Desperate Measures: Truman, Eisenhower, and the Lead-up to Operation Ajax
Abstract
In August 1953, the American CIA and British SIS collaborated with the Shah of Iran
and elements of the Iranian military to overthrow the government of Prime Minister
Mohammed Mossadegh in Operation Ajax. The coup marked the culmination of an ongoing
crisis that had begun when Mossadegh nationalized the holdings of the Anglo-Iranian
Oil Company in 1951. Operation Ajax has become one of the controversial episodes of
the early Cold War on account of what many see as its role in creating the “blowback”
of the 1979 Iranian Revolution. However, historians cannot properly engage in the
blowback debate without understanding why the United States undertook such a bold
policy. This thesis interrogates explanations for the decision to approve Operation
Ajax and analyzes their strengths and shortcomings using primarily archival evidence,
some not available to many previous scholars, and accounts of participants in the
crisis. In doing so, I engage theories of American policy in the larger Cold War.
Finally, the thesis questions the limits that scholars impose between those different
theories and advocates a multilayered approach to Cold War history.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
HistoryPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10211Citation
Leonhardt, Theodore L. (2015). Desperate Measures: Truman, Eisenhower, and the Lead-up to Operation Ajax. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10211.Collections
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