Thursday, July 1, 2010

STEPHEN KINZER: History, BP & the West's Imperial Oil Crusades

see publisher info below on this post
Photo of Stephen Kinzer found at NPR.org

STEPHEN KINZER's Recent Work:

Look for Kinzer's article just out at Tom Dispatch and find some reviews on Stephen Kinzer's new book (one in Mother Jones) I found his -Bitter Fruit- years ago and have been using it for reference often (still applies to current events.) Evidently some who appreciate Kinzer's history and recommendations claim he and Chomsky differ substantially as to cure. See Tom Dispatch: Stephen Kinzer: BP in the Gulf -- The Persian Gulf, How an Oil Company Helped Destroy Democracy in Iran Tomgram: Stephen Kinzer, BP's First "Spill" | Jun 29, 2010 CLICK here

Find another posting at Common Dreams dot org CommonDreams.org
Jun 30, 2010 Stephen Kinzer: BP in the Gulf -- The Persian Gulf. Dean Baker: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change...GO here

Find a video/interview at Democracy Now! Stephen Kinzer on the History of BP/British Petroleum and Its Role for Jun 14, 2010 author of All the Shah's Men: An American ...
here

EXCERPT from RESET: Iran, Turkey and America’s Future

A broken line of terrified schoolboys, laden with rifles and homemade grenades, crept through the streets of ancient Tabriz as dawn broke over the starving city. Weakened by hunger after months of siege, many of them sick, these young men nevertheless understood that they were the vanguard of Iran's struggle for democracy. Above all they were inspired by the man they followed. He was not, like other guerrilla leaders, a defiant officer, a bandit turned patriot, or the product of a long line of Persian fighters. Instead he was as unlikely a revolutionary as could possibly have emerged in this proud and ancient land: a twenty- four-year-old schoolteacher from Nebraska named Howard Baskerville.

Neither the inspiring figure of their leader nor the invigorating spring breeze blowing down from the nearby Sahand Mountains, however, was enough to persuade most of these boys and young men that this day, April 20, 1909, was their day to die. A hundred followed Baskerville as he set out at first light. By the time their column approached the city wall an hour later, fewer than a dozen remained. Nonetheless Baskerville pressed on.

Patriots in Tabriz were resisting a counterrevolution aimed at crushing Iran's new democracy and restoring the de cadent Qajar monarchy. Royalist forces had surrounded the defiant city. Their siege was terrifyingly effective; hunger and disease killed people every day, and many of the living were reduced to eating grass. They could survive and continue to resist only if someone, somehow, could break through the siege line, reach a nearby village, and return with food and medicine. Baskerville volunteered to try.

"Be careful," one of his American friends begged him before he set out. "You know you are not your own."

"No," he replied. "I am Persia's."

Born in the Nebraska prairie town of North Platte and raised in South Dakota's Black Hills, the son and grandson of Presbyterian preachers, Baskerville was an improbable candidate for martyrdom. As a teenager he was pious, sober, and studious enough to win admission to Princeton University. There he studied religion, excelled in horse manship, and became a modestly successful boxer. He also took two courses taught by Woodrow Wilson, one called "Jurisprudence" and the other "Constitutional Government." Wilson's lectures stirred the passion for democracy that shaped his short life.

After graduating in 1907, Baskerville decided to postpone his entry into Prince ton's theological seminary and work for a time as a missionary. That autumn he arrived in Tabriz, a two-thousand-year-old city in northwest Iran that is the supposed birthplace of the prophet Zoroaster and was built, according to legend, on the site of the Garden of Eden. There he taught history, geometry, and English to mixed classes — he insisted on accepting girls as well as boys — at the American Memorial School. He also became the school's tennis coach and riding instructor, directed a student production of The Merchant of Venice, and closed his first Thanksgiving sermon with a stirring verse from Sir Walter Scott:

Breathes there a man with soul so dead
Who never to himself hath said,
"This is my home, my native land!"

Baskerville's students would have found those words excruciating. For de cades their prostrate homeland, heir to a great empire led by heroic kings like Cyrus, Darius, and Xerxes, had been misruled by a dissolute dynasty and looted by rapacious outside powers. In 1907, Britain and Russia signed a convention dividing Persia — as Iran was then known — into "spheres of influence." Britain took the southern part of the country, Russia the north. No Iranian participated in or even knew about the negotiations that produced this agreement.

Yet the early twentieth century was an age of ferment and rebellion as well as imperial power. The Boers overthrew British rule in South Africa. Russian insurgents forced Czar Nicholas II to establish a legislature. The Russo-Japanese war ended with victory for Japan, suggesting that Europeans were not fated to dominate Asians forever.

None of these shattering events went unnoticed in Iran. Anger at the docile Qajar dynasty, and at the foreign powers it served, sparked waves of protest. In 1906 these protests achieved their unimaginable goal: democratic revolution. The king, Muzaffer al-Din Shah, was forced to make concessions like those King John had made seven centuries earlier when he signed the Magna Carta. He agreed to permit the proclamation of a constitution, the holding of elections, and the establishment of a parliament. Under the new constitution, freedom of speech and press were guaranteed, monarchs were forbidden to sign treaties or borrow money without approval from Parliament, and all citizens were declared equal before the law.

Forty days after reluctantly accepting this constitution — the pain may have been too great for him — Muzaffer al-Din Shah died. His son and successor, Mohammad Ali Shah, described by one contemporary as "perhaps the most perverted, cowardly and vice-sodden monster that had disgraced the throne of Persia for many generations," loathed the new democracy. Determined to crush it, he dissolved Parliament and then, on June 3, 1908, sent Russian-led artillery units to bomb the building where it met. Scores of deputies were killed. Protests broke out across the country, but the shah ruthlessly crushed them. The only city he could not subdue was Tabriz, which, because of its location near the borders with Russia and Turkey, was the portal through which democratic ideas had been streaming into the country for years.

RESET excerpt can also be found at npr.org

From the Book - Reset: Iran, Turkey, and America's Future by Stephen Kinzer. Copyright (c) 2010 by Stephen Kinzer. Reprinted by arrangement with Henry Holt and Company, LLC. All rights reserved. Hardcover, 352 pages Knopf List price: $25.95

1 comment:

  1. The Radical Middle Newsletter
    ( Thoughtful Idealism, Informed Hope )

    Also has something called
    The Center for Visionary Law

    The editor in Issue No. 101 (December 1, 2006) wrote an Op Ed called:

    "Coming to grips with our badness" which compares Stephen Kinzer's "cure" with Noam Chomsky's "solution" to a change.

    ReplyDelete