The confluence of the
"no-nuke" deal with Iran and the world's concerns over United States
government snooping is rather interesting, particularly given that
February 11th is the 35th anniversary of the Iranian Revolution that led to the
taking of 52 American hostages from the American Embassy in Tehran and the
ending of normal diplomatic relations between the two nations.
One aspect of the crisis that I find
most compelling about the hostage-taking is not the plight of the hostages but
the fact that the Iranian students in the embassy found thousands of pages of
shredded and unshredded documents belonging to the CIA and the State Department. Some
Iranians had long believed that the U.S. Embassy was being used as an
intelligence base by the CIA. Staff at the U.S. Embassy had been busy
shredding these documents in an attempt to prevent them from falling into the
"wrong hands", however, the thin strips of paper that the students
found were reassembled into useable documents by Iranian carpet weavers as
shown here:
These documents were then released to the public in 1982; the
54 volumes were published under the title "Documents from the U.S.Espionage Den". By 1995, the number of volumes had risen to 77.
This inadvertent "security leak" is widely viewed as one of the
most damaging intelligence breaches in history and predates the much discussed WikiLeaks
Department of State and Edward Snowden breaches by decades.
Historically speaking, it is key to
remember that Iran was very important to the CIA. The Agency's 1953
"victory" that toppled Prime Minister Muhammad Mossadegh, who had
nationalized the British-owned oil industry and reinstalled the Pahlavi dynasty
as the nation's political leadership, showed the world and Washington that the
CIA was legitimate and that it could shape political events in other nations.
This stance did cause problems for the Shah because many of his opponents
portrayed him as an American puppet who was returned to power by the CIA, a
situation that led many Iranians to be highly suspicious of the covert
involvement of the United States in Iran's coup of 1953, particularly as the
rule of the Shah and his secret police force SAVAK became increasingly brutal
in its attempts to retain power. and repress opposition.
Now, let's go to some of the
documents.
Here is one of the more interesting
documents that shows the lengths that Embassy staff went to to provide cover
for the CIA officers living in their midst:
Here is the text:
"1. S - ENTIRE TEXT
2. I concur in assignments Malcolm
Kalp and William Daugherty as described Reftels.
3. With opportunity available to us
in the sense that we are starting from a clean slate in SRF coverage at this
mission, but with regard also for the great sensitivity locally to any hint of
CIA activity, it is of the highest importance that cover be the best we can
come up with. Hence there is no question as to the need for second and third
secretary titles for these two officers. We must have it.
4. I believe cover arrangements in
terms of assignments within embassy are appropriate to present overall staffing
pattern. We should however hold to the present total of four SRF officer
assignments for the foreseeable future, keeping supporting staff as sparse as
possible as well, until we see how things go here.
5. We are making effort to limit
knowledge within emb of all SRF assignments; that effort applies particularly
to Daugherty, pursuant to new program of which he is a product and about which
I have been informed.
6. I suppose I need not mind the
Department that the old and apparently insoluble problem of R designation for
SRF officers will inevitably complicate and to some degree weaken our cover
efforts locally, no matter how much we work at it.
LAINGEN BT
#8933
NNNN
SECRET
TEHRAN
8933"
Embassy Charge d'Affairs Bruce Laingen
was concerned about cover arrangements fro CIA officers Kalp and Daughterty.
The "R" designation is the Foreign Service Reserve status that
flagged CIA officers that were operating under the cover of the State
Department.
Here is a document that provided
the cover details for Thomas Ahern, the CIA's station chief in Tehran:
Here is the text:
"S E C R E T
Page 1
Cover Considerations
According to personal data in your
passport, you are single, were born in Antwerp, Belgium 08Jul34, have blue
eyes, have no distinguishing characteristics, and are approximately 1.88 meters
tall. Your cover occupation is that of a commercial business representative.
It is not uncommon to find a Belgian
whose native language is Flemish living in a nominally French-speaking section
of Belgium, such as Jette. You can say that you were born in Antwerp, began
work with a company with a regional office in Antwerp, then was transferred to
the main offices in Brussels. Despite the fact it is only about 90 minutes
driving time between Brussels and Antwerp, you decided to live in one of the
suburbs of Brussels, Jette. This would explain the issuance locale of your
documentation. Working from your Brussels base, you have travelled in Europe on
business in the past (as reflected in your passport) and are now assigned to
the Middle East section of your company. Your non-backstopped address in Jette
is 174 Avenue de Jette, Jette, Belgium.
S E C R E T"
Here is a document from the U.S. Ambassador in
Tehran, Laingen, to the Secretary of State seeking conditional entry or refugee
status and visa clearances for former members of the Shah's regime, including
members of SAVAK, the nation's dreaded secret police, formed under the guidance of the United States and Israel in 1957. Note that the
embassy files for this subject had already been destroyed or moved to
Washington:
Incidentally, after the Iranian Revolution, SAVAK was dissolved by Ayatollah Khomeini and 61 SAVAK officials were executed between 1979 and 1981. While the exact number of SAVAK's victims is unknown, the organization is estimated to have tortured and murdered thousands of the Shah's opponents.
Finally, here is a lengthy document
from June of 1979, again from the U.S. Ambassador in Tehran to the Secretary of
State discussing the issue of the use of Iranian informants and their
increasing unwillingness to talk to Embassy Officials (EMBOFFS) as a result of
charges that the United States and CIA were meddling in Iran's affairs:
This cable gives us some sense of
how widespread the use of informants was in Iran during the Shah years with the
cable mentioning the use of former Iranian diplomats, private citizens and
intellectuals based at Iran's universities among others.
And we wonder why Iran's leadership still doesn't trust the United States....
One must look below the surface of this information and apply the principles used and suggested here and apply them to present day USA, both externally and internally. The actions of officials towards Americans mirror the actions of the CIA 50 years ago. Actions towards blacks is most disturbing. There is far more behind the scenes than simple police brutality. Be afraid, very afraid... of your government.
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