Arab Times

‘Airport scenes in ‘Argo’ realistic’

State Dept excited by movie’s Oscar win

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GENEVA, Feb 26, (Agencies): A former Swissair official said the airport scenes in Oscar-winning film “Argo” were a realistic depiction of the airline’s unwitting role in the rescue of American diplomats from Tehran during the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Heinz Koch, who was in charge of the now defunct air carrier’s operations in Tehran at the time, said Swissair was not told about the true identities of the “very important Canadian passengers” until months after it carried the six US diplomats to safety aboard one of its airplanes.

“I was informed by the Canadian embassy that they have on this particular day very important Canadian passengers on board and we should make sure that they were not off-loaded last minute. But this was purely a reservatio­n question, we had no direct impact on immigratio­n,” he told World Radio Switzerlan­d.

“It was a few months later when we got the first informatio­n that probably these U.S. diplomats were on board this particular Swissair flight. But we made sure that this informatio­n didn’t pass around the world,” Koch said.

Operate

“We still wanted to operate to and from Tehran and it would have been a big risk if the authoritie­s would have known that we were involved in this operation,” he added.

“Argo” stormed to Best Picture victory at the Oscars in Los Angeles. The honours for the Iran hostage drama marked a triumphant comeback into Hollywood’s mainstream for director Ben Affleck.

The thriller, based on a true story, recounts a CIA mission to rescue six American diplomats from Iran under the cover of making a fake Hollywood film. The six escape using falsified Canadian passports and the CIA role only emerged years later.

Iran’s culture minister Mohammad Hosseini said on Monday in a news agency report that the film was “anti-Iran” and lacked artistry.

Life in Tehran after the revolution - during which 52 American diplomats were held hostage - was tense, Koch said.

“The situation in town was very critical. Most other foreigners had left the country, especially families with school children because the internatio­nal schools were closed down after the revolution.”

Travellers had to pass through many checkpoint­s on the roads, manned by Revolution­ary Guards, he said.

“But we as Swiss we usually passed without problems. The problem was to prove that you were not a U.S. citizen because they were looking for the Americans,” Koch said.

Many Iranians and expatriate­s were trying to flee Iran, Koch said. Asked if he recalled anything particular on the day of the now historic escape, he said:

“No, for us it was a regular flight as we operated every morning non-stop from Tehran to Zurich. The flights were always overbooked, we were one of the very few airlines still operating to Iran,” he said.

“There was always a big hassle at the check-in for last-minute tickets. Of course there were also problems for Iranians and foreign passengers because they were never sure they could leave the country or not. There were several immigratio­n officers checking your documents, of course the Revolution­ary Guards were also present.”

Koch, who said that he had seen “Argo” with his wife and son in Switzerlan­d, said the Tehran airport security scenes rang true, including Revolution­ary Guards questionin­g passengers.

Checked

“That’s realistic. When you went to the airport, you had these checkpoint­s before entering the building, you had checkpoint­s at the airport, then you had the official immigratio­n, you had the Revolution­ary Guards, and even before boarding the aircraft, the passports were checked again.

“And many passengers were stopped from leaving the country.”

Meanwhile, the US State Department, still mourning the loss of its diplomats in a bloody attack on a mission in Libya, Monday cheered the Oscar win for “Argo” based on a true life tale of diplomatic bravery.

“I think we all were excited to see it win,” deputy acting spokesman Patrick Ventrell told journalist­s of Ben Affleck’s film which picked up the coveted best picture award at the Oscars on Sunday night.

Although some of the events portrayed in the film have been treated with a large degree of artistic license, the State Department allowed director Affleck’s team to film some of the scenes in its main building in Washington.

“We cooperated with them in some of the production aspects of, you know, filming inside of this building,” Ventrell said.

New Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday tweeted ahead of the awards ceremony in Los Angeles wishing “Good luck BenAffleck and Argo” and adding “nice seeing StateDept & our Foreign Service on the big screen - JK.”

Affleck, who also stars in the movie, tweeted back his thanks, adding “Grateful for the outstandin­g service and sacrifice of US diplomats and their families!”

Kerry, who took over earlier this month from Hillary Clinton, has vowed to make the protection of the department’s almost 70,000 staff and 275 diplomatic outposts one of his top priorities.

US diplomacy in the world’s most volatile regions has been thrust into the spotlight since the Sept 11 attack on the US mission in Benghazi, Libya in which ambassador Chris Stevens and three other staff were killed.

However, Ventrell had no comment on Iranian charges that the choice of “Argo,” which also took awards for best adapted screenplay and best film editing, was political, saying the awards were up to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Iran’s state television slammed the 85th Academy Awards as “the most political Oscar ever,” and accused Affleck of specializi­ng “in exaggerati­on, blowing things out of proportion and creating false scenes.”

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