Analysis
Mosaddegh’s statement correctly reflected the frustration over decades of failed negotiations with the British-controlled **Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC)**, which had resisted Iran’s demands for fairer revenue sharing. However, his claim that oil revenues *alone* could fully fund Iran’s budget and eradicate poverty/disease was speculative. Economic analyses from the era (including later IMF reports) suggested Iran’s infrastructure and administrative capacity were insufficient to immediately realize such gains post-nationalization. The 1951 nationalization did increase Iran’s oil revenue share, but political instability and the 1953 coup disrupted long-term benefits.
Background
Iran’s oil industry was dominated by the AIOC (later BP), which paid Iran minimal royalties despite extracting vast profits. Mosaddegh’s nationalization law (passed March 1951) aimed to reclaim control, but it triggered a British embargo, economic sabotage, and eventually the CIA/MI6-orchestrated 1953 coup that ousted him. Pre-nationalization, Iran received ~16% of AIOC’s net profits; post-nationalization, revenues briefly surged before collapsing due to the embargo.
Verdict summary
Mosaddegh’s claim about stalled negotiations was accurate, but his assertion about oil revenues fully funding Iran’s budget was overly optimistic and lacked concrete economic backing at the time.