About this episode
The cleanest stories are usually the least true, especially when they’re designed to justify the next war. We start with a 2026 headline swirl and a familiar claim that Iran has been America’s enemy for “47 years,” then we pull on the thread until the whole timeline opens up. What we find is a modern US-Iran history built around oil, propaganda, and covert operations, long before the hostage crisis ever hit the nightly news.
We walk through Operation Ajax, the 1953 CIA and MI6-backed coup that removed Iran’s elected prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh after Iran moved to nationalize its oil industry. From there, we connect the dots to the Shah’s return, repression, SAVAK, and the kind of blowback that can shape generations. Along the way we explore a strange side corridor of history: James Forrestal, early debates over Israel and Middle East petroleum strategy, and why the word “Ajax” keeps echoing in unexpected places.
Then we fast-forward through the 1979 revolution and hostage crisis into murkier territory: October Surprise lore, the logic of backchannels, and Iran-Contra as a case study in how official narratives can diverge from what governments actually do. We also bring it back to the present with Strait of Hormuz stakes, oil shock fears, and the moral cost of decisions made far from the people who pay for them. Subscribe, share this with a friend who still trusts sound bites, and leave a review so more listeners can find Paratruther