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"Relying on a rich cache of previously classified notes,
transcripts, cables, policy briefs, and memoranda, Andrew Cooper
explains how oil drove, even corrupted, American foreign policy
during a time when Cold War imperatives still applied,"* and tells
why in the 1970s the U.S. switched its Middle East allegiance from
the Shah of Iran to the Saudi royal family. While America struggles
with a recess ion, oil prices soar, revolution rocks the Middle
East, European nations risk defaulting on their loans, and the
world teeters on the brink of a possible global financial crisis.
This is not a description of the present, however, but the 1970s.
In The Oil Kings, Andrew Cooper tells the story of how oil came to
dominate U.S. domestic and foreign policy. Drawing on newly
declassified documents and interviews with some of the key figures
of the time, Cooper follows the political posturing and backroom
maneuvering that led the U.S. to switch to OPEC as its main
supplier of oil from the Shah of Iran, a loyal ally and leading
customer for American weapons. The subsequent loss of U.S. income
destabilized the Iranian economy, while the U.S. embarked on a long
relationship with the autocratic Saudi kingdom that continues to
this day. Brilliantly reported and filled with astonishing
revelations--including how close the U.S. came to sending troops
into the Persian Gulf to break the Arab oil embargo and how U.S.
officials offered to sell nuclear power and nuclear fuel to the
Shah--The Oil Kings is the history of an era that we thought we
knew, an era whose momentous reverberations still influence events
at home and abroad today.
In this remarkably human portrait of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the
last Emperor of Iran, Andrew Scott Cooper examines the life of an
infamously complex personality in a bold new light. The recent wave
of instability in the Middle East has led Iranians and scholars to
reassess the legacy of the Shah-widely denounced as a brutal,
corrupt dictator-who championed Western-style reforms and launched
Iran onto the world stage as a modern and powerful state. The Fall
of Heaven was written with exclusive access to royalists and
revolutionaries-most notably the Shah's widow Empress Farah, other
members of the Pahlavi family, and the men who deposed them: Iran's
first elected president Abolhassan Banisadr, along with other
religious and political figures active in the revolutionary
underground. These testimonials are set alongside first-person
remembrances of White House officials, along with American
diplomats and civilians in Tehran. Cooper takes readers from the
Shah's lavish palace in Tehran to the dusty streets of Najaf, where
Ayatollah Khomeini lived in exile, and from the Imperial Family's
summer retreat on the Caspian Sea to the back alleys of Beirut,
where Islamist revolutionaries plotted the regime's overthrow. Both
epic and intimate, The Fall of Heaven re-creates the dramatic final
days of a legendary ruling family, the deposition of which started
the militant unrest that still affects the Middle East today.
Oil Kings offers the first inside look at how an oil crisis was
manipulated by Alan Greenspan, Donald Rumsfeld, and President Ford
(hoping to secure his re-election), helping to precipitate the fall
of the Shah of Iran in 1979. Andrew Scott Cooper reveals the fatal
struggle between the "oil kings", both Middle-Eastern and American,
as they jockeyed for power, playing games that led directly to the
rise of Iran's radical anti-American theocracy, which still exists
today. An intrepid investigative reporter, Andrew Scott Cooper is
the first to access newly declassified papers, and to interview key
people who formulated US foreign poilicy in that period. Carefully
connecting up the dots, he brilliantly reconstructs the history of
that vexed decade when the modern world was changed forever.
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Paperback
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R391
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Discovery Miles 3 620
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