87
                              
                                                                                                                                              
141. One of the Iranian officers of the Cossack Brigade would eventually make
himself Shah.  His son would be Shah Muhammad Reza Pahlevi.
142. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, pp. 27-30.
143. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 37.
144. Christopher T. Rand, Making Democracy Safe For Oil: Oilmen and the Islamic
East, Little Brown, Boston, 1975, p. 145.
145. 15,000 Iranian officers went to the U.S. for between two and three years of
training.  (Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 68.)
146. See Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 67, for the seven-point
plan the Americans handed to the Shah, instructing him on how to boost his
popularity.
147. [Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 165.
148. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 56.  Daniel Yergin, The
Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, Simon and Schuster, NY, 1991.
149. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, pp. 58-9.
150. Anthony Sampson, The Seven Sisters: The Great Oil Companies and the
World They Shaped, Bantam Books, New York, 1976, pp. 140-151.  Mohamed
Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, p. 63.
151. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, pp. 61-62.  I.G. Edmonds,
Allah's Oil: Mideast Petroleum, Thomas Nelson Inc., New York, 1977, pp. 114-116.
Christopher T. Rand, Making Democracy Safe For Oil: Oilmen and the Islamic
East,  pp. 133-139.
152. Mohamed Heikal, The Return of the Ayatollah, pp. 62-63. Paul Johnson,
Modern Times: The World from the Twenties to the Eighties, Harper Colophon
Books, Harper & Row, New York, 1985, p. 491.  I.G. Edmonds, Allah's Oil: Mideast
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