CIA Coup in Iran 1953 — Operation Ajax Explained | Part 1/5 | Epic Fury Series episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 29, 2026 · 22 MIN

CIA Coup in Iran 1953 — Operation Ajax Explained | Part 1/5 | Epic Fury Series

from Epic Fury: The US-Iran War Podcast · host The Briefing Network

Before Operation Epic Fury. Before the Islamic Revolution. Before forty years of hostility between Washington and Tehran. There was a single event that set everything in motion.In August 1953, the CIA and British intelligence orchestrated the overthrow of Iran's democratically elected Prime Minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh — a man who had done nothing more provocative than nationalise his country's oil. Operation Ajax, as the CIA called it, was a masterclass in covert political manipulation: bribed parliamentarians, planted propaganda, paid street gangs, and a Shah too frightened to act without a secret signal from Eisenhower himself.The operation succeeded in four days. Its consequences are still unfolding seventy years later.This bonus episode tells the full story — from Britain's stranglehold on Iranian oil and the rise of Mosaddegh, to the two coup attempts, the chaos of August 19th, and the arrest of a Prime Minister who was right about everything. It examines what Operation Ajax actually achieved, what it destroyed, and how a decision made in Washington in 1953 helped produce the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, and ultimately the conflict now known as Operation Epic Fury.Epic Fury is a daily narrative podcast covering the US-Iran conflict of 2026. This five-part bonus series goes back to the beginning — tracing the CIA's history with Iran from the 1953 coup to the bombs falling today.

Before Operation Epic Fury. Before the Islamic Revolution. Before forty years of hostility between Washington and Tehran. There was a single event that set everything in motion.In August 1953, the CIA and British intelligence orchestrated the overthrow of Iran's democratically elected Prime Minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh — a man who had done nothing more provocative than nationalise his country's oil. Operation Ajax, as the CIA called it, was a masterclass in covert political manipulation: bribed parliamentarians, planted propaganda, paid street gangs, and a Shah too frightened to act without a secret signal from Eisenhower himself.The operation succeeded in four days. Its consequences are still unfolding seventy years later.This bonus episode tells the full story — from Britain's stranglehold on Iranian oil and the rise of Mosaddegh, to the two coup attempts, the chaos of August 19th, and the arrest of a Prime Minister who was right about everything. It examines what Operation Ajax actually achieved, what it destroyed, and how a decision made in Washington in 1953 helped produce the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, and ultimately the conflict now known as Operation Epic Fury.Epic Fury is a daily narrative podcast covering the US-Iran conflict of 2026. This five-part bonus series goes back to the beginning — tracing the CIA's history with Iran from the 1953 coup to the bombs falling today.

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CIA Coup in Iran 1953 — Operation Ajax Explained | Part 1/5 | Epic Fury Series

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This episode was published on March 29, 2026.

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Before Operation Epic Fury. Before the Islamic Revolution. Before forty years of hostility between Washington and Tehran. There was a single event that set everything in motion.In August 1953, the CIA and British intelligence orchestrated the...

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