Published by Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA, 1969
Seller: Clausen Books, RMABA, Colorado Springs, CO, U.S.A.
Wraps. Condition: Very Good. Plates (illustrator). Reprint. Textblock is clean and tight. Character-soiled covers, light reading crease along the spine, creased corners. 411p., including notes and index. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Paperback.
Published by I.A.D.A. Ltd (Mebso Bookshop), Tehran, 1969
Seller: Antiquarian Bookshop, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. 216 pages; Kermit Roosevelt Jr.'s copy inscribed and Signed on halftitle -- "I hope you / enjoyed your / stay in Tehran, / and I would be / more than happy / if you called me / anytime you are / in my town again! / Sheherasade Khosrovani " "Oct 17, 1971" Illustrated with 141 photogravure plates and 10 colour plates, one map. Not sure of identity of Khosrovani, possibly related to Iranian Ambassador to U.S. (1965-67) Khosrow Khosrovani. Kermit "Kim" Roosevelt, Jr. (1916 - 2000) was the grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt. He was a career intelligence officer who served in the Office of Strategic Services and operated throughout the Near and Middle East for the CIA in the 1950s and 1960s. In Egypt under Allen Dulles, Kim Roosevelt supervised the CIA's operation to undermine the popular General Neguib and encourage the rise to power of Gamul Abdul Nasser. Even before his decisive victory, Nasser was communicating through Roosevelt to make a settlement with Great Britain. These back-channel negotiations eventually produced the treaty signed in October 1954. Nasser ascended and for the next decade Egypt's relations with the West moved along a sometimes rocky road. By 1965 relations had significantly deteriorated and Nasser was quite worried the CIA was plotting to assassinate him. After the Odell-Amin case broke, the CIA began to look for "more West friendly" Egyptian elements. Their attention landed on the Muslim Brotherhood, which according to Talcott Seelye, "We thought of Islam as a counterweight to communism. We saw it as a moderate force, and a positive one." In fact the CIA was spending millions of dollars on anti-Nasser operations, including an extensive propaganda campaign. Roosevelt was also the mastermind of the Central Intelligence Agency's Operation Ajax, which orchestrated the coup against Iran's democratically-elected Mohammed Mossadegh administration, and returned Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, to Iran's Peacock Throne in August 1953 for the purpose of returning Western control of Middle Eastern oil supplies.