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Donald Newton Wilber (November 14, 1907,Wisconsin[1] – February 2, 1997,Princeton, New Jersey[2]),American writer andspy.
Wilber, along with MI6 agentNorman Darbyshire was one of the two principal architects of the MI6-CIA project "Operation Ajax" (or "Operation Boot" as it was called by the British), a successful plot to overthrow the government of Iranian Prime MinisterMohammad Mossadeq. The plot replaced Iran's first democratically elected Prime Minister with General Fazlollah Zahedi; the government fell back into the hands of its disempoweredMohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, who had supported the coup.
Wilber served as a United States intelligence officer with theOffice of Strategic Services (OSS), and was an active participant in the power struggles of nations, especially during the rivalry between theUnited States and theSoviet Union in Iran afterWorld War II.
In addition to orchestrating the coup in Iran, in his spare time, Wilber wrote histories, travelogues and commentaries onIran,Afghanistan andSri Lanka. He was considered an authority on ancient Persia.
Wilber studied the ancient and modern Middle East. He received his A.B. (1929), M.F.A., and Ph.D. (1949) fromPrinceton University, where he was the first student to receive a doctorate in architectural history.[3]
In 1939 Wilber married Margaret Patterson Surre; they had two daughters, Sara Wilber Cohen and Margaret Newton Wilber, who later changed her name to Valentine Margaret Wilber.[2]
His book,Iran, Past and Present, was published in nine editions. Wilber collected oriental rugs and was president of the Princeton Rug Society for many years. He spent forty years in the Middle East.
His memoir, which partially recounts his role in the coup, isAdventures in the Middle East: Excursions and Incursions.
Wilber is the author of articles and books, including: