On August 19, 1953, a CIA-orchestrated coup overthrew Iran's democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh and reinstalled Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi as absolute monarch. The operation deployed paid street gangs, bribed military officers, coordinated with clergy, and flooded Tehran with propaganda. For sixty years, the U.S. government denied involvement. In 2013, the CIA officially acknowledged its role. The declassified documents reveal operational budgets, participant names, and tactical timelines—the complete architecture of how American and British intelligence dismantled a democratic government to protect oil interests.
Mohammad Mossadegh became Prime Minister of Iran on April 28, 1951, with a mandate to do what no Iranian government had dared: take back the country's oil from British control. Within four months, he nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, ending a concession agreement that had given Britain control of Iranian petroleum since 1909. The move was supported by an overwhelming majority in Iran's parliament and celebrated in the streets of Tehran.
Two years later, he was overthrown in a coup orchestrated by the CIA and MI6. For sixty years, the United States government denied involvement. On August 19, 2013—exactly sixty years after the coup—the CIA officially acknowledged what historians had documented for decades: American intelligence had planned, funded, and executed the operation that destroyed Iran's democratic government and reinstalled the Shah as an absolute monarch.
The declassified internal CIA history, written in 1954 by agency historian Donald Wilber, provides a detailed operational account. It names participants, documents expenditures, describes tactical decisions, and evaluates what worked and what failed. Combined with State Department cables, MI6 records, and participant memoirs, the documentary record is comprehensive. This was not a rogue operation. It was approved at the highest levels of the American and British governments.
The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company was Britain's largest overseas investment. By 1950, it supplied most of the Royal Navy's fuel and generated enormous profits—most of which went to Britain. Under the 1933 concession agreement, Iran received only 16% of net profits while AIOC controlled extraction, refining, pricing, and distribution. Iranian workers at the massive Abadan refinery—the world's largest—lived in slums without electricity or running water while British employees enjoyed swimming pools and country clubs.
When Mossadegh's government nationalized the industry in May 1951, AIOC orchestrated a global boycott. British tankers refused to transport Iranian oil. British banks froze Iranian assets. The Royal Navy blockaded Iranian ports. Britain took the case to the International Court of Justice and the United Nations Security Council, arguing that nationalization violated international law. Both bodies rejected Britain's position.
"British government records now available reveal that Britain was prepared to use force to reverse nationalization. The Attlee government drew up military plans for Operation Buccaneer—the seizure of the Abadan refinery by British paratroopers and marines."
Mark Gasiorowski — Journal of Cold War Studies, 2013The Labour government of Clement Attlee considered military invasion but was dissuaded by President Harry Truman, who refused American support. When Winston Churchill's Conservatives returned to power in October 1951, the approach changed. Churchill had no interest in military invasion, which would be expensive and internationally unpopular. He preferred a covert solution.
MI6 station chief Christopher Montague Woodhouse began planning Mossadegh's removal in 1952. A classical scholar and former Special Operations Executive officer, Woodhouse had cultivated networks among Iranian military officers and royalist politicians during his Tehran posting. His initial proposal to London received little enthusiasm from the Labour government. When the Conservatives took power, he found more receptive ears.
But Britain lacked the resources and operational presence to execute the coup alone. MI6 needed American participation. The problem: President Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson had rejected British requests for help, viewing Mossadegh as a nationalist reformer, not a communist threat.
Woodhouse's solution was reframing. Instead of presenting the operation as protecting British oil interests, he would sell it as preventing Soviet expansion. In November 1952, Woodhouse traveled to Washington and met with CIA officials, warning that Mossadegh's government was weak, that the communist Tudeh Party was gaining strength, and that Iran risked becoming a Soviet satellite.
The framing worked. When Dwight Eisenhower took office in January 1953, he brought with him the Dulles brothers: John Foster Dulles as Secretary of State and Allen Dulles as CIA Director. Both were committed anti-communists. Both had professional connections to Anglo-Iranian Oil Company through their former law firm, Sullivan & Cromwell. Within months of taking office, Eisenhower approved what became Operation Ajax.
In June 1953, Kermit Roosevelt Jr.—grandson of Theodore Roosevelt and chief of the CIA's Near East and Africa division—received authorization to proceed. He arrived in Tehran in late July and set up operations in the basement of the U.S. Embassy. His mission: orchestrate Mossadegh's removal and the Shah's restoration as absolute monarch.
Roosevelt controlled networks developed over the previous year by CIA and MI6 officers. These included:
The plan required the Shah's formal cooperation. On August 13, 1953, Roosevelt met with the Shah and secured his signature on two decrees: one dismissing Mossadegh, another appointing Zahedi as Prime Minister. The decrees were constitutionally questionable—the Shah's power to dismiss an elected Prime Minister was disputed—but they provided a legal veneer.
The first attempt occurred on the night of August 15, 1953. Colonel Nasiri, commander of the Imperial Guard, was tasked with delivering the dismissal decree to Mossadegh. But Mossadegh's intelligence chief had been warned. When Nasiri arrived at the Prime Minister's residence, he was arrested. Mossadegh went on Radio Tehran to announce that royalist officers had attempted a coup and failed.
The Shah, who had been waiting at his Caspian Sea palace, fled. He flew first to Baghdad, then to Rome. In Washington, CIA headquarters sent Roosevelt an abort order. The operation had failed. Roosevelt was to destroy sensitive documents and leave Iran.
Roosevelt refused. He believed a second attempt could succeed if executed properly. Over the next three days, he reorganized his networks, coordinated with Zahedi (who was in hiding), and prepared for a second coup.
On August 19, Roosevelt's networks activated across Tehran. CIA-paid crowds began gathering in the morning. Some carried signs supporting the Shah. Others shouted anti-Mossadegh slogans. The crowds included genuine royalists, but they were organized and reinforced by paid participants.
Shaban Jafari's gangs attacked government buildings. Military units loyal to the coup plotters joined the action. By afternoon, armed crowds surrounded Mossadegh's residence. Fighting lasted several hours. Mossadegh escaped over a back wall but surrendered the next day. General Zahedi emerged from hiding, was driven to Radio Tehran in a CIA-provided car, and announced he was now Prime Minister under the Shah's decree.
The Shah returned from Rome on August 22, greeted by cheering crowds—some spontaneous, some organized by Roosevelt's networks. The monarchy was restored. Mossadegh was arrested, tried for treason, and sentenced to three years in prison, followed by house arrest until his death in 1967.
"It was a day that should never have ended. For it carried with it such a sense of excitement, of satisfaction and of jubilation that it is doubtful whether any other can come up to it."
Kermit Roosevelt — Countercoup, describing August 19, 1953In 1954, the U.S. brokered a new oil agreement. An international consortium replaced Anglo-Iranian Oil Company's monopoly. American companies—Gulf, Socony-Vacuum, Standard Oil of California, Standard Oil of New Jersey, and Texaco—received 40% of shares. AIOC (soon renamed British Petroleum) received 40%. Royal Dutch Shell received 14%. France's Compagnie Française des Pétroles received 6%.
Iran received 50% of profits, better than the previous 16%, but far less than full nationalization would have provided. The consortium agreement operated until 1973 and generated billions in profits for American oil companies. This was the economic prize for American participation: access to Iranian oil that had previously been a British monopoly.
For decades, the U.S. government denied involvement in the coup. When asked, officials claimed Mossadegh's overthrow was a spontaneous popular uprising against a weak, unstable leader. The CIA's internal history remained classified. Participants were forbidden from discussing operational details.
The first major crack came in 1979, when Kermit Roosevelt published his memoir "Countercoup." Though he avoided classified details, Roosevelt described his operational role and confirmed American involvement. The CIA neither confirmed nor denied his account.
In 2000, the New York Times obtained portions of the classified CIA history and published excerpts. The documents revealed operational details, including specific payments to Iranian participants and Roosevelt's decision to defy abort orders. The CIA still did not officially acknowledge the operation.
The official admission finally came on August 19, 2013—exactly sixty years after the coup. Following a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the National Security Archive at George Washington University, the CIA released the Wilber history and issued a statement acknowledging that the agency "orchestrated" the 1953 coup. The statement was brief and clinical, but it marked the first time the U.S. government officially admitted overthrowing a democratic government to protect oil interests.
The Shah ruled as an increasingly authoritarian monarch until 1979. His regime, supported by the United States, suppressed political opposition, controlled the press, and used SAVAK—a CIA-trained security service—to monitor, arrest, torture, and kill dissidents. American military and economic aid flowed continuously. Presidents from Eisenhower to Carter praised the Shah as a modernizer and crucial ally.
The 1979 Islamic Revolution, which brought Ayatollah Khomeini to power, was fueled partly by resentment of the Shah's authoritarianism and partly by anger at American support for his regime. When revolutionaries seized the U.S. Embassy in November 1979 and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, they justified the action by citing 1953—the year America destroyed Iran's democracy.
The phrase "Death to America" chanted in Tehran today has its origins in the events of August 1953. The Islamic Republic's deep suspicion of Western intentions, its resistance to diplomatic engagement, its pursuit of nuclear capability—all are rooted partly in the historical memory of a democratic government overthrown by foreign intelligence services to protect oil profits.
The declassified record is comprehensive. The CIA's internal history documents who was paid, how much, and for what purpose. State Department cables show diplomatic coordination. British government files reveal MI6's planning. Participant memoirs confirm operational details. Together, they establish beyond dispute:
No serious historian disputes these facts. The only remaining questions concern details that remain classified: specific names of Iranian participants, full accounting of how money was distributed, and whether any Iranians were killed during the operation beyond those who died in street fighting on August 19.
Operation Ajax was not the first CIA coup—that was Syria in 1949—but it was the first thoroughly successful one. Within a year, the CIA executed Operation PBSuccess in Guatemala, overthrowing President Jacobo Árbenz using a similar playbook: paid military officers, propaganda operations, and coordination with local elites threatened by nationalist reforms.
The success of Ajax established covert regime change as a routine tool of American foreign policy. Between 1953 and 1973, the CIA attempted or successfully executed coups in Guatemala, Indonesia, British Guiana, Iraq, Ecuador, the Congo, the Dominican Republic, South Vietnam, Brazil, Chile, and elsewhere. The operational template developed in Tehran—bribing military officers, funding opposition groups, controlling media narratives, creating the appearance of popular uprising—was applied repeatedly.
"The target was not a hardened dictatorship, but a democratic government. The method was not supporting opposition, but creating it. The justification was not preventing aggression, but protecting corporate profits."
Stephen Kinzer — All the Shah's Men, 2003The long-term consequences extended beyond Iran. American covert operations during the Cold War fueled anti-American sentiment across the developing world, undermined democratic institutions, and empowered authoritarian regimes that persecuted their own populations while receiving American support. The operational successes were tactical. The strategic outcomes were catastrophic.
In August 2013, when the CIA released its internal history and acknowledged the coup, the statement was carefully worded. It did not apologize. It did not express regret. It simply confirmed what historians had documented: "The military coup that overthrew Mosaddeq and his National Front cabinet was carried out under CIA direction as an act of U.S. foreign policy."
That single sentence marked the end of sixty years of denial. The U.S. government had finally admitted—officially, in writing—that it destroyed Iran's democratic government. The admission changed nothing about Iranian-American relations. The Islamic Republic did not soften its position. American policymakers did not alter their approach. But for the historical record, the admission mattered. The United States had acknowledged what it did.
The documents remain at the National Security Archive at George Washington University, available to researchers. The CIA's internal history, the State Department cables, the MI6 files—all confirm the same facts. In August 1953, American and British intelligence services paid Iranian military officers, street gangs, and clergy to overthrow a democratically elected government and reinstall a monarch as absolute ruler. They did it to protect oil company profits. They lied about it for sixty years. And when they finally admitted it, they offered no apology.