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ID185600
Title ProperExporting imperialism
Other Title Informationarms, Iran, and the military-industrial complex, 1969–1979
LanguageENG
AuthorJonathan Ng
Summary / Abstract (Note)On November 15, 1977, several thousand Iranians congregated in Lafayette Park. The shah of Iran’s trip to Washington, D.C. prompted a “blitz of competing parades, speeches, picketing, street theater, leafleting and general political huckstering.”1 The Los Angeles Times called it the “most turbulent day” at the White House since the antiwar demonstrations of the 1960s.2 Mounted police surveilled the opposing crowds. Regime supporters traded taunts with students wearing masks to protect their identity from secret police. During the monarch’s 1973 visit, protesters chanted, “Nixon, Don’t Arm the Shah!”3 Now Iran was the largest foreign consumer of U.S. arms. Reflecting the change in times, students carried new placards: “Stop Arming the Shah’s Regime.”4
`In' analytical NoteDiplomatic History Vol. 46, No.2; Apr 2022: p.320–348
Journal SourceDiplomatic History Vol: 46 No 2
Key WordsArms ;  Iran ;  Imperialism ;  Military-Industrial Complex - 1969–1979 ;  Shah’s Regime


 
 
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