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  • Stopping the Militant group ISIS in Syria and Iraq would benefit both the US and Iran.

  • And there is a lot of speculation about how or if that could work. For example, the US

  • could use airstrikes against ISIS targets to make way for ground attacks by Iranian

  • troops. Or the US could simply provide aid, information and international support, while

  • Iran does most of the military work on their own. All of which are reasonable plans

  • if the US and Iran can trust each other. The question is: given the history between these

  • two countries...can they?

  • Well, these two nations have a long and complicated history full of poor decisions and bad blood

  • on both sides. For starters, in 1953 the US, in conjunction with the UK, organized a coup

  • in Iran. This replaced Iran’s publicly elected Prime Minister with military rule under a

  • US-friendly Shah (“SHA”). They did this in part to stifle Russia’s growing influence

  • in Iran and partly to protect British oil interests in the area. The Iranian Prime Minister

  • at the time was considering nationalizing Iran’s Oil Industry, somet hing that didn’t

  • sit well with the West.

  • For the next 26 years, the US provided aid, support, and even nuclear technology for Iran

  • and the Shah. It was a period of prosperity for Iran, but there was a growing disconnect

  • between the Shah and the people. Various student movements, liberal groups and Islamic organizations

  • resented the fast pace at which the Shah was westernizing and secularizing Iran and the

  • influence that the US had over him. They also resented the Shah’s increasingly oppressive,

  • corrupt and extravagant government and his mismanagement of assets, which led to shortages

  • and inflation.

  • In 1979, the conflict reached a boiling point and the Shah was overthrown. Power eventually

  • landed in the hands of The Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He established the Islamic Republic

  • of Iran as we know it today and their relationship with the US hasn’t been good since.

  • On Nov 4th of that same year, protesters stormed the US embassy in Iran and the Iranian government

  • held 52 Americans hostage for more than a year. The last of the hostages were released

  • on Jan 20, 1981.

  • Since then, the US has backed Iraq in a war against Iran, a war in which the US also attacked

  • Iranian oil platforms and ships and mistakenly shot down an Iranian passenger jet. Iran has

  • funded or sheltered Western hating Islamic terrorist groups, held US citizens in Iran

  • against their will, moved forward with a Nuclear weapons program against objections from the

  • US and the international community and lied numerous times to international inspectors

  • about the status of that program. For which the US and the UN have sanctioned Iran. The

  • US has also conducted numerous covert acts against Iran, including a successful joint

  • cyber-attack with Israel that briefly crippled Iran’s nuclear program.

  • It’s been a 35-year period of lies, distrust, covert actions and open aggression. The chances

  • of the US and Iran working together for a short period against a threat like ISIS is

  • a possibility. But considering the history, it would most likely have to be an extremely

  • limited engagement that doesn’t fully require the two sides to trust each other.

  • To find out more info about the middle east and the conflict over there, please click

  • on our ISIS playlist. Or click here now to see our video on who the Kurds are and what

  • stake they have in the region. Please subscribe.

Stopping the Militant group ISIS in Syria and Iraq would benefit both the US and Iran.

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