Iran Hostage Crisis
On November 4, 1979, a group of
Iranian students stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, taking more than 60
American hostages. The immediate cause of this action was President Jimmy
Carter’s decision to allow Iran’s deposed Shah, a pro-Western autocrat who had
been expelled from his country some months before, to come to the United States
for cancer treatment. However, the hostage-taking was about more than the
Shah’s medical care: it was a dramatic way for the student revolutionaries to
declare a break with Iran’s past and an end to American interference in its
affairs. It was also a way to raise the intra- and international profile of the
revolution’s leader, the anti-American cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The
students set their hostages free on January 21, 1981, 444 days after the crisis
began and just hours after President Ronald Reagan delivered his inaugural
address. Many historians believe that hostage crisis cost Jimmy Carter a second
term as president.
The Iran Hostage Crisis: The
Shah and the C.I.A.
The Iran hostage crisis had its
origins in a series of events that took place nearly a half-century before it
began. The source of tension between Iran and the U.S. stemmed from an
increasingly intense conflict over oil. British and American corporations had
controlled the bulk of Iran’s petroleum reserves almost since their discovery–a
profitable arrangement that they had no desire to change. However, in 1951
Iran’s newly elected prime minister, a European-educated nationalist named
Muhammad Mossadegh, announced a plan to nationalize the country’s oil industry.
In response to these policies, the American C.I.A. and the British intelligence
service devised a secret plan to overthrow Mossadegh and replace him with a
leader who would be more receptive to Western interests.
Did you know? The
television series Nightline began as a nightly news report on the hostage
crisis (its original title was The Iran Crisis--America Held Hostage). ABC News
president Roone Arledge hoped that it would draw viewers away from the NBC
juggernaut The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.
Through this coup, code-named
Operation TP-Ajax, Mossadegh was deposed and a new government was installed in
August 1953. The new leader was a member of Iran’s royal family named Mohammed
Reza Shah Pahlavi. The Shah’s government was secular, anti-communist and
pro-Western. In exchange for tens of millions of dollars in foreign aid, he
returned 80 percent of Iran’s oil reserves to the Americans and the British. For
the C.I.A. and oil interests, the 1953 coup was a success. In fact, it served
as a model for other covert operations during the Cold War, such as the 1954
government takeover in Guatemala and the failed intervention in Cuba in 1961.
However, many Iranians bitterly resented what they saw as American intervention
in their affairs. The Shah turned out to be a brutal, arbitrary dictator whose
secret police (known as the SAVAK) tortured and murdered thousands of people.
Meanwhile, the Iranian government spent billions of dollars on American-made
weapons while the Iranian economy suffered.
The Iran Hostage Crisis
By the 1970s, many Iranians were
fed up with the Shah’s government. In protest, they turned to the Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, a radical cleric whose revolutionary Islamist movement
seemed to promise a break from the past and a turn toward greater autonomy for
the Iranian people. In July 1979, the revolutionaries forced the Shah to
disband his government and flee to Egypt. The Ayatollah installed a militant
Islamist government in its place. The United States, fearful of stirring up
hostilities in the Middle East, did not come to the defense of its old ally.
(For one thing, President Carter, aware of the Shah’s terrible record in that
department, was reluctant to defend him.) However, in October 1979 President
Carter agreed to allow the exiled leader to enter the U.S. for treatment of an
advanced malignant lymphoma. His decision was humanitarian, not political;
nevertheless, as one American later noted, it was like throwing “a burning
branch into a bucket of kerosene.” Anti-American sentiment in Iran exploded.
On November 4, just after the
Shah arrived in New York, a group of pro-Ayatollah students smashed the gates
and scaled the walls of the American embassy in Tehran. Once inside, they
seized 66 hostages, mostly diplomats and embassy employees. After a short
period of time, 13 of these hostages were released. (For the most part, these
13 were women, African-Americans and citizens of countries other than the U.S.–people
who, Khomeini argued, were already subject to “the oppression of American
society.”) Some time later, a 14th hostage developed health problems and was
likewise sent home. By midsummer 1980, 52 hostages remained in the embassy
compound. Diplomatic maneuvers had no discernible effect on the Ayatollah’s
anti-American stance; neither did economic sanctions such as the seizure of
Iranian assets in the United States. Meanwhile, while the hostages were never
seriously injured, they were subjected to a rich variety of demeaning and
terrifying treatment. They were blindfolded and paraded in front of TV cameras
and jeering crowds. They were not allowed to speak or read, and they were
rarely permitted to change clothes. Throughout the crisis there was a frightening
uncertainty about their fate: The hostages never knew whether they were going
to be tortured, murdered or set free.
The Iran Hostage Crisis:
Operation Eagle Claw
President Carter’s efforts to
bring an end to the hostage crisis soon became one of his foremost priorities.
In April 1980, frustrated with the slow pace of diplomacy (and over the
objections of several of his advisers), Carter decided to launch a risky
military rescue mission known as Operation Eagle Claw. The operation was
supposed to send an elite rescue team into the embassy compound. However, a
severe desert sandstorm on the day of the mission caused several helicopters to
malfunction, including one that veered into a large transport plane during
takeoff. Eight American servicemen were killed in the accident, and Operation
Eagle Claw was aborted.
The Iran Hostage Crisis: The
1980 Election
The constant media coverage of
the hostage crisis in the U.S. served as a demoralizing backdrop for the 1980
presidential race. President Carter’s inability to resolve the problem made him
look like a weak and ineffectual leader. At the same time, his intense focus on
bringing the hostages home kept him away from the campaign trail. The
Republican candidate, former California governor Ronald Reagan, took advantage
of Carter’s difficulties. Rumors even circulated that Reagan’s campaign staff
negotiated with the Iranians to be sure that the hostages would not be released
before the election, an event that would surely have given Carter a crucial
boost. (Reagan himself always denied these allegations.) On Election Day, one
year and two days after the hostage crisis began, Reagan defeated Carter in a
landslide. On January 21, 1981, just a few hours after Ronald Reagan delivered
his inaugural address, the remaining hostages were released. They had been in
captivity for 444 days.
https://www.history.com/topics/middle-east/iran-hostage-crisis
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