The British “Power Elite” (PE) members didn’t like any strong national leaders. 
These included Egypt’s Gamal Abdal Nasser (who nationalized the Suez Canal on 
July 26, 1956) and Iran’s Mohammad Mossadegh, who nationalized that country’s 
oil industry at the expense of the British.



WHAT IS THE ROLE OF IRAN?
PART 4





By Dennis L. Cuddy, Ph.D.
April 20, 2009


[NOTE: Who said the following? “This state of mind, which subordinates the 
interests of the ego to the conservation of the community, is really the first 
premise for every truly human culture…. The basic attitude from which such 
activity arises, we call – to distinguish it from egoism and 
selfishness-idealism. By this we understand only the individual’s capacity to 
make sacrifices for the community, for his fellow men.” Doesn’t this sound like 
the Communitarian philosophy of today? Actually, it was Hitler who wrote the 
quoted words in Mein Kampf (July 18, 1925). Further relevant to what is 
occurring today, Leonard Peikoff in Ominous Parallels (1982) wrote: “Contrary 
to the Marxists, the Nazis did not advocate public ownership of the means of 
production. They did demand that the government oversee and run the nation’s 
economy. 

The issue of legal ownership, they explained, is secondary; what counts is the 
issue of control. Private citizens, therefore, may continue to hold titles to 
property – so long as the state reserves to itself the unqualified right to 
regulate the use of their property…. But the Nazis defended their policies, and 
the country did not rebel; it accepted the Nazi argument. Selfish individuals 
may be unhappy, the Nazis said, but what we have established in Germany is the 
ideal system, socialism. In its Nazi usage this term is not restricted to a 
theory of economics; it is to be understood in a fundamental sense. ‘Socialism’ 
for the Nazis denotes the principle of collectivism as such and its corollary, 
statism – in every field of human action, including but not limited to 
economics. ‘To be a socialist,’ says Goebbels, ‘is to submit the I to the thou; 
socialism is sacrificing the individual to the whole.’”]

The British “Power Elite” (PE) members didn’t like any strong national leaders. 
These included Egypt’s Gamal Abdal Nasser (who nationalized the Suez Canal on 
July 26, 1956) and Iran’s Mohammad Mossadegh, who nationalized that country’s 
oil industry at the expense of the British. In Pulitzer Prize-winning 
journalist Ben Bagdikian’s The Media Monopoly, one reads about “when Kermit 
Roosevelt, a former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer, wrote a book 
called Countercoup: The Struggle for the Control of Iran. It was the author’s 
inside version of how intelligence agencies overthrew a left-leaning Iranian 
premier, Mohammad Mossadegh, in 1953 and reinstated the Shah. The issue was 
control of oil. The plot was called ‘Ajax,’ of which Roosevelt wrote: ‘The 
original proposal for Ajax came from the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) after 
its expulsion from Iran nine months earlier.’ The book was published by 
McGraw-Hill in early 1979. Books were on sale in bookstores and reviewer copies 
were already in the mail when British Petroleum, successor corporation to AIOC, 
persuaded McGraw-Hill to recall all the books – from the stores and from 
reviewers.”

As I indicated in Part 3 of this series, the British PE Milner Group didn’t 
want a strong Israel. Thus, during the Carter administration, according to 
Morton Klein, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance (member of Yale University’s 
secret society Scroll & Key) “once revealed that if Carter had won a second 
term, he intended to sell Israel down the river.” 

Today, the PE uses the terrorist acts of radical Muslims against Israel as a 
means of pressuring Israelis to make compromises that will lead to an eventual 
acceptance of a World Socialist Government. I’ve quoted in the past Lincoln 
Bloomfield’s Study Memorandum No. 7 for Rhodes scholar Secretary of State Dean 
Rusk in 1962: “If the communist dynamic was greatly abated, the West might lose 
whatever incentive it has for world government.” So just substitute the words 
“radical Muslim” for “communist” and “Israel” for “the West,” and you will 
understand the PE’s mechanism at work today. 

But it’s not as though no Israeli could anticipate the future, because Look 
magazine (January 16, 1962) published Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion’s 
prediction of what the world would look like in 25 years: “The Cold War will be 
a thing of the past… a gradual democratization of the Soviet Union…. On the 
other hand, the United States [will be transformed] into a welfare state with a 
planned economy. Western and Eastern Europe will become a federation of 
autonomous states having a Socialist and democratic regime. With the exception 
of the USSR as a federated Eurasian state, all other continents will become 
united in a world alliance, at whose disposal will be an international police 
force…. A pill to prevent pregnancy will slow down the explosive natural 
increase in China and India….” 

Concerning U.S. support for radical Muslims like Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran and 
the Taliban in Afghanistan, on July 3, 1979 President Carter signed a directive 
approving covert aid to anti-Soviet fighters in Kabul. And Carter’s National 
Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski (ZB) told The Guardian reporters David 
Leigh and Richard Norton-Taylor (“House of Saud Looks Close to Collapse,” 
November 21, 2001), “that the Russians had been drawn into what he saw as his 
cleverly baited trap. The day the Soviet forces crossed the border [into 
Afghanistan] he wrote to Carter, saying: ‘We now have the opportunity to give 
the USSR their Vietnam War.’” Often unreported about this chapter in U.S. 
history is the role of China, but Mike Evans in his new book, Jimmy Carter: The 
Liberal Left and World Chaos, points out that in January 1980, Secretary of 
Defense Harold Brown “was able to secure permission for U.S. supply planes to 
traverse Chinese air space on flights to arm the Afghan Mujahadeen. Soon 
thereafter, and despite China’s history of ignoring human rights issues, 
Congress conferred upon the Chinese government the status of 
most-favored-nation. The U.S. agreed to sell specific technological materials 
that had both military and civilian uses.”


When asked later about the wisdom of supporting radical Muslims, ZB reportedly 
said: “What is more important in world history? The Taliban or the collapse of 
the Soviet empire? Some agitated Moslems or the liberation of Central Europe 
and the end of the Cold War?” (See Blowback: The Cost and Consequences of 
American Empire by Chalmers Johnson.)


“Some agitated Moslems”?! According to Clare Lopez of The Centre for Counter 
Intelligence and Security Studies, Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security 
(MOIS, also known as VEVAK, Vezarat-e Ettela’at va Amniat-e Keshvar) was 
involved in the 1996 attack on Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia (19 Americans 
killed), the 1998 East African Embassy bombings, and the October 2000 attack 
(by Al Qaeda) on the USS Cole. VEVAK was also involved in the 1983 bombings of 
the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, about which the U.S. had foreknowledge! According 
to CIA agent Robert Baer in See No Evil (2002), he saw “an intelligence report 
from March 1982 – a full 13 months before the Embassy bombing – stating that 
Iran was in touch with a network capable of destroying the U.S. Embassy in 
Beirut. A subsequent report even specified a date the operation should be 
carried out. The source was firsthand and its validity rock solid.” Ask 
yourself why the U.S. would allow its Embassy to be bombed when it had 
foreknowledge of the attack.

Click here for part -----> 1, 2, 3, 4, 

© 2009 Dennis Cuddy - All Rights Reserved




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dennis Laurence Cuddy, historian and political analyst, received a Ph.D. from 
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (major in American History, 
minor in political science). Dr. Cuddy has taught at the university level, has 
been a political and economic risk analyst for an international consulting 
firm, and has been a Senior Associate with the U.S. Department of Education. 

Cuddy has also testified before members of Congress on behalf of the U.S. 
Department of Justice. Dr. Cuddy has authored or edited twenty books and 
booklets, and has written hundreds of articles appearing in newspapers around 
the nation, including The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and USA Today. He 
has been a guest on numerous radio talk shows in various parts of the country, 
such as ABC Radio in New York City, and he has also been a guest on the 
national television programs USA Today and CBS's Nightwatch.

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