
Department hack who was now a senior partner at Lehman Brothers. Chase
Manhattan, the Bank of America and Morgan Guaranty had been doing business in
Iran for a very long time. Now they were joined by a horde of other
banking giants.
In 1968 Citibank bought a 35% stake in Bank Iranian.
Manufacturer’s Hanover Trust, led by Minos Zombanakis, became intimately
involved in Iranian affairs. Chase Chairman David Rockefeller presented
the Shah with a hunting rifle and bought up Iranian art. Soon Chase had a
35% share of the Industrial Credit Bank of Iran. Bankers flocked to the
Hilton and Intercontinental Hotels in Tehran to put together loan deals, which
led to huge contracts for the multinational corporations which these same banks
controlled.
B.F. Goodrich, Allied Chemical and Amoco established
huge petrochemical joint ventures in Khuzistan. Chase Investment, Diamond
Agatel, Mitsui and Hawaiian Agronomic built an agro-industrial complex.
The world’s first aluminum smelter popped up at Arak in a joint venture between
Reynolds, Kaiser, British Metal and General Cable.
Dow Chemical, FMC and John Deere set up agribusiness
operations, while Cargill, Continental and other international grain giants
flooded the Iranian market with US taxpayer-subsidized wheat, corn and feed
grains.
Iran had been self-sufficient in foodstuffs. Now the
country embarked upon an export-led development strategy that benefited a
handful of Tehran elite and their multinational partners. Cotton, sugar
cane and sugar beet cultivation for export replaced traditional subsistence
crops like maize and rice with help from USAID.
In 1961, before this “White Revolution”, 79% of
Iranian agriculture was for domestic consumption. Ten years later only
50% of production stayed in country while the other half was exported.
Most multinationals operating in Iran went through either Chase Manhattan or
Bank Omran, which became known at the USDA as “the Shah’s bank”.
Food deficits weren’t far behind. Soon Iran found
itself importing basic foods like wheat and corn to feed its increasingly
urbanized population. Destitute farmers, plowed under by foreign
agribusiness, flooded into Tehran and other large cities. In 1963 there
had been over 40,000 villages in Iran. When the Shah was deposed in 1979
there were less than 10,000.
The population of Tehran doubled during the 1970’s,
with many of the newcomers living in the growing shantytowns. Ironically,
many built their shanties out of US military crates, which were now arriving
daily.
Dean
Henderson is the author of five books:Big
Oil & Their Bankers in the Persian Gulf: Four Horsemen, Eight Families
& Their Global Intelligence, Narcotics & Terror Network, The
Grateful Unrich: Revolution in 50 Countries, Das Kartell der Federal
Reserve, Stickin’
it to the Matrix & The
Federal Reserve Cartel. You can subscribe free to his weekly Left
Hook column @www.hendersonlefthook.wordpress.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.