Last Stand in Abadan
September 28, 1951 — The Mercury
September 28, 1951 — The Mercury
The Mossadegh Project | October 17, 2020 |
Lead editorial reacting to the expulsion of British AIOC workers from Iran in The Mercury newspaper (Hobart, Tasmania, Australia).
• Australian media archive
TIME TO DRAW A LINE
If Britain decides to land troops a hostile reaction is certain, not only in Persia, but throughout the Middle East and farther afield. Embarrassing protests would be made to the United Nations, and there is a possibility that the Russians might seize on the excuse to march into Persia from the north, though it seems unlikely that they are in the mood to risk war.
On the other hand the British Government is entitled to prevent the Persians from further compromising its rights as established by the International Court, which placed equal responsibility on the two sides to preserve the status quo.
Moreover, if Britain allowed herself to be pushed out of Abadan she would have no cards left to play in the oil dispute. The repercussions of such a humiliating defeat would be incalculable. In the circumstances Britain has no real alternative but to take a strong stand.
A serious feature of the new development is its possible effect on America, which so far has opposed the use of force, largely because of fear that Russia might intervene. The Americans, though they are not directly involved in the dispute, can argue that the West’s greatest interest in Persia is strategic, and that her independence must be preserved.
It would be a calamity if irresponsible Persian extremists succeeded where the Russians have failed, and drove a wedge between the Allies. There should be sufficient statesmanship on both sides of the Atlantic to prevent an open breach but the latest crisis could easily cause a temporary cooling of relations.
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Related links:
Oil To Flow Again | The Mercury, July 20, 1954
Persia—Pushing Or Being Pushed? | The Recorder, Sept. 14, 1951
Crisis looms in Persia | The News (Adelaide), September 28, 1951
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