CIA Confirms Role in 1953 Iran Coup

**Washington, D.C., August 19, 2013

 **Marking the sixtieth  anniversary of the overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq, the  National Security Archive is today posting recently declassified CIA documents  on the United States' role in the controversial operation. American and British  involvement in Mosaddeq's ouster has long been public knowledge, but today's  posting includes what is believed to be the CIA's first formal acknowledgement  that the agency helped to plan and execute the coup.

 The explicit reference to the CIA's role appears in a copy of an internal  history, *The Battle for Iran*, dating from the mid-1970s. The agency  released a heavily excised version of the account in 1981 in response to an ACLU  lawsuit, but it blacked out all references to TPAJAX, the code name for the  U.S.-led operation. Those references appear in the latest release. Additional  CIA materials posted today include working files from Kermit Roosevelt, the  senior CIA officer on the ground in Iran during the coup. They provide new  specifics as well as insights into the intelligence agency's actions before and  after the operation.

The 1953 coup remains a topic of global interest because so much about it is  still under intense debate. Even fundamental questions — who hatched the plot,  who ultimately carried it out, who supported it inside Iran, and how did it  succeed — are in dispute. The issue is more than academic. Political partisans on all sides, including  the Iranian government, regularly invoke the coup to argue whether Iran or  foreign powers are primarily responsible for the country's historical  trajectory, whether the United States can be trusted to respect Iran's  sovereignty, or whether Washington needs to apologize for its prior interference  before better relations can occur.

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