4. Loftus and Eakens to McGhee and Nitze, March 4, 1947, 800.6363/3-447; «Saudi Arabia's Offshore Oil,» August 6, 1948, 890F.6363/8–1148, RG 59, NA; Interview with Jack Sunderland; FRUS; Current Economic Developments, 1945–1934,
July 19, 1948, p. 10 («new companies»); John Loftus, «Oil in United States Foreign Policy,» Speech, July 30, 1946; Monsell Davis memo, «Kuwait Neutral Zone Concession,» August 16, 1947, POWE 33/478, PRO; Painter, Oil and the American Century, p. 165 («Aminoil»); Duce to DeGolyer, December 16, 1944, 360, DeGolyer papers; Tompkins, Little Giant of Signal Hill, pp. 156–63 (Davies).5. Somerset de Chair, Getty on Getty
(London: Cassell, 1989), pp. 15–20 («best hotel» and «a casino»), 143 («always let down»), 145, 76 and 158 (Madame Tallasou), 70 («family life»), 156; Interview with Jack Sunderland («thousand fights» and «value»); Robert Lenzer, Getty: The Richest Man in the World (London: Grafton, 1985), pp. 59–60 (Dempsey), 101, 118–34 («espionage»); Russell Miller, The House of Getty (London: Michael Joseph, 1985), p. 207 («thinking about girls»); «The Fifty-Million Dollar Man,» Fortune, November 1957, pp. 176–78; Ralph Hewins, The Richest American: Paul Getty (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1960), pp. 289 («Middle East»); Interview with Paul Walton.6. Miller, Home of Getty,
pp. 191–93 («expenses»), 200–4 («Teach» and «seminar»); Lezner, Getty, pp. 156–57 («insane»), 159–60 («pathological fear»), 182 («garbage oil»); Hewins, Richest American, pp. 309 («favorably impressed»), 313 («My bankers»); Munro to Rowe-Dutton, February 22, 1949, T 236/2161; to Furlonge, Foreign Office, November 1, 1950, ES 1532/24, FO 371/82692 («notorious»), PRO. Proctor to Drake, June 28, 1949, 12-2-4 file, case 4, 644a; Dunaway to Grubb, 44a, April 4, 1946, «various nos.» file, case 2 (Gulbenkian), Oil Companies papers. Interviews with Paul Walton and Jack Sunderland; Bernard Berenson, Sunset and Twilight: From the Diaries of 1947–1938 of Bernard Berenson, ed. Micky Mariana (New York: Harcourt, Brace 8; World, 1963), p. 309 (richest man); Multinational Hearings, partf, (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1975), pp. 282–84.7. Trott to Bevin, «Saudi Arabia: Annual Review for 1950,» March 19, 1951, ES 1011/1, FO 371/91757; Trott to McNeil, «Saudi Arabia: Annual Review for 1949, February 28,1950, ES 1011/1, FO 371/82638, «Saudi Arabia: Economic Report,» to Foreign Office, September 24, 1950, POWE 33/323, «Saudi Arabia: Economic Report,» January 28, 1951, POWE 33/324, PRO. Cable with Duce to Wilkins, May 25, 1950, 886A.2553/5-2550 («large company profits»); «Arabian-American Oil Company's Tax Problems,» July 20, 1949, 890F.6363/7-2049, RG 59, NA. Multinational Hearings,
part 8, pp. 342–50 («rolling» and «horse trading»), 357 (IRS); part 7, pp. 168 («spread the benefits»), 130–35 («retreat»); Anderson, Aramco, pp. 188–96 («welfare» and «Each time»); Betancourt, Venezuela, p. 89 («grave threat»); Painter, Oil and American Century, p. 166 («darn bit»); Interview with George McGhee («Saudis knew»); John Blair, The Control of Oil (New York: Pantheon, 1976), pp. 196–99 (criticism of tax credit).
Глава 231. Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, The Shah's Story,
trans. Teresa Waugh (London: Michael Joseph, 1980), pp. 31–47 («grief»); Barry Rubin, Paved with Good Intentions: The American Experience in Iran (New York: Penguin, 1984), p. 383, n. 9 («mouse»); FRUS, 1950, vol. 5, pp. 463 («Westernized»), 512; Brian Lapping, End of Empire (London: Granada, 1985), p. 205 («bribed»).2. Pahlavi, Shah's Story,
p. 39 («miraculous failure»); Ervand Abrahamiam, Iran Between Two Revolutions (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1982), pp. 249–50 («the Great»); Interview with George McGhee; Louis, British Empire, pp. 636, 596 («infant prodigy» and «nineteenth—century»); George McGhee, Envoy to the Middle World: Adventures in Diplomacy (New York: Harper & Row, 1983), pp. 320 («kindly feeling»); Acheson, Present at the Creation, p. 646 («stupidity»).