Friday, June 26, 2026

The Geopolitical Shift in West Asia; The Iran-US Peace Memorandum in the Shadow of National Power and Resilience

Dr. ALIREZA DELKOSH

COLOMBO : Following two rounds of aggression by Zionist regime and the United States against the Islamic Republic of Iran, the first on June 13, 2025 lasting for 12 days, and the second on February 28,2026 lasting for 41 days, the world witnessed a geopolitical shift driven by the power and resilience of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Ultimately, on June 25, 2026 , a peace memorandum of understanding was signed between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States.
This 14-article memorandum of understanding consists of two phases:
The first phase includes the immediate and permanent ending of war on all fronts, including the
war against the Islamic Republic of Iran and Lebanon, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the
lifting of the naval blockade in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, the release of Iran’s
frozen assets by the United States, the reconstruction of Iran, and other technical matters.
The second phase entails the commencement of 60-day negotiations to reach a final
agreement regarding the peaceful nuclear program of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the lifting
of all sanctions against Iran.
After testing its strength in two acts of aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran and
witnessing Iran’s crushing, explicit, and decisive responses, the United States came to the
conclusion that the way to engage with the Islamic Republic of Iran is through negotiation, not
war.
Today, US officials have clearly realized the destructive role of the Zionist regime in undermining
stability in the West Asia region and imposing damages on the people of the region and the
United States. On the other side, the historical role of the Islamic Republic of Iran in establishing
permanent stability in the Persian Gulf has become more evident today than ever before.
The international community clearly observed that despite suffering massive losses resulting
from the war, foremost among them, the martyrdom of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic
Republic of Iran, the martyrdom of 168 innocent school children in Minab, the destruction of
civilian infrastructure, and the martyrdom of a large number of Iranian citizens, the Islamic
Republic of Iran possesses authority and decisive power against a coercive discourse, and
answers any bullying with a proportionate and powerful response.
Throughout these two wars, the resilient people of Iran demonstrated that despite the economic
hardships caused by the aggression of the Zionist regime and the United States, they
consistently stand as guardians of their red lines and national interests, displaying a historic
national steadfastness in this regard.
Today, the world has become aware of the reality that the people from America to Europe and
Asia should not pay the costs of the Zionist regime’s warmongering.
A peace-loving Iran is just as powerful and decisive in diplomacy as it is in the field of
self-defense and safeguarding its national security domain.
Meanwhile, the reality remains that due to numerous historical experiences, the walls of mistrust
between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States are still standing. These walls will
only crumble when American statesmen remain faithful to their commitments, not just in words,
but in action.
Today, the United States stands between two choices: it must either remain committed to the
interests of the American people, stability in the region, and refrain from repeating crimes
against other countries, or it must follow the warmongering, racist, and criminal policies of the
Zionist regime.
It appears that today’s world can no longer tolerate the insidious and anti-human damages
caused by the Zionist regime, and everyone must remain vigilant against the destabilizing
actions of this regime.

(The writer is the Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Colombo)

The Crime That Shaped the Modern Middle East: How America and Britain Destroyed Iran’s Democracy

The Great Game | Part 3 of 10
The Crime That Shaped the Modern Middle East: How America and Britain Destroyed Iran’s Democracy
By Lim Tean
Supporters of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh rally in Tehran, 1953 - weeks before the CIA and MI6 ended Iran’s democratic experiment.
On August 19, 1953, the United States and Britain did something they have never been held accountable for: they overthrew Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister — not with armies, but with cash, propaganda, and hired mobs.
His name was Mohammad Mosaddegh. His crime? He tried to give Iran’s oil back to Iranians.
Everything that followed — the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, the decades of sanctions and hatred — flows directly from that single imperial act.
The West buried it. Classified it for decades. When the documents finally emerged, they hoped no one was paying attention.
In Part 3 of The Great Game’s Iran series, I tell you the full story — the CIA operation, the hired mob, the Shah’s complicity, and what it means for everything happening between the West and Iran today.
Read it. Share it. Because this is the history they never taught you.
I want you to remember a date: August 19, 1953.
On that day, the United States and Britain committed one of the most consequential acts of political violence in modern history — not with bombs or tanks, but with money, propaganda, and hired mobs. They overthrew the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Mohammad Mosaddegh, a man who had committed the unforgivable sin of trying to reclaim his country’s oil for his own people.
Everything that has happened between the West and Iran since — the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, the sanctions, the nuclear standoff, the hatred — has its roots in that single act of imperial criminality.
The West never told you this. They buried it. Classified it for decades. And when the documents finally emerged, they hoped no one was paying attention.
I am paying attention. And after reading Parts 1 and 2 of this series, so are you.
THE MAN THEY HAD TO DESTROY
Mohammad Mosaddegh was not a revolutionary. He was not an Islamist, a communist, or an extremist. He was a Swiss-educated lawyer, a constitutional monarchist, a democrat in the most literal sense of the word — a man who believed, with quiet ferocity, that Iran belonged to Iranians.
He came from aristocracy. He could have lived a comfortable life as a collaborator with British interests, as so many of his class did. Instead, he chose something far more dangerous: principle.
When he became Prime Minister in April 1951, Iran was effectively a vassal state. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company — which would later become BP — was extracting Iran’s oil and paying the Iranian government a royalty of roughly 16%. Sixteen percent. Of Iran’s own oil. The rest went to London.
Mosaddegh looked at this arrangement and said: no more.
On May 1, 1951 — May Day, with magnificent symbolism — the Iranian Parliament voted unanimously to nationalise the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The oil beneath Iranian soil would belong to Iran. The workers who extracted it would work for Iran. The profits would flow to Iran.
It was a perfectly legal act. It was a democratic act. It was, in the fullest sense of the word, a legitimate act.
And it was, from that moment, a death sentence.
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK
Britain’s response was immediate and vicious. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company pulled out its technicians — most of them British — making it impossible for Iran to operate the refineries. Britain imposed a blockade. British warships sat in the Persian Gulf. London threatened any country that dared buy Iranian oil with legal action.
Iran was being strangled. And Britain went to Washington.
The British case to the Americans was straightforward: Mosaddegh is soft on communism. Iran is in danger of falling to the Soviets. We must act.
It was a lie. Mosaddegh was a liberal nationalist, deeply suspicious of the Soviet Union. The Iranian communist party, the Tudeh, was a minor player that he kept at arm’s length. But this was the early 1950s. McCarthyism was at its peak. The word ‘communist’ was a magic key that unlocked American paranoia — and American money.
The CIA and MI6 got to work. The operation had two names: the Americans called it AJAX. The British called it BOOT. The objective was identical: remove Mosaddegh by any means necessary.
What followed was a masterclass in imperial subversion.
CIA operative Kermit Roosevelt Jr. — grandson of Theodore Roosevelt — arrived in Tehran with a suitcase full of cash. Bribes flowed to military officers. Newspaper editors were paid to run anti-Mosaddegh propaganda. Religious figures were recruited. Thugs were hired to create chaos in the streets — to stage riots, to make it appear that Mosaddegh had lost control, that Iran was ungovernable.
The Shah — weak, frightened, morally hollow — was pressured to sign the decree dismissing Mosaddegh, even though he had no constitutional authority to do so. When the first attempt failed and the Shah fled to Rome in panic, the CIA simply doubled down. More money. More chaos. More hired violence.
On August 19, 1953, the coup succeeded. Mosaddegh was arrested. He would spend the rest of his life under house arrest. The man who tried to give Iran its oil back died a prisoner in his own home.
THE DOCUMENTS THEY TRIED TO HIDE
For decades, Washington and London denied any involvement. It was a spontaneous uprising, they said. Popular discontent. The Iranian people turning against a failed leader.
They lied.
In 2013, the CIA finally declassified documents confirming what historians had known for years: the agency had planned, funded, and executed the coup. The internal CIA history described it plainly as ‘an act of United States foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government.’
The highest levels. That means Eisenhower. That means Dulles. That means the elected government of the United States of America, in peacetime, using taxpayer money to overthrow the elected government of a sovereign nation because that nation dared to nationalise its own oil.
This is not conspiracy. This is documented history. And it should be taught in every classroom in America and Britain. It is not.
WHAT THEY INSTALLED INSTEAD
After the coup, the Shah was returned to his throne — now fully dependent on American support and therefore fully pliant to American wishes.
The oil arrangements were restructured. Iran now received 50% of revenues — an improvement, yes, but the principle of Iranian sovereign control over Iranian resources had been broken. American and British oil companies took their share. The markets were satisfied.
And to keep the Shah in power, America armed, trained, and funded SAVAK — the Iranian secret police. SAVAK became one of the most feared intelligence services in the world. Torture. Disappearances. Political prisoners. Execution of dissidents.
All of it, funded and supported by Washington in the name of ‘stability’ and the ‘free world.’
For 26 years, the Shah held power through fear. The moderate nationalists who had followed Mosaddegh were imprisoned or exiled. The secular left was crushed. The only space for opposition that SAVAK could not fully penetrate was the mosque.
And so, when the revolution finally came in 1979, it came from the mosque.
The West created the conditions for the Islamic Revolution. Britain and America destroyed the moderate, democratic, secular alternative — and then expressed shock and horror when the Iranian people turned to the only opposition that had survived.
THE WOUND THAT NEVER HEALED
When Iranian students stormed the American embassy in Tehran in November 1979 and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, the Western world was outraged. Barbaric. Uncivilised. Fanatical.
But inside the embassy, the students found something the Americans had not managed to destroy: shredded CIA documents, painstakingly reconstructed by hand. Documents detailing American interference in Iranian affairs. Names. Networks. Operations.
The students called the embassy ‘the Den of Spies.’ Given what the documents revealed, can you really argue they were wrong?
Iranians have not forgotten 1953. They cannot forget it. It is not ancient history to them — it is the foundational trauma of the modern Iranian state. Every time an American president speaks of Iranian aggression, every time a Western politician calls Iran a ‘rogue state,’ Iranians hear the echo of August 19, 1953.
We are the ones who ended your democracy. We are the ones who installed your torturer. We are the ones who armed the man who oppressed you for 26 years. And now we want to lecture you about civilised behaviour.
The audacity is breathtaking.
WHAT THIS TELLS US ABOUT THE ‘RULES-BASED ORDER’
In Parts 1 and 2 of this series, I showed you that Iran is not a theocratic chaos but a sophisticated state with a coherent constitutional architecture and deep intellectual traditions. In this part, I want you to understand something equally important: the West’s campaign against Iran is not about democracy, human rights, or nuclear weapons.
It never was.
In 1953, Iran had a democracy. A real one. A parliament. A free press. An independent judiciary. A Prime Minister who commanded genuine popular support. The West destroyed it — not because Iran was undemocratic, but because Iran’s democratic government had made a decision that threatened British oil profits.
The lesson of 1953 is this: the so-called rules-based international order has never been about rules. It has been about power. About who gets to write the rules, who gets to break them, and who gets to be punished for daring to claim their own sovereignty.
This is what I mean when I speak of a legitimacy-based world order as the necessary replacement. Not an order built on the diktat of the powerful, dressed in the language of universal values. But an order built on the genuine sovereignty of nations, the genuine self-determination of peoples, the genuine right of every country to control its own resources and chart its own destiny.
Mosaddegh stood for that principle. They destroyed him for it.
The question for our time is: will they succeed again?
THE VERDICT OF HISTORY
Mohammad Mosaddegh died on March 5, 1967, in his village of Ahmadabad, having spent the last 14 years of his life under house arrest. He was 84 years old.
He had asked to be buried alongside the victims of the 1953 coup — the men who had died defending Iranian democracy against the CIA’s hired mob. The Shah denied even this final wish. He was buried in his house, alone, separated even in death from the cause he had given his life to.
Time, however, has rendered its own verdict.
Today, Mosaddegh is revered across Iran — not just by the secular left or the nationalists, but by millions of ordinary Iranians who understand that he was the last leader who tried to build a truly independent Iran within a constitutional framework. His image appears on murals. His name is spoken with reverence.
And the Americans who destroyed him? Their embassy is now a museum of imperialism. The CIA documents that proved their guilt are public record. The historical judgement is in — and it is damning.
In Part 4, we will examine how Iran rebuilt after 1979 — and why the Islamic Republic, for all its contradictions, represents something the West has never wanted to acknowledge: a genuine expression of Iranian sovereign will, forged in the fire of betrayal.
The story is not over. It is just beginning to be understood.

What They Never Told You: Ayatollah Khomeini Was a Great Jurist, Not a Fanatic

The West gave Iran a name — theocracy — and buried the reality beneath it. They never told you that Khomeini spent decades mastering one of the most rigorous legal traditions in human history, or that he built a constitutional republic ratified by 98% of the Iranian people in a free referendum. A nation of fanatics can be bombed with a clear conscience. A constitutional republic of 93 million people, founded by a supremely gifted jurist, is harder to dispose of.

Read what they did not want you to know.

What They Never Told You: Ayatollah Khomeini Was a Great Jurist, Not a Fanatic

                               By Lim Tean

I want to tell you something that may surprise you.

Iran has a constitution.

It has an elected parliament. It has a president chosen by popular vote. It has a supreme court. It has a body analogous to a constitutional review council. It has institutional checks between competing centres of power. And the entire edifice was founded not by a raving fanatic, but by one of the most rigorously trained legal scholars the Islamic world produced in the twentieth century.

None of this fits the cartoon. So the cartoon persists — and the reality is quietly buried.

The Word They Chose — And What It Conceals

The Western establishment gave Iran a label: theocracy. It is a word chosen with care, because it does the work of a thousand propaganda campaigns without requiring a single argument. Say theocracy, and the images follow automatically — wild-eyed mullahs brandishing the Quran, irrational zealots governing by religious hysteria, a people held captive by medieval fanaticism. The word is designed to foreclose thought, not invite it.

But here is what that word conceals. Every system of government rests, ultimately, on a foundation of law and values. The United States rests on constitutional liberalism and common law tradition. France rests on the Napoleonic code and republican secular principles. The Islamic Republic of Iran rests on the traditions of Islamic jurisprudence — one of the oldest, most sophisticated, and most demanding legal traditions in human history. To call this theocracy, and to deploy the word as an insult, is not analysis. It is a deliberate smear, designed to make a constitutional system appear illegitimate so that it may be isolated, sanctioned, and bombed with a clear conscience.

For decades, the Western press and the Washington establishment have presented Iran through a single, flattening lens: a state run by crazy, Quran-thumping mullahs, governed not by law but by religious hysteria, hostile to reason, allergic to modernity, and therefore — crucially — unworthy of the basic respect we extend to other sovereign nations and their peoples.

I believed this once. In my younger years, I absorbed this narrative as most people do — through newspapers, television, the casual assumptions of educated opinion. It seemed self-evident.

Then I began to read seriously. And what I found was not merely a more complicated picture. It was an almost complete inversion of what I had been told.

The Great Jurist, Not the Fanatic

To understand the Islamic Republic of Iran, you must begin where it begins — with a concept, and with the man who gave it modern form.

The concept is velayat-e-faqih. It translates, with reasonable accuracy, as the guardianship — or governance — of the Islamic jurist. When I first encountered this phrase, I was struck by a single word: jurist. Not guardian of the mullahs. Not rule of the clerics. Guardianship of the jurist — a person learned in the law. The choice of that word is not incidental. It is the entire point.

Ruhollah Khomeini, the founding father of the Islamic Republic, was not primarily a preacher. He was a faqih — a master of Islamic jurisprudence. But to say only this is to dramatically understate the scale of his scholarly achievement. Khomeini's ascent through the clerical hierarchy of Shia Islam was one of the most rigorous intellectual journeys any scholar of the twentieth century could undertake.

He moved to the holy city of Qom in 1922, studying under Ayatollah Abdolkarim Haeri Yazdi, the legendary scholar who re-established Qom as the intellectual capital of Shia scholarship. By his mid-thirties, Khomeini had received his certification of Ijtihad — the formal qualification of independent legal reasoning. This made him a Mujtahid: a jurist capable of deriving new legal rulings directly from Islamic primary sources — the Quran and Hadith — rather than merely following the rulings of earlier scholars. 

But Khomeini did not stop there. Beyond law and jurisprudence, he distinguished himself by teaching philosophy, ethics, and Islamic mysticism — irfan. By the 1940s and 1950s, he was a highly sought-after professor in Qom. Hundreds of students packed his lectures. He was teaching not merely the rules, but the complex logic behind how laws were made.

His rise to Grand Ayatollah — Marja' al-Taqlid, or Source of Emulation — was the ultimate recognition of his scholarly mastery. This is not an appointed or political office. It is a peer-recognised status achieved organically when a scholar is deemed by the community of believers and fellow scholars to be al-a'lam: the most learned of his time. Following the deaths of Grand Ayatollah Borujerdi in 1961 and Grand Ayatollah Hakim in 1970, Khomeini was recognised by millions of believers and fellow scholars as their Marja'. His legal authority was so massive that his word was considered binding by his followers, even while he remained in exile.

During his years of exile under the Shah — first in Turkey, then in the Iraqi shrine city of Najaf, one of the most ancient and revered centres of Islamic scholarship in the world — Khomeini produced an extraordinary body of juristic work. He authored the multi-volume Kitab al-Bay' (The Book of Sale), a massive technical work on Islamic commercial and contract law that cemented his reputation among the clergy as a serious, rigorous jurist and not merely a firebrand activist. He produced Tahrir al-Wasilah, a comprehensive two-volume compendium on traditional and contemporary legal issues. And in 1970, he delivered his foundational Najaf lectures that became Hukumat-i Islami — Islamic Government — the work that introduced his doctrine of velayat al-faqih to the world.

The 1963 arrest episode is particularly revealing. Following an incendiary speech against the Shah, Khomeini was arrested and faced a potential death sentence for treason. To save his life, senior clerics — including Ayatollah Mohammad Kazem Shariatmadari — invoked a provision in the 1906 Iranian Constitution granting senior religious leaders immunity from execution. The clerical establishment united to formally declare Khomeini a Grand Ayatollah, forcing the Shah's regime to commute his sentence to exile instead. This extraordinary episode simultaneously confirmed his immense scholarly stature and demonstrated that constitutional thinking was already embedded in Iranian governance long before 1979.

In total, Khomeini authored over 40 books on jurisprudence, legal philosophy, and mysticism. To call him a mullah in the dismissive Western sense — to place him in the same category as a village preacher with a rudimentary religious education — is the equivalent of calling a professor of constitutional law at Cambridge a parish vicar. It is not merely imprecise. It is a deliberate erasure of intellectual substance, designed to make serious engagement unnecessary.

The People Chose This — 98% of Them

Here is a fact that Western discourse buries with remarkable consistency.

In March and April of 1979, the Iranian people were asked in a national referendum whether they wished to establish an Islamic Republic. The turnout was overwhelming. The yes vote was 98.2% — a margin of popular endorsement that almost no constitutional act in modern history can match.

This referendum was no different in principle from the Brexit referendum of 2016, when the British people voted to leave the European Union. Brexit was contested, bitterly debated, and — crucially — accepted as a legitimate democratic act by the international community, however much individual commentators disagreed with the outcome. The Iranian referendum of 1979 was a cleaner, larger expression of popular will. Yet the world was invited to treat it as the imposition of a theocratic tyranny.

The Iranian people exercised that right in 1979. And the West — which had spent twenty-six years propping up a Shah who had never been chosen by anyone, and whose throne had been restored by a CIA-engineered coup in 1953 — responded by refusing to recognise the legitimacy of what the Iranian people chose for themselves.

A Constitutional Architecture

The constitution Iran adopted in 1979 — revised in 1989 — is a document of genuine institutional sophistication. Its Supreme Leader is a constitutionally defined position, selected by an Assembly of Experts that is itself elected by the people. Iran has a directly elected President, an elected parliament of 290 members — the Majlis — that passes legislation and holds the executive to account, and a Guardian Council of jurists who review legislation for constitutional compatibility, performing a function directly analogous to the US Supreme Court or France's Constitutional Council. These are not the institutions of a fanatical mob. They are the architecture of a constitutional system — imperfect, contested, but real. The tensions within it are the tensions of governance, not the absence of it.

The Comity of Laws — A Lawyer's Perspective

I was trained as a lawyer in the British common law tradition — the legal system that undergirds the legal orders of the British Commonwealth, the United States, and much of the developed world. It is a tradition I know intimately, and one I respect deeply. But my respect for the common law has never led me to conclude that legal systems different from my own are inferior to it. That would be an error of both logic and jurisprudence.

The principle relevant here is the doctrine of comity of laws: the recognition by one legal system that the laws and legal traditions of another jurisdiction deserve respect, and should not be dismissed merely because they differ from one's own. This is not moral relativism. It is the foundation of international law and of civilised coexistence between sovereign nations.

Let me give you a personal illustration. Around the year 2000, a client told me something that surprised me: in Italian criminal trials, defendants are not required to give evidence on oath. This is dramatically different from the common law system, where all witnesses in court — including defendants who choose to testify — must give evidence under oath, and where a witness who lies on oath can be charged with perjury and imprisoned. My client told me that Italians, as a matter of social understanding, expect defendants to defend themselves as vigorously as possible without being held to an oath of complete truthfulness.

Now, I found this interesting. I found it different. But I did not find it inferior. Italy is a deeply Catholic country with an ancient legal tradition stretching back to Roman law — arguably the foundational legal tradition of Western civilisation itself. The Italians have obviously concluded, through centuries of legal experience, that such an approach is best suited to their society and their understanding of justice. Who am I to contradict that judgment?

This is precisely the wisdom that Oliver Wendell Holmes — one of the greatest jurists the American common law tradition has produced — captured in his famous pronouncement: "The life of the law is not logic, it is experience." Law does not emerge from abstract universal principles applied with cold consistency. It grows from the particular experiences, values, history, and social circumstances of a people. Different peoples, with different experiences, will produce different law. That is not a failure. It is the very nature of living legal systems.

Islamic jurisprudence — fiqh — is a legal tradition of extraordinary depth and antiquity, developed over fourteen centuries by some of the finest legal minds the Muslim world has produced. It has its own principles of legal reasoning, its own jurisprudential schools, its own sophisticated debates about the interpretation of sources and the derivation of rulings. Whatever differences one may have with its substantive conclusions, the intellectual tradition itself commands respect under the doctrine of comity. The West's refusal to accord it that respect is not a principled legal position. It is intellectual contempt dressed up as civilisational superiority.

The Mirror America Should Hold Up

Americans are rightly proud of their constitution. But Americans who invoke that tradition to dismiss Iran might pause to recall that at the United States' founding, enslaved people were counted as three-fifths of a person, women had no vote, and it took nearly two centuries for the promise of equal citizenship to approach meaningful reality. None of this invalidates the American tradition. But it should produce some humility about judging a constitutional experiment that is less than fifty years old.

Iran's Islamic Republic is forty-six years into its existence. It emerged from a revolution against foreign-backed autocracy. It has survived a devastating eight-year war, decades of crippling sanctions, and sustained covert warfare against its institutions. That it has institutional problems and democratic deficits — that the Guardian Council's vetting of candidates constrains electoral choice, that the space for dissent is too narrow, that the treatment of minorities and women falls short of universal standards — all of this is true and worth saying. But it must be said with honesty about what Iran actually is — not what Western propaganda has decided, for strategic convenience, to call it.

Law as the Foundation

Here is what I want you to take from this piece.

The Islamic Republic of Iran is, in its own terms, a society founded on law. The law it is founded on is Islamic jurisprudence — a legal tradition of extraordinary depth and antiquity, developed over fourteen centuries by some of the finest legal minds the Muslim world has produced. Its constitutional architecture was designed by a man of profound and rigorously attained legal mastery — a Grand Ayatollah who spent decades in the seminaries of Qom and Najaf before proposing that qualified Islamic jurists should not merely advise the state, but actively govern it. That architecture was ratified by 98% of the Iranian people in a democratic act of popular sovereignty. And it has functioned — however imperfectly — as the governing framework of a nation of ninety three million people for nearly half a century.

This does not mean it is beyond criticism. No system is beyond criticism — least of all systems that restrict political freedom, limit women's rights, and suppress dissent.

But criticism requires honest engagement with what a thing actually is. And what Iran actually is — as opposed to what decades of Western propaganda have told you it is — is a constitutional republic, grounded in a sophisticated legal tradition, with institutions that carry genuine democratic legitimacy, founded by a legal scholar of the first rank.

The West has found it strategically convenient to deny this. Because a nation of fanatics governed by chaos can be dismissed, isolated, sanctioned, and bombed with a clear conscience. A constitutional republic of ninety three million people — ratified by 98% of its founding voters, built on a legal tradition stretching back a millennium, and established by one of the most learned Islamic jurists of the modern age — is considerably harder to dispose of.

So the cartoon persists. And the reality waits — patiently, as civilisations do — for the world to look more honestly at what is actually there.

For those who wish to explore Iran's constitutional and legal architecture seriously, I recommend Hamid Algar's translations of Khomeini's political writings, and Said Amir Arjomand's The Turban for the Crown, which remains the most rigorous scholarly account of the Islamic Republic's institutional foundations.

I’ll be honest — I wrote this article out of frustration.

The picture below is of Mohammed Mosaddegh, August 1953- at the moment of his arrest in a coup plotted by MI6 and the CIA
Every day on social media I encounter people who dismiss Iran as a crazy country ruled by medieval mullahs, whose people chant “Death to America” for no rational reason. And from that ignorance flows something truly dangerous — the casual assumption that it is therefore perfectly justifiable for America, Israel, or anyone else to bomb Iran and kill its people.
Before you can have an opinion on Iran, you owe it to yourself to know its history. What Churchill and Britain did with Iranian oil. What MI6 and the CIA did to Mosaddegh in 1953. What the Shah spent at Persepolis while his people went hungry. What America did when Saddam gassed Iranian soldiers.
Read this. Then tell me the anger is irrational.
The Story The West Does Not Want You To Know
I will be honest about why I wrote this article.
Across my social media platforms, I encounter daily a particular brand of ignorance that I find increasingly impossible to ignore. Iran is dismissed as a crazy country ruled by medieval mullahs, its people caricatured as fanatics who chant “Death to America” for no coherent reason. And from that caricature flows a conclusion that should horrify any person of conscience — that it is therefore perfectly justifiable for America, Israel, or any other country to bomb Iran, kill its people, and destroy its infrastructure.
This is not analysis. It is the recycling of propaganda as a substitute for thought. And it has real consequences — because populations that are kept ignorant of history can be mobilised to support atrocities committed in their name.
Iran is not a cartoon. It is one of the world’s oldest and most sophisticated civilisations. And its anger at America is not irrational. It is the entirely rational response of a people to whom history has been profoundly, systematically unjust.
Let me show you why.
The Original Theft
To understand Iran today, you must begin not in 1979, but in 1908.
In that year, on the sun-baked plains of Khuzestan, workers drilling for the Anglo-Persian Oil Company struck black gold at Masjid-i-Suleiman — the first great oil discovery in the Middle East. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company, which would later become the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and ultimately British Petroleum — the BP that today trades on the London Stock Exchange as a pillar of corporate respectability — had found the resource that would not merely enrich its shareholders, but change the course of world history.
The discovery was not merely commercially significant. It was strategically transformative. Winston Churchill, as First Lord of the Admiralty, had made the fateful decision to convert the Royal Navy’s warships from coal to oil before the First World War — giving Britain’s fleet superior speed and range, but making it utterly dependent on a secure oil supply. Iranian oil did not merely enrich British shareholders. It powered the British Empire’s ability to wage and win the greatest war in human history. The Iranian people received almost nothing in return.
For decades, Britain extracted Iran’s oil under terms of stunning inequality. Iranian workers toiled in dangerous conditions for poverty wages. Iranian communities near the oilfields lived without electricity, running water, or basic sanitation — while British staff enjoyed swimming pools, clubs, and comfortable salaries. The Iranian government received a pittance in royalties, and was denied even the right to audit the company’s accounts. Iran’s greatest natural treasure was being systematically looted, and the Iranian people knew it.
A man arose who decided to say: enough.
Mosaddegh and the Crime of Democracy
Mohammed Mosaddegh was everything the West claims to want in a Middle Eastern leader. He was democratically elected. He was secular. He was a constitutional lawyer steeped in European liberal tradition, who had studied in Paris and Neuchâtel. He wore suits, not robes. He believed in parliamentary democracy, the separation of powers, and the rule of law.
In 1951, as Prime Minister, he did something unforgivable. He nationalised the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, returning Iran’s oil to its rightful owners — the Iranian people. The Iranian parliament voted for it unanimously. The Iranian street erupted in celebration. For the first time in their modern history, Iranians dared to believe that the wealth beneath their feet might actually benefit them.
Britain was apoplectic. The Americans were alarmed. And so, in August 1953, the CIA and MI6 launched Operation Ajax — one of the most consequential covert operations in modern history. They bribed Iranian generals, hired thugs to create street chaos, spread disinformation, and toppled the democratically elected government of a sovereign nation.
Mosaddegh was arrested, tried, and spent the rest of his life under house arrest. He died in 1967, never having been broken, never having recanted — a man of extraordinary dignity whose only crime was wanting his country’s wealth to belong to his country’s people.
In his place, the West reinstalled Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi — and handed him SAVAK, one of the most feared secret police forces in the world, to keep his people in line.
This is the original sin. This is where the story truly begins.
The Shah’s Gilded Cage
The Shah that America restored and sustained was not a moderniser, whatever his propaganda claimed. He was a man of spectacular vanity and profound disconnect from his own people.
Consider this extraordinary fact: Mohammed Reza Shah held his coronation not once, but effectively twice. He had been on the throne since 1941, but waited until 1967 — twenty-six years — to hold his formal coronation, because he felt the circumstances had never been grand enough for a ceremony befitting his self-image. When he finally crowned himself, in a ceremony of breathtaking opulence, ordinary Iranians watched from a distance that was not merely physical.
But the coronation was merely a rehearsal for the true performance of imperial delusion — the celebrations at Persepolis in October 1971.
To mark the 2,500th anniversary of the Persian Empire, the Shah staged a spectacle that remains one of the most extraordinary acts of self-aggrandisement in modern political history. Heads of state and royalty from across the world were flown in. A tent city of fifty lavish pavilions was constructed in the desert near the ruins of Persepolis, the ancient Achaemenid capital.
The tents themselves — along with virtually everything else — were imported from France. Maxim’s of Paris catered the meals. Guests dined on quail eggs stuffed with caviar, crayfish mousse, and roast lamb, washed down with vintage Bordeaux. Iranian culture was largely absent from a celebration ostensibly honouring Iranian civilisation. The Iranian people were spectators at a party thrown in their name, to which they were not invited.
The estimated cost was anywhere between $100 million and $300 million — at a time when millions of Iranians lived in poverty, lacking clean water, adequate healthcare, or basic education.
The Iranian people drew their conclusions.
Khomeini’s Rational Revolution
When Ayatollah Khomeini offered the Iranian people his theory of velayat-e-faqih — the guardianship of the Islamic jurist — and proposed an Islamic Republic as the vessel for a new Iranian order, he was not offering them theology alone. He was offering them dignity. He was offering them the promise that Iran’s sovereignty, Iran’s resources, and Iran’s future would belong to Iranians — not to the Shah’s court, not to Western oil companies, not to American strategic planners in Washington.
The Iranian revolution of 1979 was a mass movement of extraordinary breadth. Secular nationalists, leftists, intellectuals, bazaar merchants, students, and the religious poor all marched together. They had different visions of what would come after — but they were united in what they were marching against. A corrupt, repressive monarchy sustained by American power and serving American interests, which had delivered neither freedom nor prosperity to its own people.
When the American Embassy was seized and diplomats taken hostage, the West erupted in outrage. But behind that act was a simple, searing Iranian fear — that America would do in 1979 what it had done in 1953. That Washington would organise another coup, reinstall the Shah, and extinguish the revolution. The hostage crisis was many things — chaotic, counterproductive, damaging to Iran’s own interests — but it was not irrational. It was the desperate act of a people who had already been betrayed once by American power and were determined not to be betrayed again.
When America Armed the Man Who Gassed Iranian Children
If the 1953 coup was the original sin, the Iran-Iraq war was the confirmation — the moment that removed any remaining doubt in Iranian minds about what American power truly meant for their people.
In September 1980, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq invaded Iran. It was an act of naked aggression against a revolutionary government that was still finding its footing, launched with the tacit encouragement of Washington, which viewed the chaos of revolutionary Iran as an opportunity to be exploited. The war that followed lasted eight years. It consumed perhaps one million lives. It was one of the bloodiest conflicts of the twentieth century’s second half — and it has been almost entirely erased from Western historical memory.
What has been even more comprehensively erased is America’s role in sustaining it.
As the war ground on and Iranian forces began pushing back Iraqi advances, Washington made a decision of breathtaking cynicism. It could not allow Iran to win.
And so America began providing Saddam Hussein with satellite intelligence on Iranian troop positions, military equipment, and — most damningly of all — with the precursor chemicals for the weapons that Saddam would use to commit one of the most documented war crimes of the modern era.
Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons against Iranian forces on a massive scale — mustard gas, tabun, sarin. Thousands of Iranian soldiers died in agonising chemical attacks. And Washington knew. American officials knew that Iraq was using chemical weapons. The intelligence community reported it. And the Reagan administration made a deliberate policy decision to continue supporting Saddam regardless — because an Iranian victory was deemed strategically unacceptable.
The most haunting chapter came not on a battlefield but in a Kurdish village. In March 1988, Iraqi forces attacked Halabja with chemical weapons, killing thousands of Kurdish civilians — men, women, and children — in a single day. It was the largest chemical weapons attack against a civilian population in history. And even then, Washington’s response was muted, carefully calibrated to avoid jeopardising its strategic relationship with Baghdad.
Iranian mothers who lost sons to American-supplied chemical weapons are still alive today. Iranian veterans who survived those attacks carry the physical scars — destroyed lungs, ravaged skin, broken bodies — into old age. Iran has never forgotten. Iran will never forget.
And yet Western commentators express bewilderment at the “Death to America” chant.
Consider for a moment what that chant actually represents, stripped of its theatrical staging. It represents the voice of a mother whose son was gassed with chemicals whose precursors passed through American hands. It represents the voice of a nation that had its democracy stolen in 1953, its resources plundered for decades before that, its revolution encircled and sanctioned, and its sons killed in a war that America prolonged deliberately to prevent Iranian victory.
If any Western nation had suffered a fraction of what Iran has suffered at the hands of a foreign power, that chant would be taught in schools as an anthem of righteous resistance. It would be celebrated in films and memorialised in monuments. Instead, because it is directed at American power, it is presented as evidence of Iranian irrationality. The arrogance required to sustain that position is staggering.
47 Years of Punishment
Since 1979, the United States has imposed on Iran some of the most comprehensive and punishing sanctions ever inflicted on any nation in modern history. Sanctions on oil. Sanctions on banking. Sanctions on technology. Sanctions on medicine. Sanctions that have impoverished ordinary Iranians, denied patients access to life-saving drugs, and strangled an economy of 93 million people.
And surrounding Iran on all sides — in the Gulf, in Iraq, in Afghanistan, in the Arabian Peninsula — America has built a vast archipelago of military bases, projecting power and telegraphing threat. Iran has been encircled, economically strangled, and subjected to covert warfare including the assassination of its nuclear scientists on its own streets.
Throughout all of this, Iran has survived. It has adapted. It has built regional influence through patient statecraft, cultivating allies across Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. It has advanced its nuclear programme not out of theological ambition but out of the entirely rational calculation that the only nations America does not attack are those that possess nuclear deterrence.
Justice Delayed
When analysts speak of America’s strategic defeat in its confrontation with Iran, they reach for the language of geopolitics and military balance. But there is another language that must be spoken — the language of history.
For 47 years, a people of ancient civilisation, extraordinary intellectual depth, and justified grievance have been punished for the crime of reclaiming their own sovereignty. They were punished for Mosaddegh’s ghost. They were punished for daring to say no to a superpower that had grown accustomed to treating the Middle East as its private strategic estate.
The “Death to America” chant that so offends Western sensibilities did not emerge from the Quran. It emerged from Operation Ajax. It emerged from SAVAK’s torture chambers. It emerged from Persepolis while children went hungry. It emerged from sanctions that killed patients who could not obtain medicine. It emerged from chemical weapons whose precursors passed through American hands. It emerged from a history that the West has studiously refused to confront — because confronting it would require acknowledging that the rage it provokes is not irrational.
It is the entirely rational response of a people to whom history has been profoundly, systematically unjust.
Understanding this does not require endorsing every act of the Islamic Republic. It requires only honesty — the willingness to read history as it actually happened, rather than as Western convenience has chosen to remember it.
Iran is not a cartoon. It is a civilisation. And civilisations have long memories.
Much of the historical foundation of this piece draws on two remarkable books that I commend to every serious reader: Michael Axworthy’s Revolutionary Iran — Axworthy served as Head of the Iran Section at the British Foreign Office before becoming one of the foremost academic authorities on modern Iran — and Scott Anderson’s Shah of Shahs. They changed how I understand this civilisation. They may change how you understand it too.