Analyse
The 1906 Persian Constitution, as amended in 1921, allowed the Shah to appoint and dismiss the prime minister, subject to parliamentary confidence, so the Shah did have a legal basis for removal. However, Mosaddegh’s removal was engineered by covert CIA/MI6 operations and the military, bypassing constitutional processes, which qualifies as a coup against a legally elected government. Thus the statement mixes a true characterization of the event with a false assertion about constitutional rights.
Achtergrond
Mohammad Mosaddegh was Iran’s democratically elected prime minister who was ousted in August 1953 after a CIA‑MI6‑backed operation (Operation Ajax) that forced his resignation and installed General Zahedi. The Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, used his constitutional powers to appoint a new government, but the manner of the removal violated democratic norms.
Samenvatting verdict
Mosaddegh correctly identified the 1953 overthrow as a coup, but his claim that the Shah lacked any constitutional authority to dismiss him is false.