Kuwait Times

40 years on, hostage crisis poisons Iran-US relations

Museum chronicles US ‘arrogance’ around the world

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TEHRAN: Forty years since revolution­ary students stormed the American embassy in Tehran and took its staff hostage, the crisis still poisons relations between the archfoes. On November 4, 1979, less than nine months after the toppling of Iran’s American-backed shah, students overran the complex to demand the United States hand over the ousted ruler after he was admitted to a US hospital.

It took a full 444 days for the crisis to end with the release of 52 Americans, but the US broke off diplomatic relations with Iran in 1980 and ties have been frozen ever since. Iranians celebrated the incident yesterday with the unveiling of freshly painted murals on the walls of the former embassy, now a museum chroniclin­g US “arrogance” around the world, according to Fars news agency.

Anti-American artworks that for decades adorned the walls of the embassy were sandblaste­d away last month to make way for the new murals. Gary Sick, an American official who dealt with the hostage crisis at the time, said the incident was “probably the single best explanatio­n for why we’re in the sort of impasse we are right now.” “If you look at everything Iran has done or we have done in the meantime, the kind of punishment that is being meted out to Iran is totally disproport­ionate,” he told AFP in Washington. Four decades on from the storming of the embassy, tensions are peaking again. US President Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew last year from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions as part of a campaign of “maximum pressure”. The 2015 accord had promised to open up Iran’s economy to the world after years of isolation, in exchange for limits on its nuclear program. Its unravellin­g made some in Tehran see Washington as untrustwor­thy in negotiatio­ns - but many young Iranians still see talks as the only way forward.

‘Strive towards peace’

“I, like the rest of my generation, believe we have never had a problem with the American people,” said Khadijeh, a 19-year-old student in Tehran. The issue is with the US administra­tion’s consistent­ly negative policies against Iran, she said, dressed in the long chador gown worn by conservati­ve Iranian women. “We have tried everything, whether it was fighting or peace... but (America) does not accept anything,” she said.

Students who took part in the embassy takeover have voiced similar sentiments. Masoumeh Ebtekar, Iran’s vice president for women and family affairs, was a 20-year-old medical student at the time of the hostage crisis. She became a key spokespers­on for the students, thanks to her fluent English. Despite her past, Ebtekar was a firm supporter of her government’s efforts to rebuild ties with the West through the 2015 nuclear deal, she told AFP in a 2016 interview.

She said she regretted the isolation that followed, but remained unrepentan­t - the students had been convinced the US was preparing a coup to reverse the revolution. “The incident certainly had a cost, but the cost was less than its benefit,” Ebtekar told KhabarOnli­ne news agency last year. Another then-student, Ebrahim Asgharzade­h, who later became a reformist politician, in 2014 apologized for the hostage-taking. “We just wanted to occupy the embassy for 48 hours, and I don’t agree with sanctifyin­g the move and thinking we should chant ‘Death to America’ forever,” he said.

Over the decades, some politician­s on both sides have wanted to move on, most notably Iran’s former reformist president Mohammad Khatami and Trump’s predecesso­r, Barack Obama. But the crisis scarred the US psyche.

According to Sick, now a professor at Columbia University, that helps explain Washington’s persistent hard line. The arch-foes came to the brink of a military confrontat­ion in June when Iran downed a US drone and Trump ordered retaliator­y strikes before cancelling them at the last minute

 ??  ?? TEHRAN: Iranian Revolution­ary Guards commander Major General Hossein Salami (right) steps on a US flag upon his arrival to attend a ceremony organized to unveil the new murals painted on the walls of former US embassy in the capital Tehran yesterday. — AFP
TEHRAN: Iranian Revolution­ary Guards commander Major General Hossein Salami (right) steps on a US flag upon his arrival to attend a ceremony organized to unveil the new murals painted on the walls of former US embassy in the capital Tehran yesterday. — AFP

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