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Thalia Toha's avatar

Alex- I appreciate this coverage of the three-mile island, something I'm admittedly unfamiliar with. Hope you're well this week. Cheers, -Thalia

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Peter Grafström's avatar

The angloamericans were worried about a collaboration between the USSR Westgerrmany France Japan and OPEC.

The aim was to develop the poor countries by implementing a new financial instrument and Brezhnev and Helmut Schmidt had signed a common accord in 1978.

Iran wanted to collaborate with both East and West.

Nuclear power had begun to be implemented.

If the development plans had proceeded several unwanted consequences for the US/UK were expected.

It was intended to lead to extensive use of nuclear power for industrialisation in the third world instead of continued imperial looting.

OPECs condition for joining was that such a development would be a part of it.

Thus a competing petro-currency was in the cards.

Obviously this collaboration between the USSR and an important western group spelled the end of US/UKs hegemonical aims.

In the eyes of the burgeoning hegemons they were fortunately able to put an end to all those plans. The iranian revolution was entirely caused by deliberate actions from the US/UK.

And not only in 1953 like the CIA likes to confirm but also for ousting the shah just as they once had ousted his predecessor.

Khomeni, whose son in 2011 confirmed that the father's origin was obscure.

When Khomeini rose to power he immediately closed the nuclear power project.

But I believe that was shortly before the three mile island incident.

So apparently not a consequence of it.

Khomeine was a useful asset.

It was claimed he spoke only some 200 words of the language.

Officially he would have a father from India but some rumours suggest he was the son of a british spy who went native and lived like a muslim..

Be that as it may but the east-west collaboration against the critique of the British and those plans about developing the third world were one obvious reason why the US/UK saw it as a deadly threat to their dominance.

Hostage to Khomeini by Robert Dreyfuss from 1981 throws some light on this context. The economical accord was much discussed in the campaigner and Executive intelligence review at the time.

Last time I looked it was available at wlym.com and larouchepub.

Larouche and Dreyfuss were later accused of defamation of one iranian (presumably a coconspirator with the US)

Perhaps that has led to the whole thing being buried?

I believe Larouche all along wanted the US to join the collaboration.

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