For decades, whispers and suspicions surrounded the 1953 coup in Iran, a pivotal event that reshaped the nation's destiny and cast a long shadow over U.S.-Iranian relations. This was no ordinary political upheaval; it was a meticulously planned covert operation, orchestrated by foreign powers, to depose a democratically elected leader. The central intelligence agency, which has repeatedly pledged for more than five years to make public the files from its secret mission to overthrow the government of Iran in 1953, initially claimed to have destroyed or lost almost all the documents decades ago, leaving a void of official transparency.
Yet, the truth, as it often does, eventually surfaced. On August 19, 2013, the CIA publicly admitted for the first time its involvement in the 1953 coup against Iran's elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. This belated acknowledgment confirmed what many historians and Iranians had long suspected: that the United States, in collaboration with the United Kingdom, played a central and decisive role in dismantling Iran's nascent democracy. The repercussions of this intervention continue to resonate, making the 1953 coup a critical historical juncture demanding thorough examination.