15. Makins to Foreign Office, June 4,1953, FO 371/104659 (Shah's suspicions); Shuckburgh to Strang, August 29, 1953, FO 371/104659; Roe to Foreign Office, August 25, 1953, EP 1914/1, FO 371/104658; Bromley to Salisburg, August 26, 1953, EP 1941/12, FO 371/104658 (Shah in Rome and Baghdad), PRO. FRUS: Iran, 1951–54,
pp. 748 («snuggle up»), 780–88 (description of events); William Shaweross, The Shah's Last Ride (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988), pp. 68–70 («bulletin» and «I knew they loved me»); Roosevelt, Countercoup, pp. 156–72, and passim; Mark T. Gasiorowski, «The 1953 Coup d'Etat in Iran,» International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 19 (1987), pp. 261–86; Woodhouse, Something Ventured, pp. 115–16. Woodhouse was, at the time. Rim Roosevelt's opposite number, in charge of the 1953 coup enterprise from the British side.16. Robert Belgrave to author, March 16, 1989; Interview with Wanda Jablonski; «Persia: Ouarterly Political Report,» July— September 1953, November 19, 1953, EP 1015/263, POWE 33/2089, PRO; Donald N. Wilber, Adventures in the Middle East: Excursions and Incursions
(Princeton, N.J.: Darwin Press, 1986), p. 189; Stephen E. Ambrose, Eisenhower: The President (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984), p. 129 («dime novel»); Richard and Gladys Harkness, «The Mysterious Doings of CIA,» Saturday Evening Post, November 6, 1954, pp. 66–68; Brands, Loy Henderson, chap. 20.17. Butler to Secretary, August 24, August 26, 1953, POWE 33/2088 («stumped»); «Skeleton Memo on Middle East Oil,» August 17,1953, PO (0)(53)72, CAB 134/1149; «Draft Proposal/Walter Levy,» October 20, 1952, POWE 33/1936, PRO. Interview with Wanda Jablonski; Bennett Wall, Growth in a Changing Environment: The History of Standard Oil (New Jersey), 1950–1972, and the Exxon Company, 1972–1975
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988), pp. 487–88; Wilber, Adventures in the Middle East, p. 184; Nitze, From Hiroshima to Glasnost, pp. 133–37; United States Congress, Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Multinational Corporations, 93rd Congress, 2d Session, Multinational Corporations and U.S. Foreign Policy (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1975), p. 60; Multinational Hearings, part 7, p. 301 («touch and go»); Interviews with George Parkhurst («ouchy») and Howard Page («beat us on the head»). Multinational Subcommittee Staff Interviews; Burton I. Kaufman, The Oil Cartel Case: A Documentary Study of Antitrust Activity in the Cold War Era (Westport, Conn,: Greenwood Press, 1978), pp. 162–170 (Funkhouser); Wilkins, Maturing of Multinational Enterprise, p. 322; Interview with George McGhee («fiddler»); United States Congress, Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Multinational Corporations, The International Petroleum Cartel, the Iranian Consortium, and U.S. National Security (Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1974), pp. 57–58 («strictly commercial viewpoint»).18. Wall, Exxon,
pp. 453–55, 947, n. 33; Kaufman, Oil Cartel Case, pp. 27 («rubber stamping»), 163 («highly slanted»), 30 («Soviet propaganda»); FTC, International Petroleum Cartel. Версию министерства юстиции см. Multinational Subcommittee, Iranian Consortium, pp. 5–16 («spot market»). For the British view, see Eden in «Notes for Secretary of State on U.S. Federal Trade Commission's Report,» September 4, 1952, POWE 33/1920 and «International Oil Industry,» Memo by the Foreign Secretary, September 30, 1952, С (52)315, PREM 11/500; Churchill to Foreign Secretary, August 30, 1952, M 463/52, PREM 11/500, PRO. Lloyd to Anglo-Iranian, October 2, 1952, brown wrapper. Case 9, Oil Companies papers («stale bread,» «witch-hunters» and «prejudicial»). On antitrust policy, see Raymond Vernon and Debra L. Spar, Beyond Globalism: Remaking American Foreign Economic Policy (New York: Free Press, 1989), pp. 113–17 and Kingman Brewster, Jr., Antitrust and American Business Abroad (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1958), pp. 8, 72–74, 330–31.