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Definición y significado de Iran_hostage_crisis

Definición

definición de Iran_hostage_crisis (Wikipedia)

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Wikipedia

Iran hostage crisis

                   
Iran–United States hostage crisis
Part of Consolidation of the Iranian Revolution
US Embassy Tehran.JPG
A defaced Great Seal of the United States at the former U.S. embassy, Tehran, Iran, as it appeared in 2004
Date November 4, 1979 – January 20, 1981
Location Tehran, Iran
Result Rupture of Iran–United States relations
Belligerents
Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line United States United States
Commanders and leaders
United States Jimmy Carter

United States Ronald Reagan
United States George H. W. Bush

The Iran hostage crisis was a diplomatic crisis between Iran and the United States where 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days from November 4, 1979, to January 20, 1981, after a group of Islamist students and militants took over the American Embassy in Tehran in support of the Iranian Revolution.[1] President Carter called the hostages "victims of terrorism and anarchy", adding that the "United States will not yield to blackmail".[2]

The episode reached a climax when, after failed attempts to negotiate a release, the United States military attempted a rescue operation, Operation Eagle Claw, on April 24, 1980, which resulted in a failed mission, the deaths of eight American servicemen, one Iranian civilian, and the destruction of two aircraft. It ended with the signing of the Algiers Accords in Algeria on January 19, 1981. The hostages were formally released into United States custody the following day, just minutes after the new American president Ronald Reagan was sworn into office.

The crisis has been described as an entanglement of "vengeance and mutual incomprehension".[3] In Iran, the hostage taking was widely seen as a blow against the U.S., and its influence in Iran, its perceived attempts to undermine the Iranian Revolution, and its longstanding support of the Shah of Iran, recently overthrown by the revolution. The Shah had been restored to power in a 1953 coup organized by the CIA at the American Embassy against a democratically-elected nationalist Iranian government,[4] and had recently been allowed into the United States for medical treatment. In the United States, the hostage-taking was seen as an outrage violating a centuries-old principle of international law granting diplomats immunity from arrest and diplomatic compounds are considered inviolable.[5]

The crisis has also been described as the "pivotal episode" in the history of Iran–United States relations.[6] In the U.S., some political analysts believe the crisis was a major reason for U.S. President Jimmy Carter's defeat in the November 1980 presidential election.[7] In Iran, the crisis strengthened the prestige of the Ayatollah Khomeini and the political power of those who supported theocracy and opposed any normalization of relations with the West.[8] The crisis also marked the beginning of U.S. legal action, or economic sanctions against Iran, that further weakened economic ties between Iran and the United States.[9]

Contents

  Background

  1953 coup

In February 1979, less than a year before the hostage crisis, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, had been overthrown in a revolution. For several decades before that, the United States had been an ally and backer of the Shah. During World War II, Allied powers Britain and the Soviet Union occupied Iran and required Reza Shah the existing Shah of Iran to abdicate in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.[10] The invasion was allegedly in fear that Reza Shah was about to align his petroleum-rich country with Nazi Germany during the war: However, Reza Shah's earlier Declaration of Neutrality and refusal to allow Iranian territory to be used to train, supply, and act as a transport corridor to ship arms to Russia for its war effort against Germany, was the strongest motive for the allied invasion of Iran. Because of its importance in the allied victory, Iran was subsequently called "The Bridge of Victory" by Winston Churchill.[11]

By the 1950s, the Shah was engaged in a power struggle with Prime Minister Mohammed Mosaddeq, an immediate descendant of the previous monarchy, the Qajar dynasty. In 1953, the British and U.S. spy agencies deposed the democratically-elected government of Mossadegh in a military coup d'état codenamed Operation Ajax, and restored the Shah as an absolute monarch.[12][13][14] The anti-democratic coup d'état was "a critical event in post-war world history" that replaced Iran's post-monarchic, native, and secular parliamentary democracy with an absolute monarchy.[15] U.S. support and funding continued after the coup, with the CIA training the government's secret police, SAVAK. In subsequent decades this foreign intervention, along with other economic, cultural and political issues, united opposition against the Shah and led to his overthrow.[16][17][18]

  Carter administration

Shortly before the revolution on New Year's Day 1979, American president Jimmy Carter further angered anti-Shah Iranians with a televised toast to the Shah, declaring how beloved the Shah was by his people. After the revolution in February, the embassy had been occupied and staff held hostage briefly. Rocks and bullets had broken enough of the embassy front-facing windows for them to be replaced with bulletproof glass. Its staff was reduced to just over 60 from a high of nearly 1000 earlier in the decade.[19]

The Carter administration attempted to mitigate the anti-American feeling by finding a new relationship with the de facto Iranian government and by continuing military cooperation in hopes that the situation would stabilize. However, on October 22, 1979, the U.S. permitted the Shah—who was ill with cancer—to attend the Mayo Clinic for medical treatment. The American embassy in Tehran had discouraged the request, understanding the political delicacy,[20] but after pressure from influential figures including former United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Council on Foreign Relations chairman David Rockefeller, the Carter administration decided to grant the Shah's request.[21][22][23]

The Shah's admission to the U.S. intensified Iranian revolutionaries' anti-Americanism and spawned rumors of another U.S.-backed coup and re-installation of the Shah.[24]

Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini—who had been exiled by the Shah for 15 years—heightened rhetoric against the "Great Satan", the United States, talking of what he called "evidence of American plotting".[25]

"You have no right to complain, because you took our whole country hostage in 1953."[24]

In addition to putting an end to what they believed was American plotting and sabotage against the revolution, the hostage takers hoped to depose the provisional revolutionary government of Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan, which they believed was plotting to normalize relations with the United States and extinguish Islamic revolutionary ardor in Iran.[26]

A later study found that there had been no plots for the overthrow of the revolutionaries by the United States, and that a CIA intelligence gathering mission at the embassy was "notably ineffectual, gathering little information and hampered by the fact that none of the three officers spoke the local language, Persian". Its work was "routine, prudent espionage conducted at diplomatic missions everywhere".[27]

  Planning

The seizure of the American embassy was initially planned in September 1979 by Ebrahim Asgharzadeh, a student at that time. He consulted with the heads of the Islamic associations of Tehran's main universities, including the University of Tehran, Sharif University of Technology, Amirkabir University of Technology (Polytechnic of Tehran) and Iran University of Science and Technology. Their group was named Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line.

Asgharzadeh later said there were five students at the first meeting, two of whom (including current Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad—although this claim has been denied by the Iranian government—the Iranian opposition as well as a CIA investigation on the matter) wanted to target the Soviet embassy because the USSR was "a Marxist and anti-God regime". But two others, Mirdamadi and Habibolah Bitaraf, supported Asgharzadeh's chosen target—the United States. "Our aim was to object against the American government by going to their embassy and occupying it for several hours," Asgharzadeh said. "Announcing our objections from within the occupied compound would carry our message to the world in a much more firm and effective way."[28] Mirdamadi told an interviewer, "we intended to detain the diplomats for a few days, maybe one week, but no more."[29] Masoumeh Ebtekar, spokeswoman for the Iranian students during the crisis, said that those who rejected Asgharzadeh's plan did not participate in the subsequent events.[30]

The Islamist students observed the security procedures of the Marine Security Guards from nearby rooftops overlooking the embassy. They also used experiences from the recent revolution, during which the U.S. embassy grounds were briefly occupied. They enlisted the support of police in charge of guarding the embassy and of Islamic Revolutionary Guards.[31]

According to the group and other sources Khomeini did not know of the plan beforehand.[32] The Islamist students had wanted to inform him but according to author Mark Bowden, Ayatollah Musavi Khoeyniha persuaded them not to. Khoeyniha feared the government would use police to expel the Islamist students as they had the last occupiers in February. The provisional government had been appointed by Khomeini and so Khomeini was likely to go along with their request to restore order. On the other hand, Khoeyniha knew that if Khomeini first saw that the occupiers were his faithful supporters (unlike the leftists in the first occupation) and that large numbers of pious Muslims had gathered outside the embassy to show their support for the takeover, it would be "very hard, perhaps even impossible", for the Imam Khomeini to oppose the takeover, and this would paralyze the Bazargan administration Khoeyniha and the students wanted to eliminate.[33]

Though fear of an American-backed return by the Shah was the publicly stated reason, the true cause of the seizure was the long-standing U.S. support for the Shah's government. Reza Pahlavi ruled Iran from 1941 to 1979, with a brief period of exile in 1953 when he fled to Italy due to a power struggle with Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh. Because Mossadegh's policies and announcements created concern over access to Iranian oil, oil prices, and possible Soviet influence in Iran, the United States and British intelligence services aided Iranian military officers in a coup to overthrow the Prime Minister. After his return to power, the Shah established a very close alliance with the United States. The U.S. supplied weapons, training, and technical knowledge that aided the Shah in modernizing his country. However, the Shah ruled as a dictator, using SAVAK, his secret police, to terrorize his political enemies. The Shah was opposed by both the Marxist Tudeh Party, and by fundamentalist Islamic leaders who believed his policies and his reliance on the Americans were corrupting Iranian society.

By 1978, unrest against the Shah had escalated into a violent uprising against his authority called the Iranian Revolution or the Islamic Revolution. On January 16, 1979, the Shah fled into exile for a second time, traveling to various countries before finally entering the U.S. for cancer treatments in October, 1979. After the Shah's departure, the Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini returned from his own exile in France to take power over Iran. Khomeini was a leading member of the Shia Muslim clergy. The Shia are a subset of the Islamic faith, and form the majority of the Iranian population. Vital parts of this Islamic Revolution were propaganda and demonstrations against the United States and against President Jimmy Carter. After the Shah's entry into the U.S., the Ayatollah Khomeini called for anti-American street demonstrations. On November 4, 1979, one such demonstration, organized by Iranian student unions loyal to Khomeini, took place outside the walled compound housing the U.S. Embassy.

Members of these Iranian student unions scaled the walls of the U.S. Embassy on November 4, 1979, taking 63 Americans hostage. Three more U.S. citizens were taken prisoner at the Iranian Foreign Ministry, for a total of 66 hostages. Within three weeks, the hostage-takers released several women and African-Americans, leaving 53. A sick hostage was later released, reducing the number to 52. Throughout their captivity, the hostages were paraded in front of television cameras, often blindfolded or hooded. Though the hostage-takers were not members of the Iranian government or military, their obvious, publicly-stated loyalty to Khomeini and the Islamic government created an international crisis.

Immediate official American reactions involved halting oil exports from Iran, expelling many Iranians living in the U.S., and freezing Iranian government assets and investments. Many Americans called for military action to free the hostages, but the situation became much more complicated when the Soviet Union invaded Iran's neighbor, Afghanistan, in order to crush an Islamic-based rebellion against that nation's Marxist government. President Carter now faced a crisis with oil-rich, but hostile Iran, a new Cold War crisis with the Soviets, and a growing sense in his own country that he was increasingly showing himself to be an ineffective leader.

Partly to counter the criticisms against him, as well as to free the hostages, President Carter ordered a military rescue mission code-named "Operation Eagle Claw." This mission was a total and complete failure resulting in the deaths of eight U.S. military personnel. On April 24, 1980, units of the rescue force landed in the Iranian desert to refuel their aircraft before heading to Tehran. A confusing series of events took place at this refueling point, including failed equipment, and desert sandstorms which reduced visibility. As a result of these problems, the rescue was called off. During the retreat, one of the helicopters collided with a transport airplane, causing an explosion which killed eight members of the rescue mission. Several of the burned American bodies were later part of grisly street demonstrations protesting the abortive U.S. "invasion" of Iran. A second rescue attempt was planned but never implemented, largely due to equipment failure.

  Takeover

Around 6:30 a.m. on November 4, the ringleaders gathered between 300 and 500 selected students, thereafter known as Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line, and briefed them on the battle plan. A female student was given a pair of metal cutters to break the chains locking the embassy's gates, and she hid them beneath her chador.[34]

At first the students' plan to only make a symbolic occupation, release statements to the press and leave when government security forces came to restore order, was reflected in placards saying "Don't be afraid. We just want to set-in." When the embassy guards brandished firearms, the protesters retreated, one telling the Americans, "We don't mean any harm."[35] But as it became clear the guards would not use deadly force and that a large angry crowd had gathered outside the compound to cheer the occupiers and jeer the hostages, the occupation changed.[36] According to one embassy staff member, buses full of demonstrators began to appear outside the embassy shortly after the Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line broke through the gates.[37]

As Ayatollah Musavi Khoeyniha had hoped, Khomeini supported the takeover. According to Foreign Minister Ebrahim Yazdi, when he, Yazdi came to Qom to tell the Imam about the incident, Khomeini told the minister to "go and kick them out". But later that evening, back in Tehran, the minister heard on the radio that Imam Khomeini had issued a statement supporting the seizure and calling it "the second revolution", and the embassy an "American spy den in Tehran".[38]

The occupiers bound and blindfolded the embassy Marines and staff and paraded them in front of photographers. In the first couple of days many of the embassy staff who had snuck out of the compound or not been there at the time of the takeover were rounded up by Islamists and returned as hostages.[39] Six American diplomats did however avoid capture and found refuge at the nearby Canadian and Swiss embassies in Tehran for three months (Canadian caper). They fled Iran using Canadian passports on January 28, 1980.[40]

  Hostage-holding motivations

The Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line demanded that the Shah return to Iran for trial and execution. The U.S. maintained that the Shah, who died less than a year later in July 1980, had come to America only for medical attention. The group's other demands included that the U.S. government apologize for its interference in the internal affairs of Iran, for the overthrow of Prime Minister Mossadeq (in 1953), and that Iran's frozen assets in the U.S. be released.

  Hostage Barry Rosen, age 34

The initial takeover plan was to hold the embassy for only a short time, but this changed after it became apparent how popular the takeover was and that Khomeini had given it his full support.[37] Some attribute the Iranian decision not to release the hostages quickly to U.S. President Jimmy Carter's "blinking" or failure to immediately deliver an ultimatum to Iran.[41] His immediate response was to appeal for the release of the hostages on humanitarian grounds and to share his hopes of a strategic anti-communist alliance with the Islamic Republic.[42] As some of the student leaders had hoped, Iran's moderate prime minister Mehdi Bazargan and his cabinet resigned under pressure just days after the event.

The duration of the hostages' captivity has been blamed on internal Iranian revolutionary politics. As Ayatollah Khomeini told Iran's president:

This action has many benefits. "... This has united our people. Our opponents do not dare act against us. We can put the constitution to the people's vote without difficulty, and carry out presidential and parliamentary elections."[43]

Theocratic Islamists, as well as leftist political groups and figures like leftist People's Mujahedin of Iran,[44] supported the taking of American hostages as an attack on "American imperialism" and its alleged Iranian "tools of the West". Revolutionary teams displayed secret documents purportedly taken from the embassy, sometimes painstakingly reconstructed after shredding,[45] to buttress their claim that "the Great Satan" (the U.S.) was trying to destabilize the new regime, and that Iranian moderates were in league with the U.S. The documents were published in a series of books called Documents from the US Espionage Den (Persian: اسناد لانه جاسوسی امریكا‎). These books included telegrams, correspondence, and reports from the U.S. State Department and Central Intelligence Agency.

  A group photograph of the former hostages in the hospital. The 52 hostages are spending a few days in the hospital after their release from Iran prior to their departure for the United States.

By embracing the hostage-taking under the slogan "America can't do a thing," Khomeini rallied support and deflected criticism from his controversial Islamic theocratic constitution,[46] which was due for a referendum vote in less than one month.[47] Following the successful referendum, both leftists and theocrats continued to use the issue of alleged pro-Americanism to suppress their opponents, the relatively moderate political forces, which included the Iranian Freedom Movement, National Front, Grand Ayatollah Shari'atmadari,[48] and later President Abolhassan Banisadr. In particular, carefully selected diplomatic dispatches and reports discovered at the embassy and released by the hostage-takers led to the disempowerment and resignations of moderate figures[49] such as Premier Mehdi Bazargan. The political danger in Iran of any move seen as accommodating America, along with the failed rescue attempt, delayed a negotiated release. After the hostages were released, leftists and theocrats turned on each other, with the stronger theocratic group annihilating the left.

  A man holding a sign during a protest of the crisis in Washington, D.C. in 1979. The sign reads "Deport all Iranians" and "Get the hell out of my country" on its forefront, and "Release all Americans now" on its back.

  444 days hostage

  Hostage conditions

The hostage-takers released 13 women and black people in the middle of November 1979, claiming they were sympathetic to oppressed minorities. One more hostage, a white man named Richard Queen, was released in July 1980 after he became seriously ill with what was later diagnosed as multiple sclerosis. The remaining 52 hostages were held captive until January 1981, a total of 444 days of captivity.

The hostages initially were held in buildings at the embassy, but after the failed rescue mission they were scattered to different locations around Iran to make rescue impossible. Three high level officials—Bruce Laingen, Victor Tomseth and Mike Howland—were at the Foreign ministry at the time of the takeover. They stayed there for some months, sleeping in the ministry's formal dining room and washing their socks and underwear in the bathroom. They were first treated as diplomats but after the provisional government fell relations deteriorated and by March the doors to their living space were kept "chained and padlocked".[50]

By midsummer 1980 the Iranians moved the hostages to prisons in Tehran[51] to prevent either escape or rescue attempts and to improve the logistics of guard shifts and food delivery.[52] The final holding area, from Nov. 1980 until their release, was the Teymour Bakhtiari mansion in Tehran, where the hostages were finally provided tubs, showers and hot and cold running water.[53] Several foreign diplomats and ambassadors—including Canadian ambassador Ken Taylor prior to the Canadian Caper—came to visit the hostages over the course of the crisis, relaying information back to the U.S. government—including the "Laingen dispatches", made by hostage Bruce Laingen—to help the home country stay in contact.

Iranian propaganda stated that the hostages were "guests" treated with respect. Ibrahim Asgharzadeh described the original hostage taking plan as a "nonviolent" and symbolic action where the "gentle and respectful treatment" of the hostages would dramatize to the whole world the offended sovereignty and dignity of Iran.[54] In America, an Iranian chargé d'affaires, Ali Agha, stormed out of meeting with an American official, exclaiming "We are not mistreating the hostages. They are being very well taken care of in Tehran. They are our guests."[55] In Iran one guard told several hostages "We want you to feel that you are our guests," and complained that use of the word "guard" was "too cruel".[56] Visiting Iranian officials asked hostages "What can I do for you? We want to make you more comfortable."[57] and told another surprised hostage that they, the hostages, should be grateful that Iran was protecting them from attempts by the U.S. government to kill them.[58]

The actual treatment of the hostages was far different from that purported in Iranian propaganda: the hostages described beatings,[59] theft,[60] the fear of bodily harm while being paraded blindfold before a large, angry chanting crowd outside the embassy (Bill Belk and Kathryn Koob),[61] having their hands bound "day and night" for days[62] or even weeks,[63] long periods of solitary confinement[64] and months of being forbidden to speak to one another[65] or stand, walk, and leave their space unless they were going to the bathroom.[66] In particular they felt the threat of trial and execution,[67] as all of the hostages "were threatened repeatedly with execution, and took it seriously".[68] The hostage takers played Russian Roulette with their victims.[69]

The most terrifying night for the hostages came on February 5, 1980, when guards in black ski masks rousted the 52 hostages from their sleep and led them blindfolded to other rooms. They were searched after being ordered to strip themselves until they were bare, and to keep their hands up. They were then told to kneel down. 'This was the most terrifying moment' as one hostage said. They were still wearing the blindfolds, so naturally, they were terrified even further. One of the hostages later recalled 'It was an embarrassing moment. However, we were too scared to realize it.' The mock execution ended after the guards cocked their weapons and readied them to fire but finally ejected their rounds and told the prisoners to wear their clothes again. The hostages were later told the exercise was "just a joke" and something the guards "had wanted to do". However, this affected a lot of the hostages long after.[70]

Michael Metrinko was kept in solitary confinement for months. On two occasions when he expressed his opinion of Ayatollah Khomeini and he was punished especially severely in relation to the ordinary mistreatment of the hostages—the first time being kept in handcuffs for 24 hours a day for two weeks,[71] and being beaten and kept alone in a freezing cell for two weeks with a diet of bread and water the second time.[72]

One hostage (Army medic Donald Hohman) went on a hunger strike for several weeks[73] and two are thought to have attempted suicide. Steve Lauterbach became despondent, broke a water glass and slashed his wrists after being locked in a dark basement room of the chancery with his hand tightly bound and aching badly. He was found by guards, rushed to the hospital and patched up.[74] Jerry Miele, an introverted CIA communicator technician, smashed his head into the corner of a door, knocking himself unconscious and cutting a deep gash from which blood poured. "Naturally withdrawn", and looking "ill, old, tired, and vulnerable" Miele had become the butt of his guards' jokes who rigged up a mock electric chair with wires to emphasize the fate that awaited him. After his fellow hostages applied first aid and raised alarm, he was taken to a hospital after a long delay created by the guards.[75]

Different hostages described further Iranian threats to boil their feet in oil (Alan B. Golacinski),[76] cut their eyes out (Rick Kupke),[77] or kidnap and kill a disabled son in America and "start sending pieces of him to your wife". (David Roeder)[78]

Four different hostages attempted to escape[79] all being punished with stretches of solitary confinement when their attempt was discovered.

The hostage released for multiple sclerosis (Richard Queen) first developed symptoms (dizziness and numbness in his arm) six months before his release.[80] It was misdiagnosed by Iranians first as a reaction to draft of cold air, and after warmer confinement didn't help as "it's nothing, it's nothing," the symptoms of which would soon disappear.[81] Over the months the symptoms spread to his right side and worsened until Queen "was literally flat on his back unable to move without growing dizzy and throwing up".[82]

The cruelty of the Iranians became "a form of slow torture".[83] Guards would often withhold mail from home, telling one hostage (Charles W. Scott) "I don't see anything for you, Mr. Scott. Are you sure your wife has not found another man?"[84] and hostages' possessions went missing.[85]

As the hostages were taken to the plane that would fly them out of Tehran, they were led through a gauntlet of students forming parallel lines and shouting "Margbar Amrika", (death to America).[86] When the pilot announced they were out of Iran the "freed hostages went wild with happiness. Shouting, cheering, crying, clapping, falling into one another's arms".[87]

  Impact in America

  A heckler in Washington, D.C. leans across a police line toward a demonstration of Iranians during the Iran hostage crisis, August 1980.

In the United States, the hostage-taking is said to have created "a surge of patriotism" and left "the American people more united than they have been on any issue in two decades".[88] The action was seen "not just as a diplomatic affront", but as a "declaration of war on diplomacy itself".[5] Television news gave daily updates.[89] The respected CBS Evening News anchor, Walter Cronkite, began ending each show in January 1980 by saying how many days the hostages had been captive.[90] President Carter applied economic and diplomatic pressure on Iran: oil imports from Iran were ended on November 12, 1979, and through the issuance of Executive Order 12170, around US$8 billion of Iranian assets in the U.S. were frozen by the Office of Foreign Assets Control on November 14.

During the weeks leading up to Christmas in 1979, high school students created Christmas cards that were delivered to the hostages in Iran.[3] This was then replicated by community groups across the country, resulting in bales of Christmas cards delivered to the hostages. The White House Christmas Tree that year was left dark except for the top star.

A severe backlash against Iranians in the U.S. developed. One Iranian later complained, "I had to hide my Iranian identity not to get beaten up, even at university."[91] Many Iranians in the U.S. were also expelled.[citation needed]

According to author/journalist Mark Bowden, a pattern developed in President Carter's attempts to negotiate a release of the hostages:

Carter would latch on to a deal proffered by a top Iranian official and grant minor but humiliating concessions, only to have it scotched at the last minute by Khomeini.[92]

  Canadian rescue of hostages

On the day the hostages were seized, six American diplomats evaded capture and remained in hiding at the Swiss and Canadian embassies. In 1979, the Canadian Parliament held a secret session for the first time since World War II in order to pass special legislation allowing Canadian passports to be issued to some American citizens so that they could escape. The six American diplomats boarded a flight to Zürich, Switzerland, on January 28, 1980. Their escape and rescue from Iran by Canadian ambassador Ken Taylor has come to be known as the "Canadian Caper".[93]

  Negotiations for release

  Anticipating the takeover of the embassy, the Americans attempted to destroy classified documents with a burn furnace. The furnace malfunctioned and the staff was forced to use cheap paper shredders.[94][95] Skilled carpet weaver women were later employed to reconstruct the documents.[96]

In 1979, boxer Muhammad Ali, a devout Muslim, offered to go to Iran in exchange for a couple of hostages; however, this was denied by the Iranian authorities.

The first attempt to negotiate a release of the hostages involved Hector Villalon and Christian Bourget, representing Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh. They "delivered a formal request to Panama for extradition of the Shah", which was "a pretext to cover secret negotiations to free the American hostages". This happened as the Soviets invaded Iran's neighbor Afghanistan, an event America hoped would "illustrate the threat" of its superpower neighbor and need for better relations with the Soviet's enemy, America. Ghotbzadeh himself was eager to end the hostage taking, as "moderates" were being eliminated from the Iranian government one by one after being exposed by the student hostage takers as "traitors" and "spies" for having met at some time with an American official.[97]

Carter aide Hamilton Jordan flew to Paris "wearing a disguise—a wig, false mustache and glasses" to meet with Ghotbzadeh. After "weeks of negotiation with ... emissaries, ... a complex multi-stepped plan" was "hammered out" that included the establishment of an international commission to study America's role in Iran.[98] Rumours of a release leaked to the American public and on February 19, 1980, the American Vice President Walter Mondale told an interviewer that "the crisis was nearing an end." The plan fell apart however after Ayatollah Khomeini gave a speech praising the embassy occupation as "a crushing blow to the world-devouring USA" and announced the fate of the hostages would be decided by the parliament (Majlis), which had yet to be seated or even elected.[99] When the six-man international UN commission came to Iran they were not allowed to see the hostages,[100] and President Abolhassan Banisadr retreated from his criticism of the hostage takers, praising them as "young patriots".[101]

The next unsuccessful attempt occurred in April and called first for the American president Carter to publicly promise not to "impose additional sanctions" on Iran. In exchange custody of the hostages would be transferred to the government of Iran, which after a short period would release the hostages—the Iranian president and foreign minister both opposing the continued holding of the hostages. To the American's surprise and disappointment, after Carter made his promise, President Bani-Sadr added additional demands: official American approval of resolution of the hostage question by Iran's parliament (which would leave the hostages in Tehran for another month or two), and a promise by Carter to refrain from making "hostile statements". Carter also agreed to these demands, but again Khomeini vetoed the plan. At this point Bani-Sadr announced he was "washing his hands of the hostage mess".[102]

The death of the Shah on July 27 and the invasion of Iran by Iraq in September 1980 may have made Iran more receptive to the idea of resolving the hostage crisis. Ronald Reagan defeated Jimmy Carter in the November 1980 presidential election but Carter continued to attempt to negotiate the release of the hostages through Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher, Algerian intermediaries and members of the Iranian government in the final days of his presidency.

Talks that finally succeeded in bringing a release began secretly in September 1980 and were initiated by Sadegh Tabatabai, a brother-in-law of Khomeini's son Ahmad and "a mid-level official" in the former-provisional revolutionary government. By this time resolution of the crisis was made easier by the fact that two of the hostage takers demands were met—the Shah was dead and "most" of his wealth had been "removed from American banks"—while the threat of war with Iraq made availability of American-made military spare parts for Iran's materiel important. Iranian demands for the release were now four: expression of remorse or an apology for the U.S. historical role in Iran, unlocking of "Iranian assets in America and withdraw any legal claims against Iran arising from the embassy seizure, and promise not to interfere in the future." The demands were listed at the end of a speech by Khomeini considered "a major shift on Iran's side of the impasse" by journalists.[103] Tabatabai, and Ahmad Khomeini secured the support of Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, the speaker of the Majlis.

The talks hammered out an agreement to bring to their higher-ups, with the U.S. agreeing to three demands but not to an apology.[104] Talks were stalled first by Iraq's invasion of Iran, which Iranian officialdom blamed on the United States. Rafsanjani delivered a vote in parliament in favor of releasing the hostages. Then negotiations began over how much money U.S. businesses owed Iran—Iran believing the sum to be $20 to $60 billion and the United States estimating it at "closer to $20 to 60 million".[105]—and how much Iran owed U.S. businesses.[106] Negotiations continued through the American elections (which President Carter lost) with pressure being added by President-Elect Ronald Reagan's talk of not paying "ransom for people who have been kidnapped by barbarians".[105] and a New Years Day threat from Radio Tehran that if the U.S. did not accept Iran's demands the hostages would be tried as spies and executed.[107]

On November 2, the Iranian parliament finally set forth formal conditions for the hostages' release and eight days later Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher arrived in Algiers with the first U.S. reply setting off a slow motion diplomatic shuffle between Washington, Algiers and Tehran.[108] Algeria mediated between the U.S. and Iran. In the final stages of the negotiations in Algiers, the chief Algerian mediator was the Foreign Affairs Minister Mohammed Benyahia who interacted primarily with Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher from the U.S. side.[109] Former Algerian ambassador to the U.S. Abdulkarim Ghuraib also participated in the negotiations.[citation needed] The negotiations resulted in the "Algiers Accords"[110] of January 19, 1981. The Algiers Accords called for Iran's immediate freeing of the hostages, the unfreezing of $7.9 billion of Iranian assets and immunity from lawsuits Iran might have faced in America, and a pledge by the United States that "it is and from now on will be the policy of the United States not to intervene, directly or indirectly, politically or militarily, in Iran's internal affairs." The Accords also created the Iran – United States Claims Tribunal (http://www.iusct.org/), and Iran deposited 1 billion dollars in an escrow account to satisfy claims adjudicated by the Tribunal in favor of American businesses that had lost assets after the hostage takeover. The Tribunal closed to new claims by private individuals on January 19, 1982. In total, it received approximately 4,700 private U.S. claims. The Tribunal has ordered payments by Iran to U.S. nationals totaling over USD 2.5 billion. Almost all private claims have now been resolved; but several intergovernmental claims are still before the Tribunal.

The hostages were released on the day President Carter's term ended. While Carter had an "obsession" with finishing the matter before stepping down, the hostage-takers are thought to have wanted the release delayed as punishment for his perceived support for the Shah.[111] Iranians insisted on payment in gold rather than U.S. dollars so the U.S. government transferred 50 tonnes of gold to Iran while simultaneously taking ownership of an equivalent quantity of Iranian gold that had been frozen at the New York Federal Reserve Bank.[112]

  Rescue attempts

After rejecting Iranian demands, Carter approved an ill-fated secret rescue mission, Operation Eagle Claw. Late in the afternoon of April 24, 1980, eight RH-53D helicopters flew from the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz to a remote road serving as an airstrip in the Great Salt Desert of Eastern Iran, near Tabas. Early the next morning six of the eight RH-53D helicopters met up with several waiting C-130 transport and refueling airplanes at the landing site and refueling area, designated "Desert One" by the mission.

Of the two helicopters that did not make it to Desert One. One suffered avionics failures en route and returned to the USS Nimitz, and the other had an indication that one of its main rotor blades was fractured, and was abandoned in the desert en route to Desert One. Its crew was seen and retrieved by another helicopter that continued to Desert One. The helicopters maintained strict radio silence under orders for the entire flight, an issue that impacted their ability to maintain a cohesive flying unit while en route, as they all arrived separately and behind schedule. The strict radio silence also prevented them from requesting permission to fly above the sandstorm as the C-130s had done, and they flew the entire route at hazardous low levels, even while inside the sandstorm and with limited field of vision and erratic instrumentation.

The mission plan called for a minimum of six helicopters but of the six that made it to Desert One, one had a failed primary hydraulics system and had flown on the secondary hydraulics system for the previous four hours.

The failing helicopter's crew wanted to continue, but due to the increased risk of not having a backup hydraulic system during flight, the helicopter squadron's commander decided to ground the helicopter. The commander of the operation, Col. Beckwith, then recommended the mission be aborted and his recommendation was approved by President Carter. As the helicopters repositioned themselves for refueling, one helicopter ran into a C-130 tanker aircraft and crashed, killing eight U.S. servicemen and injuring several more.

After the mission and its failure were made known publicly, Khomeini's prestige skyrocketed in Iran as he credited divine intervention on behalf of Islam for the result.[113] Iranian officials who favored release of the hostages, such as President Bani Sadr, were weakened. In America, President Carter's political popularity and prospects for being reelected in 1980 were further damaged after a television address on April 25, in which he explained the rescue operation and accepted responsibility for its failure.

A second rescue attempt that was planned but never attempted used highly modified YMC-130H Hercules aircraft. Outfitted with rocket thrusters fore and aft to allow an extremely short landing and takeoff in the Shahid Shiroudi soccer stadium located close to the embassy, three aircraft were modified under a rushed super-secret program known as Operation Credible Sport. One aircraft crashed during a demonstration at Duke Field at Eglin Air Force Base Auxiliary Field 3 on October 29, 1980, when its landing braking rockets were fired too soon. The misfire caused a hard touchdown that tore off the starboard wing and started a fire; all on board survived. The impending change in the White House following the November election led to an abandonment of this project. The two surviving airframes were returned to regular duty with the rocket packages removed. One is on display at the Museum of Aviation located next to Robins Air Force Base in Georgia.

The aforementioned failed rescue attempt led to the creation of the 160th S.O.A.R., a helicopter aviation special forces group in the United States Army and the United States Special Operations Command.

  Release

  At the end of the Iran hostage crisis, Vice President George H. W. Bush and other VIPs wait to welcome hostages home
  The hostages disembark Freedom One, an Air Force VC-137 Stratoliner aircraft, upon their arrival at the base.

Relatively little happened during the summer, as Iranian internal politics took its course. In early July, the Iranians released hostage Richard Queen, who had developed multiple sclerosis. In the States, constant media coverage—yellow ribbons, footage of chanting Iranian mobs, even a whole new television news program, ABC's Nightline—provided a dispiriting backdrop to the presidential election season. As Carter advisor and biographer Peter Bourne put it, "Because people felt that Carter had not been tough enough in foreign policy, this kind of symbolized for them that some bunch of students could seize American diplomatic officials and hold them prisoner and thumb their nose at the United States." Finally, in September, Khomeini's government decided it was time to end the matter. There was little more advantage to be gained from further anti-American, anti-Shah propaganda, and the ongoing sanctions were making it harder to straighten out an already chaotic economy. Despite rumors that Carter might pull out an "October Surprise" and get the hostages home before the election, negotiations dragged on for months, even after Republican Ronald Reagan's landslide victory in November.[114]

After months of negotiations the United States had agreed to release several billion dollars in Iranian gold and bank assets, frozen in American banks just after the seizure of the embassy. The government of Iran, now involved in a war with neighboring Iraq, was desperate for money and therefore seemed willing to release the hostages. The Iranians refused to communicate directly with the president, or any other American, so Algeria had agreed to act as an intermediary. This arrangement slowed down the negotiating process. As Carter recalled, "The Iranians, who spoke Persian, would talk only with the Algerians, who spoke French. Any question or proposal of mine had to be translated twice as it went from Washington to Algiers to Tehran, and then the answers and counter-proposals had to come back to me over the same slow route." Much of the money involved was being held in overseas branches of twelve American banks, so Carter, his cabinet, and staff were constantly on the phone to London, Istanbul, Bonn, and other world capitals to work out the financial details.

A series of small crises slowed down the process. Lloyd Cutler, one of the White House attorneys, told the president there was a delay in the transfer of assets; the Federal Reserve Bank of New York did not have its part of the money, so funds were shifted among the reserve banks. Another difficulty concerned the time difference between Washington and Tehran. Because of the war with Iraq, the Iranian officials had blackouts of airport lights. This meant that once it got dark in Iran (about 9:30 a.m. Washington time), even if the deal had been sealed, the Algerian pilots would not take off until dawn. Thus, if the departure time passed, everyone understood that it would be another eight to ten hours before anything could happen. That morning, word came to Carter that the planes were on the runway in Tehran, and the hostages had been taken to the vicinity of the airport. At 4:44 a.m. Carter went to the press briefing room to announce that with the help of Algeria the United States and Iran had reached an agreement, but was halted because the Algerian negotiator sent word that the Iranian bank officials did not agree with the terms of accountability in the banking agreements, so the planes were returned to their standby position. The staff soon understood that Carter's trip to Germany to greet hostages would not occur until after the inauguration.

At 6:35 a.m., Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher informed Carter that, "All escrows were signed at 6:18. The Bank of England has certified that they hold $7.977 billion, the correct amount." At 8:04 a.m., Algeria confirmed that the bank certification was complete, and the Algerians were notifying Iran. At 9:45 a.m., Christopher told Carter take-off would be by noon, but, as a security measure, the Iranian officials did not want the word released until the hostages were out of Iranian airspace. President Carter said the United States would comply.[115]

On January 20, 1981, at the moment Reagan completed his 20-minute inaugural address after being sworn in as President, the 52 American hostages were released by Iran into U.S. custody, having spent 444 days in captivity.[116][117] The hostages were flown to Algeria as a symbolic gesture for the help of that government in resolving the crisis. The flight continued to Rhein-Main Air Base in West Germany and on to Wiesbaden USAF Hospital, where former President Carter, acting as emissary, received them. After medical check-ups and debriefings, they took a second flight to Stewart Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, New York, with a refueling stop in Shannon, Ireland, where they were greeted by a large crowd. From Newburgh they traveled by bus to the United States Military Academy, and stayed at the Thayer Hotel at West Point for three days receiving a heroes' welcome all along the route. Ten days after their release, the former hostages were given a ticker tape parade through the Canyon of Heroes in New York City.

  Aftermath

  Iran–Iraq War

The Iraq invasion of Iran occurred less than a year after the embassy employees were taken hostage. At least one observer (Stephen Kinzer) believes the dramatic change of U.S.–Iranian relations from ally to enemy played a part in emboldening Saddam Hussein to invade, and U.S. anger with Iran led the U.S. to aid Iraq after the war turned against Iraq. The U.S. supplied Iraq with, among other things, "helicopters and satellite intelligence that was used in selecting bombing targets".[118]

In turn, this aid and the shooting down of Iran Air Flight 655 in the Persian Gulf by the U.S. Navy Cruiser USS Vincennes in 1988 "deepened and widened anti-American feeling in Iran".[119]

  Iran

  After the Iranian hostage crisis (1979–1981), the walls of the former U.S. embassy in Tehran were covered in mostly anti-U.S. murals.
20101227 USA embassy graffiti Tehran Iran.jpg
 

The hostage taking was unsuccessful for the Islamic Republic in some respects. Iran lost international support for its war against Iraq, and the settlement was considered almost wholly favorable to the United States since it did not meet any of Iran's original demands.[120] But the crisis strengthened Iranians who supported the hostage taking. Anti-Americanism became even more intense, and anti-American rhetoric continued unabated.[121] Politicians such as Mohammad Mousavi Khoeiniha and Behzad Nabavi[122] were left in a stronger position, while those associated or accused of association with America were removed from the political picture. Khomeini biographer Baqer Moin describes the incident as "a watershed in Khomeini's life" transforming him from a "cautious, pragmatic politician" into "a modern revolutionary, single-mindedly pursing a dogma". In his statements, "imperialism, liberalism, democracy" were "negative words", while "revolution ... became a sacred word, sometimes more important than Islam."[123]

Some have suggested that the greatest benefit of the takeover of the American embassy was the acquisition of intelligence information contained within the embassy, including the identity of informants to the U.S. government, which the new Islamic republic could use to remove potential dissenters and consolidate its gains and stabilize its place.

Iranian government commemorates the event every year by demonstration at the embassy and burning U.S. flag but on November 4, 2009, when pro-democracy protesters and reformists demonstrated in the streets of Tehran, despite Iranian government authorities encouraging people to chant "Death to America," protesters instead chanted "Death to the Dictator" (referring to Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei) and other anti-government slogans.[124]

On 29 November 2011 groups of militants pretending to be students stormed the British embassy in Tehran in a scene reminiscent of this storming of the American embassy.[125]

  United States

In the United States, gifts were showered upon the hostages upon their return, including lifetime passes to any minor league or Major League Baseball game.[126]

In 2000, the hostages and their families tried to sue Iran, unsuccessfully, under the Antiterrorism Act. They originally won the case when Iran failed to provide a defense, but the U.S. State Department tried to put an end to the suit, fearing that it would make international relations difficult. As a result, a federal judge ruled that nothing could be done to repay the damages the hostages faced because of the agreement the U.S. made when the hostages were freed.[citation needed]

The U.S. embassy building is used by Iran's government and its affiliated groups. Since 2001, the building serves as a museum to the revolution. Outside the door stand a bronze model based on New York's Statue of Liberty on one side and a statue portraying one of the hostages on the other.[127]

The Guardian reported in 2006 that a group called The Committee for the Commemoration of Martyrs of the Global Islamic Campaign used the U.S. embassy to recruit "martyrdom seekers", volunteers to carry out operations against Western and Jewish targets. Mohammad Samadi, a spokesman for the group, signed up several hundred volunteers in a few days.[128]

  Hostages

November 4, 1979 – January 20, 1981: 66 original captives, 63 taken at the embassy, three captured and held at Foreign Ministry Office.

Three of the hostages were operatives of the CIA.[27]

Thirteen hostages were released November 19–20, 1979, and one was released on July 11, 1980. Fifty-two remaining hostages endured 444 days of captivity until their release January 20, 1981.

  Six diplomats who evaded capture

  • Robert Anders, 34—Consular Officer
  • Mark J. Lijek, 29—Consular Officer
  • Cora A. Lijek, 25—Consular Assistant
  • Henry L. Schatz, 31—Agriculture Attaché
  • Joseph D. Stafford, 29—Consular Officer
  • Kathleen F. Stafford, 28—Consular Assistant

  13 hostages released

From November 19–20, 1979, thirteen women and men who had been captured and held hostage were released:

  • Kathy Gross, 22—Secretary
  • Sgt. James Hughes, 30—USAF Administrative Manager
  • Lillian Johnson, 32—Secretary
  • Sgt. Ladell Maples, 23—USMC Embassy Guard
  • Elizabeth Montagne, 42—Secretary
  • Sgt. William Quarles, 23—USMC Embassy Guard
  • Lloyd Rollins, 40—Administrative Officer
  • Capt. Neal (Terry) Robinson—USAF Military Intelligence Officer
  • Sgt. David Walker, 25—USMC Embassy guard
  • Joan Walsh, 33—Secretary
  • Cpl. Wesley Williams, 24—USMC Embassy Guard

  Richard I. Queen released

On July 11. 1980, 28-year-old Vice Consul Richard I. Queen, who had been captured and held hostage, was released after becoming seriously ill. He was later diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. (Died August 14, 2002.)

  52 remaining hostages released

The following fifty-two remaining hostages were held captive until January 20, 1981.

  • Thomas L. Ahern, Jr.,—Narcotics Control Officer (later identified as CIA station chief)[129][130]
  • Clair Cortland Barnes, 35—Communications Specialist
  • William E. Belk, 44—Communications and Records Officer
  • Robert O. Blucker, 54—Economics Officer Specializing in Oil (Died 4/3/2003)
  • Donald J. Cooke, 25—Vice Consul
  • William J. Daugherty, 33—3rd Secretary of U.S. Mission (CIA officer [131])
  • Lt. Cmdr. Robert Englemann, 34—USN Attaché
  • Sgt. William Gallegos, 22—USMC Guard
  • Bruce W. German, 44—Budget Officer
  • Duane L. Gillette, 24—USN Communications and Intelligence Specialist
  • Alan B. Golacinski, 30—Chief of Embassy Security, Regional Security Officer
  • John E. Graves, 53—Public Affairs Officer (Died 4/27/2001)
  • Joseph M. Hall, 32—CWO Military Attaché
  • Sgt. Kevin J. Hermening, 21—USMC Guard
  • Sgt. 1st Class Donald R. Hohman, 38—U.S. Army Medic
  • Col. Leland J. Holland, 53—Military Attaché (Died 10/2/1990)
  • Michael Howland, 34—Assistant Regional Security Officer, held at Iranian Foreign Ministry Office
  • Charles A. Jones, Jr., 40—Communications Specialist, Teletype Operator. (The only African American hostage not released in November 1979)
  • Malcolm Kalp, 42—Commercial Officer (Died 4/7/2002)
  • Moorhead C. Kennedy Jr., 50—Economic and Commercial Officer
  • William F. Keough, Jr., 50—Superintendent of American School in Islamabad, Pakistan, visiting Tehran at time of embassy seizure (Died 11/27/1985)
  • Cpl. Steven W. Kirtley—USMC Guard
  • Kathryn L. Koob, 42—Embassy Cultural Officer; one of two female hostages
  • Frederick Lee Kupke, 34—Communications Officer and Electronics Specialist
  • L. Bruce Laingen, 58—Chargé d'Affaires, held at Iranian Foreign Ministry Office
  • Steven Lauterbach, 29—Administrative Officer
  • Gary E. Lee, 37—Administrative Officer (Died 10/10/2010)
  • Sgt. Paul Edward Lewis, 23—USMC Guard
  • John W. Limbert, Jr., 37—Political Officer
  • Sgt. James M. Lopez, 22—USMC Guard
  • Sgt. John D. McKeel, Jr., 27—USMC Guard (Died 11/1/1991)
  • Michael J. Metrinko, 34—Political Officer
  • Jerry J. Miele, 42—Communications Officer
  • Staff Sgt. Michael E. Moeller, 31—Head of USMC Guard Unit at Embassy
  • Bert C. Moore, 45—Counselor for Administration (Died 6/8/2000)
  • Richard Morefield, 51—U.S. Consul General in Tehran (Died 10/11/2010)
  • Capt. Paul M. Needham, Jr., 30—USAF Logistics Staff Officer
  • Robert C. Ode, 65—Retired Foreign Service Officer on Temporary Duty in Tehran (Died 9/8/1995)
  • Sgt. Gregory A. Persinger, 23—USMC Guard
  • Jerry Plotkin, 45—civilian businessman visiting Tehran (Died 6/6/1996)
  • MSgt. Regis Ragan, 38—U.S. Army soldier, Defense Attaché's Office
  • Lt. Col. David M. Roeder, 41—Deputy USAF Attaché
  • Barry M. Rosen, 36—Press Attaché
  • William B. Royer, Jr., 49—Assistant Director of Iran–American Society
  • Col. Thomas E. Schaefer, 50—USAF Attaché
  • Col. Charles W. Scott, 48—U.S. Army Attaché
  • Cmdr. Donald A. Sharer, 40—USN Attaché
  • Sgt. Rodney V. (Rocky) Sickmann, 22—USMC Guard
  • Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic, Jr., 23—Military Police, U.S. Army, Defense Attaché's Staff
  • Elizabeth Ann Swift, 40—Deputy Head of the Political Section; 1 of 2 female hostages (Died 5/7/2004)
  • Victor L. Tomseth, 39—Counselor for Political Affairs, held at Iranian Foreign Ministry Office
  • Phillip R. Ward, 40—Communications officer CIA, Assigned to Brandy Station, Va.

  Hostages awarded

For their service during the hostage crisis, the U.S. military later awarded the 20 servicemen who were among the hostages the Defense Meritorious Service Medal. The only hostage serviceman not to be issued the medal was Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic, Jr. The reason given was that Subic "did not behave under stress the way noncommissioned officers are expected to act",[132] i.e. he cooperated with the hostage-takers, according to other hostages.[133]

For their part in the mission, the Humanitarian Service Medal was awarded to the servicemen of Joint Task Force (JTF) 1-79 (the planning authority for Operation Rice Bowl/Eagle Claw) who participated in the rescue attempt.

Also, the USAF special ops component of the mission was awarded the AF Outstanding Unit award for that year for performing their part of the mission flawlessly, to include accomplishing the evacuation of the entire Desert One site after the accident and under extreme conditions.

Several of the State Department employees, including Donald J. Cooke, L. Bruce Laingen, John W. Limbert Jr., Alan B. Golacinski, and Barry M. Rosen, were awarded the Award for Valor for their courage during captivity.[134]

  Civilian hostages

A small number of hostages were not connected to the diplomatic staff. All had been released by late 1981.

  Notable hostage takers, guards, interrogators

  See also

  Notes

  1. ^ Iran–U.S. Hostage Crisis (1979–1981)
  2. ^ State of the Union Address by President Carter, January 23, 1980
  3. ^ a b The Long Ordeal of the Hostages By HP-Time.com;John Skow, January 26, 1981
  4. ^ Mackey, Sandra (1998). The Iranians: Persia, Islam and the Soul of a Nation. Plume. ISBN 0-452-27563-6. 
  5. ^ a b "Doing Satan's Work in Iran", The New York Times, November 6, 1979
  6. ^ Inside Iran's Fury, Stephen Kinzer, Smithsonian magazine, October 2008
  7. ^ Reagan's Lucky Day: Iranian Hostage Crisis Helped The Great Communicator To Victory, CBS News, January 21, 2001
  8. ^ Mackey, Sandra, The Iranians: Persia, Islam and the Soul of a Nation, New York: Dutton, c. 1996 (p. 298)
  9. ^ History Of US Sanctions Against Iran Middle East Economic Survey, 26-August-2002
  10. ^ Abrahamian, Iran Between Two Revolutions, (1982), p. 164
  11. ^ "Country name calling: the case of Iran vs. Persia.". http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-6583215/Country-name-calling-the-case.html.  retrieved 04 May 2008
  12. ^ O'Reilly, Kevin (2007). Decision Making in US History. The Cold War & the 1950s. Social Studies. pp. 108. ISBN 1-56004-293-1. 
  13. ^ Mohammed Amjad. Iran: From Royal Dictatorship to Theocracy. Greenwood Press, 1989. p. 62 "the United States had decided to save the 'free world' by overthrowing the democratically elected government of Mossadegh."
  14. ^ Iran by Andrew Burke, Mark Elliott, p. 37
  15. ^ The Lessons of History: "All The Shah's Men"
  16. ^ "Iran's century of upheaval". BBC. February 2, 2000. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/618649.stm. Retrieved 2007-01-05. 
  17. ^ "1979: Shah of Iran flees into exile". BBC. January 16, 1979. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/january/16/newsid_2530000/2530475.stm. Retrieved 2007-01-05. 
  18. ^ "January 16 Almanac". CNN. http://www.cnn.com/almanac/9801/16/. Retrieved 2007-01-05poop. 
  19. ^ Bowden, Mark, Guests of the Ayatollah: the first battle in America's war with militant Islam, Atlantic Monthly Press, (2006), p. 7
  20. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006), p. 19
  21. ^ Daugherty Jimmy Carter and the 1979 Decision to Admit the Shah into the United States
  22. ^ David Farber
  23. ^ Rooz: Weak Understanding is Cause of Bad Iran Policies
  24. ^ a b Democracy Now, March 3, 2008, Stephen Kinzer on US–Iranian Relations, the 1953 CIA Coup in Iran and the Roots of Middle East Terror
  25. ^ Moin Khomeini, (2000), p. 220
  26. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006) p. 10
  27. ^ a b "Journal of Homeland Security review of Mark Bowden's "Guests of the Ayatollah"". http://www.homelandsecurity.org/newjournal/BookReviews/displayBookReview2.asp?review=63. Retrieved 2007-02-25. "routine, prudent espionage conducted at diplomatic missions everywhere" 
  28. ^ Among the Hostage-Takers
  29. ^ Molavi, Afshin, The Soul of Iran, Norton, (2005), p. 335
  30. ^ Video of Massoumeh Ebtekar Speaking about Hostage Crisis (in English)
  31. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006) pp. 8, 13
  32. ^ Scott Macleod (November 15, 1999). "Radicals Reborn". Time. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,992548,00.html. Retrieved April 26, 2012. 
  33. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006), p. 12
  34. ^ Radicals Reborn Iran's student heroes have had a rough and surprising passage
  35. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006), pp. 40, 77
  36. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006), pp. 127–8
  37. ^ a b Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006)
  38. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006) p. 93
  39. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006) p. 50, 132–4
  40. ^ Jimmy Carter Library
  41. ^ Moin, Khomeini (2001), p. 226
  42. ^ Moin, Khomeini, (2000), p. 221; "America Can't do a Thing" by Amir Taheri New York Post, November 2, 2004
  43. ^ Moin, Khomeini, (2000), p. 228
  44. ^ Abrahamian, Ervand (1989), The Iranian Mojahedin (1989), p. 196
  45. ^ Iran, 1977–1980/Document
  46. ^ Arjomand, Said Amir, Turban for the Crown: The Islamic Revolution in Iran by Said Amir Arjomand, Oxford University Press, 1988 p. 139
  47. ^ Moin, Khomeini (2000), p. 227
  48. ^ Moin, Khomeini (2000), pp. 229, 231; Bakhash, Reign of the Ayatollahs, (1984), pp. 115–6
  49. ^ Bakhash, Reign of the Ayatollahs, (1984), p. 115
  50. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 151, 219, 372
  51. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 528
  52. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 514–5
  53. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 565
  54. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 128
  55. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 403
  56. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 398
  57. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 490
  58. ^ Khamenei talking to Scott in Bowden, 2006, p. 528
  59. ^ (Rick Kupke in Bowden, 2006, p. 81, Charles Jones, Colonel Dave Roeder, Metrinko, Tom Ahern (in Bowden, 2006, p. 295)
  60. ^ Hall in Bowden, 2006, p. 257, Limbert in Bowden, 2006, p. 585
  61. ^ in Bowden, 2006, p. 267
  62. ^ Bill Belk in Bowden, 2006, pp. 65, 144, Malcolm Kalp in Bowden, 2006, pp. 507–511
  63. ^ Queen, in Bowden, 2006, p. 258, Metrinko, in Bowden, (2006), p. 284
  64. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 307, 344, 405, 540
  65. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 149, 351–2
  66. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 161
  67. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 597
  68. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 203
  69. ^ "Russian roulette played with hostages". Edmonton Journal. Associated Press (New York): p. A3. 21 January 1981. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=hfhkAAAAIBAJ&pg=6225,19155. 
  70. ^ Bowden, (2006), pp. 346–350
  71. ^ Bowden, (2006), p. 284
  72. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 544
  73. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 335
  74. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 345
  75. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 516–7
  76. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 158
  77. ^ Bowden, 2006, pp. 81–3
  78. ^ Air Force Lieutenant Colonel David Roeder in Bowden, 2006, p. 318
  79. ^ Malcolm Kalp in Bowden, 2006, pp. 507–11, Joe Subic, Kevin Hemening, and Steve Lauterbach, in Bowden, 2006, p. 344
  80. ^ December 1979
  81. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 258
  82. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 520
  83. ^ Bowden, (2006), p. 397
  84. ^ Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah, (2006), p. 354
  85. ^ Hall's apartment ransacked in Bowden, 2006, p. 257, Roeder in Bowden, 2006, p. 570
  86. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 584
  87. ^ Bowden, 2006, p. 587
  88. ^ "Man Of The Year: The Mystic Who Lit The Fires of Hatred". Time. January 7, 1980. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,923854,00.html. Retrieved April 26, 2012. 
  89. ^ The ABC late-night program America Held Hostage, anchored by Ted Koppel, later became a stalwart news magazine under the title Nightline.
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CNN—Former hostages allege Iran's new president was captor

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