
Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya
Against whom is the European Union’s so-called “oil embargo on Iran” really aimed at?
This is an important geo-strategic question. Aside from rejecting the new E.U. measures against Iran as counter-productive, Tehran has warned the member states of the European Union that the E.U. oil embargo against Iran will hurt them and their economies far more than Iran.
Tehran has thus warned the leaders of the E.U. countries that the new sanctions are foolish and against their national and bloc interests. But is this correct? At the end of the day, who will benefit from the chain of events that are being set into motion?
Are Oil Embargoes against Iran New?
This is an important geo-strategic question. Aside from rejecting the new E.U. measures against Iran as counter-productive, Tehran has warned the member states of the European Union that the E.U. oil embargo against Iran will hurt them and their economies far more than Iran.
Tehran has thus warned the leaders of the E.U. countries that the new sanctions are foolish and against their national and bloc interests. But is this correct? At the end of the day, who will benefit from the chain of events that are being set into motion?
Are Oil Embargoes against Iran New?
Oil
embargos against Iran are not new. In 1951, the Iranian government of
Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh with the support of the Iranian
Parliament nationalized the Iranian oil industry. As a result of Dr.
Mossadegh’s nationalization program, the British militarily blockaded
the territorial waters and national ports of Iran with the British Royal
Navy and prevented Iran from exporting its oil. They also militarily
prevented Iranian trade. London also froze Iranian assets and started a
campaign to isolate Iran with sanctions. The government of Dr. Mossadegh
was democratic and could not be vilified easily domestically by the
British, so they began to portray Mossadegh as a pawn of the Soviet
Union who would turn Iran into a communist country together with his
Marxist political allies.
The
illegal British naval embargo was followed by regime change in Tehran
via a 1953 Anglo-American engineered coup d’état. The 1953 coup
transformed the Shah of Iran from a constitutional figure head to an
absolute monarch and dictator, like the monarchs of Jordan, Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, and Qatar. Iran was transformed overnight from a
democratic constitutional monarchy into a dictatorship.
Today,
a militarily imposed oil embargo against Iran is not possible like it
was in the early 1950s. Instead London and Washington use the language
of righteousness and hide behind false pretexts about Iranian nuclear
weapons. Like in the 1950s, the oil embargo against Iran is tied to
regime change. Yet, there are also broader objectives that go beyond the
boundaries of Iran tied to the Washington’s project to impose an oil
embargo against the Iranians.