(Archived document, may contain errors)
126 August 29, 1980 IRAN, THE UNITED STATES AND THE HOSTAGES AFTE R
300 DAYS INTRODUCTION The November 4, 1979 seizure of the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran and the continued holding of 53 American
diplomatic personnel as hostages is a pivotal I1hinget1 event which
has exerted a signifi cant influence on the course of American- I
ranian relations as well as the course of the Iranian revolution,
the unfolding of U.S. foreign policy vis-a-vis the Persian Gulf,
and the state of relations between the United States and its
allies. The ongoing hostage crisis is said to have dissipated t he
paralyzing effects of the Vietnam syndrome" in Washington as well
as stoked the fires of revolutionary zeal in Tehran.
Regardless of its eventual outcome, it is clear that the prolonged
confrontation between the United States and Iran is a watershed whi
ch will shape the political landscape in each capital for years to
come, if only because the fate of the hostages has become
inextricably intertwined with the struggles for political
leadership in both countries the hostage crisis by outlining the
prevail ing currents of Iranian domestic politics which have
generated the disjointed Iranian approach to the problem, and by
analyzing the shifting U.S diplomatic strategy for securing the
release of the hostages.
The recent death of the Shah has fueled speculation that there may
soon be a breakthrough in the hostage impasse. However, as this
analysis makes clear, the militants who seized the U.S.
Embassy were,primarily motivated by domestic political considera
tions, not by the entrance.of the Shah into the United States which
merely served as a convenient pretext for the operation.
Therefore, the Shah's death will have little, if any, effect on the
situation The purpose of this paper is to review the development of
I 2 THE SEIZURE OF THE EMBASSY On November 4, 1979, at the height
of the an anti-Amehan rally protesting the October 22 entry of the
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi into the United States for medical
treatment, a group of 400-500 militant Iranian Itstudentsl1
assaulted the American Embassy compound in Teh r an and took as
hostages 63 American employees Three Americans, including L. Bruce
Lqingen, the Charge d!Affaires had been on an official call to the
Iranian Foreign Ministry, and were granted asylum there on November
7 The militants demanded the return of the Shah to Iran to stand
trial for crimes against the Iranian people and declared that their
hostages would not be released until their demands had been met
hours, Ayatollah Khomeini had endorsed the demands of the militants
via a telephone call to the o ccupied embassy, and had legitimized
their demands in the eyes of the Iranian people by allowing his own
son Ahmad to make a high profile visit to the embassy at the
militants! request.
The demoralized provisional government of Premier Mehdi Bazargan,
unde rmined by months- of political interference and derisive
sniping at the hands. of Khomeini and his inner circle was
incapable of effectively coming to grips with the increasingly
turbulent domestic political environment, let alone the fast-moving
hostage c risis. The confused response of the provisional govern
ment was typical the Foreign Ministry drifted with the crowds and
expressed sympathy with the militants! action while Foreign
Minister Ibrahim Yazdi privately informed Laingen that "we hope to
have al l of them out by morning Within twenty-four On November 5,
Khomeini!s son warned Premier Bazargan that he would be resisting
the will of the Iranian people if he opposed the occupation of the
U.S. Embassy. This was apparently the last straw for Bazargan, w h
o refused to condone an action.which was both a clear violation of
international law and a direct challenge to his own authority. On
November 6, Premier Bazargan resigned the provisional government
collapsed and Ayatollah Khomeini directed the Revolutiona r y
Council to assume control of the Iranian government and prepare for
the upcoming national elections THE FIRST EMBASSY SEIZURE AND U.S.
DEFERENCE The November 4 seizure of the embassy was by no means an
unprecedented event. Less than nine months before, o n February 14,
1979, a group of heavily-armed leftists had invaded the embassy
compound and briefly held hostage Ambassador William Sullivan and
his entire staff before someone in the Islamic revolutionary
hierarchy (presumably Khomeini) intervened to rel e ase them. The
Carter Administration failed to react firmly to the embassy seizure
strengthen the demonstrably weak security of the embassy, but it
also failed to publicly respond to the seizure in a manner which
would discourage any such future incidents. Instead, anxious to Not
only did it neglect to significantly 3 avoid offending the Khomeini
regime which it was assiduously cultivating, the Carter
Administration passively turned the other cheek, down-played the
incident and prided itself on the avoidanc e of l'overreaction If A
significant precedent had been set: the sovereignty of the U.S.
Embassy had been violated without eliciting anything more than a
token U.S. response, as Washington preferred inaction to
overreaction. This precedent would hardly hav e deterred, and may
even have encouraged, the Iranian militants who later seized the
embassy, given the perceived low-risk nature of such a venture.
Although several junior foreign service officers expressed concern
about restaffing the embassy after the F ebruary attack the U.S.
diplomatic presence was enlarged from about 40 to 70 by November 4.
This expansion of the American diplomatic community was a direct
outgrowth. of the Carter Administration's decision to rapidly
improve relations with the embryonic Islamic Republic being
constructed under the aegis of the Ayatollah Khomeini.
This occurred despite the fact that the Administration tad only
months before lent its questionable support to the Shah and
subsequently to the stillborn Bakhtiar regime .in an effort to
forestall a total Khomeini victory. The White House over
optimistically hoped to establish a working relationship with
triumphant revolutionary forces in Iran immediately after
Khomeini's return In spite of a continuous torrent of anti American
statements by the vitriolic Khomeini, the Carter Admini stration
adopted a conciliatory posture toward the implacable ayatollah and
sought.to accommodate the Iranian revolutionary camp in order to
salvage some vestige of American influence in Tehran.
This policy of deference was based on the assumption that Western
dependence on Iran as a major source of exported oil required a
strong and cohesive Iranian central government, regard less of the
nature of the new regime was operating on the premise that the S
hiite clerics, who were developing an increasingly potent
hammerlock on Iranian political life, would see it in their own
interest to cooperate, if only tacitly, with the United States
vis-a-vis the Soviet Union thereby assuring themselves a degree of
ins u rance in the event of a civil war which would pit the Marxist
left against the Islamic right. NSC adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, in
particular, was reported to have advocated a marriage of
convenience with the Islamic regime, which he perceived to be a
pote n tial bulwark against Soviet influence The Carter
Administration 1. For an excellent analysis of how the Carter
Administration's ambivalent vacillating policy vis-a-vis Iran
undermined the Shah and encouraged the opposition forces, see:
Michael Ledeen and W illiam Lewis, "Carter and the Fall of the Shah
Spring 1980 The Inside Story," The Washington Quarterly, 4 The
State Department operated according to a different set of concerns.
More than a few at State had long been uncomfortable with
Washington's commit m ent to the Shah and viewed the Iranian
revolution, according to one aide, a5 Ira chance to get on the
right side of a barricade for once Unfortunately, after the
collapse of Carter's policy of accommodation toward Iran, the only
Americans on the "right si d e of a barricade" wer.e the host ages
held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran began shortly after Khomeini's
return to Iran in early February and extended'up to the November 4
embassy seizure. In the spring of 1979, the State Department
started to encourage Am e rican businessmen to return to Iran in
their country's best interest as well as their own. During the
summer, the White House directed the Pentagon to deliver military
spare parts and fuel to the Iranian army in order to aid its
campaign against rebelliou s Kurdish tribesmen In August, Iranian
military transports began arriving in the United States on a
regular.basis to pick up spare parts contracted for before the
revolution Washington's over-eager wooing of the Iranian
revolutionaries During the entire pe r iod, the Carter
Admini.stration soft pedaled its criticism of the human rights
violations of the Khomeini regime and adopted a low-key,
don't-rock-the-boat posture with respect to the 'Irevolutionary
justice" meted out by revolu prisoners and petty.crimin a ls, and
particularly the harsh oppres sion of the Jews, Bahais, Khuzestani
Arabs, Kurds and other minority groups. U.N. Ambassador Andrew
Young even went so far as to anoint Ayatollah Khomeini as
Itsomewhat of a saint tionary tribunals, the estimated 1500
executions of political Despite occasional setbacks, such as Iran's
refusal in mid-June to accept Walter Cutler as ambassador, and. its
apparent preference to restrict relations to the charge d'affaires
level the American effort to engineer a U.S.-Iran ra p prochement
intensi fied in the fall. On October 20, only fifteen days before
the assault on the embassy, Henry Precht, the head of the State
Department's Iran Desk, arrived in Tehran for a ten-day visit aimed
at improving and normalizing the channels of c ommunication between
the two governments. On November 1, NSC adviser Brzezinski met with
Premier Bazargan and Foreign Minister Yazdi while attend ing
festivities in Algiers commemorating the twenty-fifth anniver sary
of the Algerian revolution.
Washington' s overly conspicuous campaign of reconciliation
provoked a spate of warnings in the Iranian press, which was
increasingly dominated by Islamic fundamentalists, against an
improvement of bilateral relations. Premier Bazargan and Foreign
Minister Yazdi were subjected to a barrage of heavy criticism for
2. Richard Burt U.S. Quandary in Iran Crisis New York Times,
November 9 1979, p. A12. 5 c their informal meeting.with
Brzezinski. By seeking out the Iranian moderates, the U.S.
government was in effect making t hem vulnerable to domestic
criticism. These and other warning signs led one Western diplomat
to lament that It was clear that the perception in Washington was
several light years behind that in Tehran"; another diplomat
observed that What the Americans we r e trying to do was
reconstruct their old relationship with new partners. They acted as
if the revolution had never happened.If3 obsequious, manner in
which Washington sought to establish cordial relations with the
virulently anti-American, anti-Western fo r ces which had gained
control of Tehran. Elie Kedourie, author of several books on the
Middle East, issued a particularly devastat ing critique of U.S.
policy Other analysts have criticized the acquiescent, almost The
Shah's departure was, in reality, a gr e at between Khomeinils
triumphal return in February and the fall of the Tehran embassy in
November 1979, nothing was done to show the world that the U.S.
does not abandon its friends, or that the Western alliance does not
accept defeat easily. Instead, a v a in and delusive confirming
Iran's neighbors in the belief not only that the U.S. was a weak
unpredictable and treacherous friend, but also mat its policies
were backed neither by knowledge nor by sound judgment The stance
adopted by the U.S. was apologeti c , if not positively
self-incriminating and placatory. Such a stance wa& in itself
an encouragement, or rather ag incitement to attack the U.S embassy
defeat for the U.S. and her allies. But search began for
tlmoderatestl in Tehran While it can be argued t h at the
deferential U.S. stance encouraged the militants to occupy the
embassy because it was interpreted as a sign of weakness on the
part of the United States, it is perhaps more accurate to consider
the American search for accommodations in the context o f domestic
Iranian politics, where it was perceived by many anti-American
Iranians to be an intolerable bid to partially recoup the U.S.
losses sustained in the Iranian revolution 3. William Branigin U. S
4. Elie Kedourie Western June 18, 1980, p. A18 7, 1 980, p. 19
Called Too Eager'in Wooing Iran," Washington Post Deference in the
Mideast," The New Republic, June 6 IRANIAN DOMESTIC POLITICS The
loose ad hoc coalition of divergent political groups which forced
the Shah into exile was broad but shallow, ber eft Sf any real
sense of common purpose beyond the ouster of the Shah.
To many members of the Iranian opposition, the Ayatollah Khomeini
was not so much.an accepted leader as a symbol of resistance.
Untainted by any form of association with the Shah, his stern
visage and uncompromising willpower provided Iranian dissidents of
many stripes with a common rallying point. However, once the
initial flush of victory wore off, the latent contradictions in t
he opposition movement surfaced and the movement dissolved into
three rival camps grouped around Khomeini's Islamic fundamentalists
the moderate democrats of the National Front and the radical left.
As the Iranian political arena became increasingly polari zed
during the course of 1979, the radical left (chiefly the Islamic
socialist Mujaheddin and the militant pro-Soviet Marxist Fedayeen
was forced underground by the growing assertiveness of the Islamic
fundamentalists and their coercive use of the Pasdara n (Islamic
Guards) and the Hezbollahi (the Party of God, an ultra-conservative
violence-prone mob of fanatic Moslems generally drawn from the
ranks of the uneducated poor, many of whom flocked to the slums of
Tehran as the Iranian economy floundered The mo d erate democrats,
caught in the middle, grew increasingly frustrated and dispirited
under the withering criticism levelled at them by Khomeini for
their Wn-Islamicll Westernized values. Many of their leaders,
discredited by smear campaigns in the highly po l iticized
clergy-controlled state media, were also forced underground or into
exile, gradually leaving the relatively small Iranian middle class
and technocratic elite without any regular ized political channels
through which to influence the course of the revolution c While
Khomeini led an essentially Persian revolution against a Persian
state, he inadvertently pried open a Pandora's box of local drives
for ethnic separation, political autonomy and cultural freedom
among the many ethnic minority groups whi c h claim the allegiance
of 14 million of Iran's 34 million people. Iran's complex mosaic of
nationalities, suddenly exposed to a partial vacuum of secular
power, began to disintegrate in the face of centrifugal ethnic
pressures. Chronic ethnic tensions gen e rated sporadic outbursts
of civil unrest and political violence among the Kurds in the west,
the Khuzestani Arabs in the southwest, the Baluchis in the
southeast, the Turkomans in the north, and the Azerbaijanis in the
northeast. This "doughnut of crisis e speci ally the Kurdish
insurrection which erupted in March 1979 and has 5. For a more
detailed analysis of the Iranian revolution see: James Phillips The
Iranian Revolution: Long-Term Implications," Heritage Foundation
Backgrounder #89, June 15, 1979 7 pe rsisted sporadically to the
present), threatens not only the political authority of Khomeini's
Islamic republic, but also the territorial integrity of the Iranian
state.
Instead of attempting to defuse separatist appeals by parti ally
satisfying the demand s of the minorities, Khomeini, charac
teristically unwilling to compromise, exacerbated the delicate
situation in the peripheral provinces through inflammatory rhetoric
and a series of harsh crackdowns aimed at intimidating the leaders
of minority groups pressing for any degree of local autonomy.
When the Iranian army, demoralized by large-scale purges of its
officers and widespread desertion among its soldiers, became bogged
down in Kurdistan, Khomeini ordered the undisciplined Pasdaran to
join the strugg le against rebellious Kurdish tribesmen succeeding
only in increasing the intensity of their resistance by provoking
further, often unnecessary clashes.
More than a few observers, noting the shrill hyperbole of
Khomeini's invective against the Kurds, are of the opinion that the
ayatollah was using the Kurds as a foil in order to incite
nationalistic passions among the Iranian people, to rekindle the
sense of solidarity which had been dissipated by the splintering of
the revolutionary movement, and distrac t the Iranian people from
their mounting social and economic problems. Khomeini on several
occasions denounced ceasefires worked out by a representa tive of
the Iranian government to end the bloodshed, just as he was to
later sabotage the efforts of Bani-S adr to resolve the hostage
crisis In both cases the ayatollah sought to prolong the crisis at
hand, presumably for domestic political reasons The revolution
plunged the Iranian economy into chaos.
Under the Shah, much of the infrastructure of key industrie s had
been designed, built, administered and maintained by foreign
particularly American) technocrats who fled the country to escape
the virulent strain of xenophobia which accompanied the revolution.
Stripped of foreign technical advisers and deprived of many of the
most competent Iranian managers by political purges and the
emigration of disgruntled professionals, many Iranian industries
fell into the hands of timid functionaries who avoided the tough
decisions for fear that they would later be chastised for
llun-Islamicll acts. Workers I councils, many of them controlled by
radical leftists, undermined the authority of the managers and
disrupted production through sporadic strikes-in pursuit of higher
wages as well as purely political goals.
Inflation skyrocketed to an annual rate of 50 percent and estimates
of unemployment ranged from 30-50 percent.
Khomeinils inner circle could not but have become alarmed by the
worsening unemployment situation fearing that the unemployed would
become a volatile reserv oir of unrest which radical leftists or
the Tudeh (Communist) Party might exploit at their expense In
mid-April 1979, hundreds of the unemployed marched through the
streets of Isfahan and Sanadaj chanting "Give us jobs or give us
back the Shah By November , the situation had degenerated to 8 the
point where approximately 3 million Iranians out of a total labor
force of 11 million were unemployed.
On November 12, little more than a week after the seizure of the
U.S. Embassy, hundreds of unemployed workers, o rganized by
leftists, occupied the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs
demanding jobs, unemployment payments and health insurance. A
series of similar demonstrations in the weeks before the embassy
seizure had underlined the political vulnerability of th e Islamic
fundamentalists on the issue of unemployment. Over the long haul,
the unacceptably high level of unemployment constituted a
potentially dangerous challenge to their authority since they were
constructing a theocratic state which accorded a higher priority to
Islamic values than to economic growth.
Fortunately for them, the Shah's visit to the United States was the
catalyst for a strident wave of anti-American protest which swiftly
drowned out the tentative protests of the unemployed.
Once they be came acquainted with the diversionary appeal of the
occupied U.S. Embassy, Khomeini and his fundamentalist supporters
were reluctant to dispense with such a lightning rod for Iranian
protest THF, MOTIVATION AND GOALS OF MILITANTS In early October,
when Ir a n's academic year began, Iranian universities were
engulfed by daily demonstrations, often domina ted by leftists,
protesting Khomeini's ban on llpolitical debatel in their
institutions, which was ostensibly dictated by the necessity to
preserve the revol ution's "unity of word The demonstrations were
tolerated, but Khomeini moved to harness them by opportunistically
diverting the attention of the protesters to the Shah's entrance
into the United States for medical treatment.
On November 1, a communique fro m Khorneini was broadcast over the
state controlled radio which reminded Iranians that November 4 was
the first anniversary of bloody anti-Shah demonstrations at the
University of Tehran. Noting that in the absenc.e of the Shah all
our problems come from A merica," Khomeini appealed to the student
population to demonstrate against the United States It is,
therefore, up to the dear pupils, students and theological students
to expand with all their might their attacks against the United
States and Israel, so they may force the United States to return
the deposed and criminal Shah and to condemn this great plot.
While it is clear that Khomeini was seeking to restore his
authority over Iran's unruly student population, a large segment of
which had been radicaliz ed by the revolution, it is uncertain
whether he directly ordered the attack on the embassy or merely
accommodated himself to a fait accompli engineered by overzealous
followers. Given the ayatollah's ambiguous style of rule,which
encouraged a proliferati o n of semi-autonomous power centers 9
within the chaotic Iranian political arena, the latter interpreta
ion seems to be the correct one, particularly in view of the
aggressively independent activities of the militants throughout the
hostage crisis. While t h e self-termed tlMoslem Students Following
the Iman's Llnell have consistently deferred to Khomeini's public
wishes, they are known to have been wracked by sharp internal
debates among rival factions at several junctures. Such
disagreements would have been extremely unlikely if they merely had
been implementing the ayatollah's direct orders.
The occupiers of the embassy are believed to be a loosely organized
ad hoc group of militant Islamic nationalists, with a sprinkling of
Marxists, recruited on the basis of their willing ness to face
martyrdom for Khomeini. The majority were apparent ly middle class
students, varying in age from the late teens to the mid-thirties,
drawn predominantly from the technical scho o ls of several Tehran
universities. The bulk of the ringleaders were drawn from the
student population and teaching staff of the Feizieh (Islamic)
Science Center in Qom, an institution closely indentified with the
Ayatollah Khomeini, who taught there befor e being exiled to Iraq
in 1963 apparently sympathized with the Mujaheddin and several had
strong links to the PLO, if there were any Tudeh or Fedaye members
involved, they did not publicly admit their affiliations. Many of
the militants professed.to be ant i -Communist Islamic national
ists leftists surfaced in a bid for power and were forced. out
While a number of the militants u Nevertheless, within a few days
of the embassy seizuge The embassy quickly became a hothouse of
Islamic ideological fervor. At one point, the militants became so
fragmented that they reportedly demarcated the sovereign territory
of individual factions with a system of strings; there were
arguments over which clique would guard key rooms, such as the
chancery basement where suspected C IA employees were held. By
early January, the National Security Council reportedly had
identified five distinct factions operating within the embassy
compound Moslem student groups, one group of Marxist non-student
radical and one group known as the Itsec urity forcell trained by
the PLO.
Discipline was maintained by an eight-member central commit tee
which was apparently heavily influenced by Hojatolislam
sub-ayatollah) Mohammad Moussavi Khoeni, a veteran of Khomeini's
Paris exile entourage, who functioned as the spiritual mentor or
ltchaplainl1 of the embassy occupiers. Khoeni, a member of Ayatol
lah Beheshti's clerically-dominated Islamic Republican Party, was
the self-proclaimed Ilreligious dean" of Iran's student population
and was perhaps the only aut h ority figure consulted by the mili
tants in advance of their operation Khomeini's son, Ahmad three
bona fide 6. Jonathan Randal, "Hostage Seizure Hones Militants'
Political Acumen 7. Jack Anderson U.S. Intelligence in Iran
Catching.Up Washington Post Wash i ngton Post, March 20, 1980, p.
A26 January 11, 1980, p. D15. admitted in an interview on November
20 that he had been in contact with the group prior to the attack,
but he denied having advance knowledge of their plans According to
one of the ringleaders i nterviewed by an Ameri can reporter, the
militants.reportedly began planning for the operation around
October 1, three weeks before the ghah was admitted to the United
States for needed treatment. The original plan evidently had been
to seize control of t h e embassy, ransack it and steal documents
which could be used to embarrass both the Bazargan government and
the United States the attack was derived primarily from domestic
political consider ations. The Islamic fundamentalists were alarmed
about the poss i bility that the relatively moderate secular
government was permitting Iran to drift back into the tentative
embrace of the United States, which they perceived to be the prime
source of the alien Western values that had undermined Islam in
recent years The motivation for This apprehension, based on
Washington's eager public efforts to improve relations with
revolutionary Iran, could only have been heightened by the
expansion of the U.S. diplomatic presence and the increasingly
insensitive, complacent behavi or of American diplomats who were
attempting to promote a "business as usual atmosphere for the
resuscitation of Iranian-American relations.
According to one Western diplomat The Americans did not keep the
low profile they should have kept parties they ins isted on giving
my own advised their people not to g0.I You should have seen the A
n-er of embassies including In retrospect, a strong argument can be
made that the U.S policy of immediate rapprochement was ill-suited
to Iranian domestic political realiti es. By obsessively trying to
seek out and cultivate moderates within the provisional government,
Washing ton was in effect undermining their domestic political
position.
For the Iranian revolution was by no means over, especially in the
eyes of the Islamic right and the Marxist left. Both groups had
defined the struggle to overthrow the Shah as a struggle to cleanse
Iran of pernicious Western values and influences ("materi alism"
and "permissive liberalismll to the Moslem fundamentalists
llcapitalismlf and lfimperialisml' to Iranian leftists Both groups
wanted Iran to burn its bridges to the United States in order to
bar any return, even to a limited extent, of American influence.
This desire was rooted in Iran's historical experience. On four
occasions in the past century, successful Iranian nationalist
rebellions have been neutralized and partially reversed by the
influence of a foreign power began in 1872 against the British, the
1891 Tobacco revolt and The gains of nationalist uprisings 8. Don
Schanche U.S. Hostages Not Part of Original Student Plans 9.
Branigin, cit.
Angeles Times, December 8, 1979, p. 1 11 the Constitutional
movement of 19
05. These were subsequently diluted when the clerically-led
coalition of bazaar merchants students, intellectuals , and the
faithful disintegrated after the initial success In each instance,
after the nationalists had won, westernized defectors from the
short-lived nationalist coalition (usually government officials who
perceived the clergy to be a barrier to moderni z ation) aligned
themselves with an external power (usually the British) to r.estore
to some degree the status guo. In 1953, this pattern was repeated
when the Mossadegh regime, weakened by the defection of secular
moderates was overthrown and the Shah retu r ned to the throne with
the help of the CIA As the United States stepped up its campaign to
arrive at a mutually agreeable modus operandi with the Bazargan
regime, the Islamic fundamentalists could only have become
increasingly mindful of the threat that t h e United States, as an
external power which was attempting to cultivate westernized
Iranian moderates, posed to their vision of an Islamic society. The
fundamentalists stepped up their rhetorical attacks on the moder
ates in the fall, focusing in particul ar on the U.S.-educated
Foreign Minister Ibrahim Yazdi, who was considered to have an
unwholesome influencell on Iranian foreign policy.
The embassy seizure was the coup de grace which toppled the
Bazargan regime and discredited the moderates, while simultaneous
ly taking the wind out of leftist sails.
Islamic fundamentalists had fractured Iranian ties to the United
States and the West, re-focused student protests, diverted the
attention of Iranians from festering social and economic problems
that the cler gy was ill-prepared to resolve, stole a march on the
Iranian left, which could only applaud the embassy occpBation and
revived the waning zeal of Iran's moribund revolution. Moreover the
occupied U.S. Embassy was a highly charged political symbol which
co u ld be used to humiliate a superpower, thereby giving Iranians
the psychological satisfaction of demonstrating what they
considered to be their superior moral strength In one stroke, the
Given all these considerations it can be argued that the return of
th e Shah was not the prime goal of the embassy occupa tion,
especially since it appears that the operation was planned before
the Shah arrived unannounced in New York. If the militants had
merely been seeking the return of the Shah, they would have taken
act i on against Egypt, Morocco, the Bahamas and Mexico countries
where the Shah took refuge months before entering the United
States. However, such targets lacked political symbolism 10. Late
in November, Khomeini's grandson and advisor, Sayed Khossein,
explai n ed that the embassy seizure "enabled us to open the way
for a strategic alliance between the Islamic movement and secular
and leftist formations as well as a tactical alliance with the
Soviet Union Stategic Mid-East and Africa, December 12, 1979, p. 4
12 in Iranian eyes, and were therefore of little value in
influencing the course of Iranian domestic politics.
The militants, perceiving themselves to be the vanguard of an
ongoing revolution, were more interested in exploiting the embassy
seizure for domesti c political purposes than for bargain ing to
gain the extradition of the Shah. It was, therefore, no coincidence
that once in control of embassy files they spent as much time
gathering documents for 'levidencetI which would discredit moderate
Iranian poli t icians as they did seeking documents which would
discredit the Shah or prove their allegations about the est of
spies The Shah's entrance into the United States was not their
prime motivation for occupying the U.S. Embassy, but merely a
catalytic influenc e and a convenient pretext which they seized
upon, secure in the knowledge that due to the virulently
anti-American mood engendered by the Shah's presence in America the
Bazargan regime would be incapable of reversing their action.
Thus, they would be assu red a prominent platform for discrediting
their domestic political rivals as well as the United States THE
INITIAL U.S. RESPONSE: RENUNCIATION OF FORCE From the outset of the
crisis, the United States has consis tently and firmly rejected
Iranian demands t o extradite the deposed Shah. In the immediate
aftermath of the embassy attack the Carter Administration, hoping
that the Iranian government would secure the release of the
hostages, ad0pted.a cautious low-key posture designed to minimize
tensions, preclu de reprisals against the hostages and defuse the
crisis.
Fearful of lrover-reactionll and obsessed with maintaining an
unprovocative stance, the White House initially ruled out the use,
or even the threat, of force as a means of pressuring the Iranians
to live up to their obligation under international law to protect
accredited foreign diplomats stationed in their country.
On Novever 9, the President's views were publicly expressed for the
first time in a White House statement The most important concern is
the safety of our fellow citizens held in Tehran."
By ruling out the use of force and publicly proclaiming the safety
of the hostages to be his pre-eminent concern, President Carter
minimized the immediate threat to the lives of the hostages by
sacrificing his long-term bargaining position. In effect, he w as
unilaterally depriving himself of potential leverage over Iranian
behavior while simultaneously strengthening Iranian leverage over
his own behavior. By explicitly disavowing the use of force, the
President reduced the potential risks which the militan ts forced
other Iranians to bear on behalf of their venture.
This not only reduced the domestic political pressures on the 11.
See Strategic Mid-East and Africa, December 12, 1979, p. 3. 13
militants to come to terms, but.actually increased public support
for retaining the hostages, since. as long as the militants held
the hostages, the United States would not exercise its legal right
to resort to military reprisals. By subordinating other U.S,
national interests (national prestige, the deterrence of futur e
terrorist kidnappings of U.S. citizens, and the reassur ance of
troubled allies, especially in the Persian Gulf region that the
United States is willing and able to protect its own interests) to
the question of the safety of the hostages, the President i n
advertently enhanced the bargaining value of the hostages in the
eyes of the Iranians, giving them little incentive to moderate
their conditions for releasing the hostages THE RAMSEY CLARK
MISSION President Carter's first initiative to resolve the crisis w
as to dispatch former Attorney General Ramsey Clark, who later
surfaced as an ultra-dovish critic of the Administration, and
William Miller, the staff director of the Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence, to Tehran on November 6. Apparently, the White H
ouse felt #at the anti-Shah credentials of these two liberals would
give them credibility in revolutionary Tehran, enable them to with
the Iranians and lay the groundwork for a diplo matic resolution of
the crisis. However, while their plane was en route t o Tehran,
Khomeini denounced their mission and prohibi ted them from entering
Iran, Clark spent ten days in Istanbul calling friends in Iran to
plead his case, only to discover that his sanctimonious anti-Shah
positions, derived as they were from Western l iberal values,
earned him little but derision from the vehemently anti-Western
Khomeini. Oblivious to the limitation of his own myopic
ultra-liberal worldview, Ramsey Clark made contact with PLO
officials in Istanbul and reportedly planned to continue his
quixotic mission by journeying to Beirut, Lebanon to seek the close
cooperation of the PLO headed by Abu Walid, had previously been
sent to Tehran by Yasser Arafat as a public relations gambit to
curry American favor and enhance the PLO's image, but if it was
intended to be a sincere effort to resolve the crisis, it was a
total failure A high level PLO delegation Fortunately, Clark was
refused his request and was retrieved before he could do any
further damage. However, his amateurish brand of diplomacy wa s
symptomatic of the Carter Administration's disturbing propensity to
value symbols (Clark had marched in a 1979 anti-Shah rally) over
substance and its dangerous tendency to elevate idealistic,
normative foreign policy considerations over pragmatic consid e
rations of national security. As evidenced by his headstrong
behavior at the "Crimes of America" conference held in Iran months
later, Ramsey Clark was an individualistic idealogue better suited
to moralistic breast-beating than to representing the intere s ts
of the American people him to perform a sensitive diplomatic
mission, the White House displayed the same lack of judgment that
had led it to select an apolitical soldier, General Huyser, to
report on and operate By choosing 14 within the highly complex
political environment which existed in Tehran during the final days
of the Shah's regime.
INTERNATIONALIZING THE CRISIS When the Clark-Miller mission
collapsed &d Khomeini prohibi ted all high-level Iranian
officials from receiving American diplomats, the United States
turned to foreign diplomats to argue its case. The Administration's
strategy was to flinternationalizell the crisis by framing issues
in terms that embraced the interests of other nations
(inviolability of diplomatic persons and places and appealing for
support on that basis.
By isolating Iran and marshalling world opinion in condemna tion of
its illegal act, the White House hoped to force the Iranians to the
conclusion that they could present their case to the world in a
more effective manner by releasing the hostages.
According to a senior White House official become enough of an
embarrassment to them they may decide that it is in their own
interest to let them go The U.S., therefore sought to deny the
Iranians the use of the U.N. as a pro paganda platform, while
focusing the attention of the Security Council on the plight of the
hostages its Ilprofound concernt1 for the hostages and urged Itin
the strongest political unityt1 among U.N. members (with the
exception of the Vietnamese, North K o reans, Albanians and South
Yemenis, virtually every country in the world, including the Soviet
Union, condemned the holding of the hos.tages the Security Council
did not call for any concrete measures apart from urging
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim to l l use his good officesll to
help reach a diplomatic solution If the hostages On November 9, the
U.N. Security Council unanimously voiced termsll that they be
released without delay. Despite what one I international civil
servant termed 'Ian unprecedented mo r al and I When the newly
installed Iranian Foreign Minister, Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, called
for a U.N. Security Council meeting on November 14, in order to
publicize Iran's grievances against the United States, the
President instructed U.N. Ambassador Donald McHenry to block any
Iranian attempt to discuss Iran's problems as long as the hostages
were being held. The next day, speaking before the national
convention of the AFL-CIO, President Carter declared IIOnly after
the hostages are released will we be will i ng to address Iran's
concerns I He condemned the embassy seizure as an act of terrorism
totally outside the bounds of international law and diplomatic
tradition,I' and noted that "We have done nothing for which any
American need apologize.lI that "The Uni t ed States of America
will not yield to international terrorism or to blackmail He
proclaimed 15 U.S. COUNTERACTIONS: OIL AND FOREIGN ASSETS During
the second week of the crisis the Administihon believing that the
volatile first phase of the confrontation w as giving way to a less
dangerous second phase, geared up for politi cal, economic and
psychological warfare against Tehran. On November 12, President
Carter banned W.S. imports of Iranian oil in a symbolic display of
determination, stating that No one sh ould underestimate the
resolve of the American government and the American people in this
matter It is necessary to eliminate any suggestion that economic
pressures can weaken our stand on basic issues of principle.
The Iranian oil import ban was a pre-emp tive neutralization of
Iranian oil leverage over the United States designed to weaken the
Iranian bargaining position. Although it was an aggessive defensive
action, rather than an offensive one, it constituted a symbolic
victory over Tehran insofar as th e United States seemed to have
beaten the Iranians to the draw (the Iranians claimed that they had
already decided to embargo oil exports to the U.S when President
Carter instituted the American boycott) and gained the initiative
if only for a while.
Prior to the imposition of the boycott, the United'States had been
importing 700,000-800,000 barrels of oil per day from Iran, the
equivalent of 6.5 percent of oil imports or about 3 percent of
total oil requirements tion network was flexible enough to allow t
h e re-routing of oil traffic through swap arrangements between oil
companies, the decision to forego Iranian oil imports imposed
insignificant costs on the U.S. economy, aside from, increasing the
upward pressure on petroleum prices, particularly in the sp o t
market Since the world oil distribu 12 On November 14, Bani-Sadr,
who directed Iran's Finanace Ministry as well as its foreign
affairs, announced that Iran intended to withdraw its funds from
American banks and their overseas branches Itat the suggestio n of
our sisters and brothers in the central bank Apparently the
Iranians opted for the propaganda benefits of a public
announcement, realizing that they had little chance of successfully
withdrawing their funds since such an action would have left
America n s Ilholding a very large bag full of defaulted loans and
confiscated assets," according to a Deputy Secretary of the
Treasury. Alerted by a timely warning from the Department of the
Treasury, President Carter declared a national emergency with
respect to t he "situation in Iran invoked the 1977 International
Emergency Economic Powers Act and blocked the transfer of Iranian
funds until Iran's debts to the United States are settled I 12. For
a more extensive treatment of the U.S. oil boycott see: Milton
Copul o s and James Phillips, "The Iranian Dilemma: Energy and
Security Implications," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder #105,
November 16, 1979. 16 While the property of individual Iranians and
private Iranian companies remained untouched, approximately 8
billion worth of Iranian government assets were frozen, more than
half of which were deposited in the overseas branches of U.S.
banks. Although the Administration argued that the action taken
against Iran was sui generis, the restrictions imposed on Iranian
funds gave a psychological shock to foreign investors, especially
oil-rich Arab governments, whose confidence in American financial
markets was undoubtedly shaken. In the long run, the freezing of
Iranian assets in peacetime in the past assets were blocked in w a
rtime or when diplomatic relations were broken), is a precedent
which will raise the perceived risks of investing petrodollar
surpluses in U.S. financial instruments, thereby strengthening the
hands of those advocating the conservation of oil through prod u
ction cutbacks in oil-exporting states which already produce more
oil than is needed to finance economic development U.S. FLIP-FLOPS:
THREATS OF FORCE AND U.N. NEGOTIATIONS Concerned about the
deteriorating image of the Islamic revolution, Bani-Sadr and t h e
head of Iran's state-controlled media, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh,
reportedly convinced Khomeini to order the release of black and
women hostages "if their spying is not proven 18 and 19 ostensibly
because, in Bani-Sadr's words, IIIslam has a high regard for wom e
n and blacks are part of an impoverished down-trodden society After
ordering their release, Khomeini suggested, possibly as a sop to
the militants who were reluctant to let them go, that the remaining
49 embassy hostages be tried in Islamic courts as spie s Thirteen
hostages were released in two groups on November In response to
this threat, the White House was compelled to backpedal away from
its initial rejection of the use of force.
On November 20, President Carter ordered a task force led by the
aircraf t carrier Kitty Hawk to steam from the Philippines to the
Arabian Sea to join the aircraft carrier Midway which had been on
maneuvers in the area at the time of the embassy seizure following
day, a White House source officially warned Iran that U.S. milit a
ry action was a distinct possibility and that Iran would be held
"strictly accountable if the hostages were harmed The The Carter
Administration also reversed course on another front on November
23, when it privately submitted a proposal to Iran's United N
ation's representative which called for a Security Council meeting
on November 27, the release of the hostages that same day and the
establishment of an international commission to investigate human
rights violations perpetrated during the reign of the Sh a h. The
Iranians responded with a vague counter-proposal which specified
that Iran would '!begin the process of terminating occupation of
the U.S. Embassy" when the establishment of a commission of inquiry
was announced. In spite of the fact that this offe r did not meet
the American demand for the outright release of the hostages, the
Administration was tentatively 17 I willing to consider it if
Bani-Sadr was willing to United Nations headquarters in New York to
discuss come to the the details.
Bani-Sadr, a radical, Islamic socialist economist, was known to be
critical of the embassy seizure, which he perceived to be a
counterproductive endeavor If it had not been for the hostages we
would have had all world public opinion with us.ll was
anti-American in ou t look, he was far more flexible than other
members of Khomeinils inner circle and was one of the few who
favored a diplomatic solution. However, Bani-Sadr was severely
constrained by the fervently anti-American atmosphere which
pervaded Tehran: I1Although I was against taking hostages from the
start, now we are confronted with a fait accompli To free them
would be a sign of weakness taking a step it wpgld be impossible
not stand for it.ll While he Without the American government Our
public opinion would Ban i -Sadr announced his willingness to
attend a Security Council session on December 1, apparently in the
belief that Iranian public opinion would become more amenable to a
negotiated settlement if Iran was granted a forum within the U.N.
with which to presen t its case to the world. However, the acting
Foreign Minister evidently moved too quickly for Khomeini, and the
ayatol lah denounced the proposed meeting on November 27, possibly
influenced by fundamentalist members of this entourage who dis
trusted Bani-S adr. The following day, Bani-Sadr resigned in a huff
and was replaced by Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, his former rival for
leadership of the Iranian student exile community in the sixties.
Ghotbzadeh, a blunt hardliner, relatively less open to compromise
than Bani-S adr, immediately announced that he would not be
attending the Security Council session. Washington had compromised
its initial position by displaying a-willingness .to allow Iran to
address the Security Council before the hostages had been released
In the process, it had accomplished little except to precipitate an
unfavorable change of leadership in the Foreign Ministry.
MULTILATERAL DIPLOMATIC PRESSURES In the month of December, the
United States intensified efforts to I1internationalizel1 the
crisis and bring multilateral diplomatic pressures to bear. On
December 4, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved
Resolution 457 which llurgentlyll called for the release of the
hostages and a peaceful settlement of outstanding issues. On
December 5, Presid e nt Carter told a group of congressmen that he
would "turn the screws a little tighter" day by day to increase
pressure on Iran. In mid-December Secretary of State Vance visited
London, Paris, Rome and Bonn to 13. Quoted in Washington Post,
November 16, 19 79, p. A4. 18 marshal European diplomatic pressures
against Iran. On December 15, the International Court of Justice
ruled unanimously in favor of the United States in its preliminary
report and ordered Iran to release the hostages immediately.
The Iranian s proved to be unresponsive to the pressure of
international organizations, which were denounced as instruments of
the United States, and frustrated by the tenor of world opinion
which they believed to be manipulated by the American media
American journal i sts were temporarily expelled from the country
in January as a result Moreover, Khomeini and the Revolutionary
Council were becoming increasingly pre-occupied with Iran's
internal problems back burner because, after all, the
hostage-taking itself was an a c tion taken in response to Iran's
growing internal difficulties an attempt to paper over deepening
cleavages in the anti-Shah coalition by unifying Iranians against a
convenient scapegoat the United States The hostage confrontation
was placed on the Howeve r, not even the "great Satan" could long
divert the December, Azerbaijani Shiites loyal to the Ayatollah
Kazem Shariat Iranian people from their worsening domestic problems
In early madari clashed with Khomeini's followers in the city of
Tabriz.
The Azerba ijanis, who make up almost one third of Iran's
population objected strongly to the provisions of the Islamic
constitution approved in an early December national referendum),
which gave Khomeini supreme powers as Iran's political and
religious overlord.
Shariatmadari, an Azerbaijani, was a more moderate and more worldly
rival of Khomeini's who deplored Khomeini's dominance over Iranian
political affairs.
While an uneasy truce was worked out between Khomeini's forces and
Shariatmadari's Maslem People's Re publican Party, the fact that
the Azerbaijanis, Iran's biggest minority group, had violently
demonstrated their opposition to Khomeini after months of relative
quiescence underlined the growing unpopularity of the Khomeini
regime, especially in the fronti e r provinces, where the ayatollah
had become a symbol of oppression situation, Khomeini had no
incentive to resolve the hostage crisis and every reason to prolong
it, since by continually provoking the hostility of the United
States, he managed to present I ranians with a powerful external
enemy which would give them reason to close ranks behind him Faced
with such a The Revolutionary Council, preoccupied with domestic
turmoil was also factionalized by the political ambitions of
several of its fifteen member s , notably Bani-Sadr and the
Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti, who appeared to be the chief rivals in
the upcoming presidential election. Beheshti, nicknamed the
"Iranian Rasputin is an ambitious, power-seeking clerical activist
whose pragmatic outlook and keen political senses make him a
formidable opponent As head of the secretive Revolutionary Council,
Beheshti directly exercised power in the executive, judicial, and
security organs of government; as head of the Islamic Republican
Party, he was 19 destined to become a dominant legislative power in
the Majlis parliament). Although his presidential ambitions were
crushed when Khomeini "advisedIt the clergy not to run for
president, he remained a powerful adversary who persistently
bedeviled Bani-Sadr after his e l ection as President and
obstructed his attempts to negotiate a diplomatic solution to the
hostage crisis and Khomeini maintaining an aloof distance from the
day-to-day administration of Iranian affairs, Iran's posture
vis-a-vis the hostages became increas i ngly difficult to decipher
channels of diplomatic communication to the U.S. had been severed
the international media became a one-way conduit for the demands of
competing Iranian power centers. Throughout December and January
the militants trumpeted their preparations for spy trials
Ghotbzadeh continually waffled on the subject, and Beheshti claimed
that the hostages would appear as witnesses and would be released
after the court proceedings political situation forced the major
actors to abruptly change th e ir positions frequently, leading the
New York Times to complain in an editorial: I'Official Iranian
statements have a half-life of maybe an hour At one point the wily
Ghotbzadeh warned reporters that if they used his exact words they
would be "misquot ing him In the midst of such chaotic anarchy,
meaningful communication, let alone negotiations, were extremely
difficult to sustain With the Revolutionary Council split by
internal differences Since direct The turbulent domestic On
December 15, the Shah left t he United States for Panama an event
that should have markedly altered the status of the hostages if the
militants' avowed motivation for seizing the embassy was taken at
face value. However although the militants proclaimed that
preparations for spy tria ls were I'accelerated there was no move
on the part of the Iranians to bring the crisis to a head. The
hostages were still paying dividends in the domestic political
sphere where they served as a rallying point for revolutionary
solidarity.
In view of the continuing hard-line voiced by the militants echoed
by Beheshti and endorsed by Khomeini, the United States made known
its intention to formally request the U.N. Security Council to
impose economic sanctions on Iran on December 21 However, the White
House reversed course on December 28 in order to allow
Secretary-General Waldheim time to travel to Tehran in an attempt
to mediate the crisis. In Iran, Waldheim was cooly received by
Iranian officials who chose to interpret his visit as a
fact-finding mission and was confronted by hostile crowds.
Cutting his trip short, he returned to New York and then traveled
to Washington on January 6 for a meeting with President Carter at
which the President reportedly rejected the idea that a U.N
investigation would be par t of a "package deal" to secure the
release of the hostages.
January 11, but the United States again agreed to postpone voting
The Security Council met to consider economic sanctions on 20 on
the sanctions issue in order to obtain clarification of an offe r
of compromise, verbally conveyed to Secretary-General Waldheim by
Iran's U.N. ambassador, Mansour Farhang. When the written
clarification proved to be unacceptable, the United States pressed
for a vote on sanctions on January
13. As expected the proposal was vetoed by the Soviets. The United
States then pledged to impose unilateral sanctions and sought the
cooperation of its allies by sending Deputy Secretary of State
Warren Christopher to Europe.
However, the Administration reversed itself yet again s hortly
thereafter, quietly shelving the sanctions issue as part of the
Irresponsefr to the new reality of a Soviet-occupied Afghanistan
which cast the Iranian crisis in a new geopolitical light. The
Administration made a calculated effort to drive a wedge between
the militants and the mainstream of Iranian public opinion by
concentrating its fire on the militants, who were described as
llMarxistslt working against the interests of the Iranian people in
league with the Soviet Union.
State of the Union addre ss to Congress, the President had softened
his position further, going as far as to hold out the promise of
cooperation with Iran once the hostages had been released offer
apparently invalidated President Carter's November 27 allusion to
reprisals in whic h he stated his belief that the release of the
hostages would not "wipe the slate clean If President Carter
thought his offer of Ifcooperationl1 would be well-received in
Tehran he was mistaken for it had been the prospect of American
'cooperationll which h ad led the militants to seize the embassy in
the first place By the time of his January 22 This By the end of
January, the Carter Administration had signifi cantly moderated its
stance on the hostage problem through a series of unilateral
concessions whic h failed to elicit any corresponding softening of
the Iranian position. The White House had reversed itself on the
question of whether Iran would be allowed to address the U.N.
Security Council before the hostages were released, on the question
of reprisal s , and on the question of economic sanctions. It had
sought to llinternationalizell the crisis in order to isolate Iran,
but this dovetailed nicely with Khomeini's desire to expunge
Western influence and Western values from his embryonic Islamic
republic. B y the time that tentative negotiations for the release
of the hostages began under U.N auspices in February, Washington
had repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to compromise, to
unilaterally forego hardline options and to whittle away its own
bargaining position without obtaining a quid pro quo from the
Iranians Irving Kristol characterized this approach as a policy of
"Reverse Graduated Response Given such a track record, the Iranians
had little incentive to compromise,.for they perceived the United
Sta t es as a Ilworld devouringll enemy and therefore interpreted
American restraints as a sign of weakness 21 THE U.N. COMMISSION OF
INQUIRY The concept of a U.N. commission of inquiry, stifled in
late On January 17 White House Chief of Staff November by Khome
ini, was revived in mid-January as an American initiative, only to
be sabotaged once more by the Ayatollah and his militant followers.
Hamilton Jordan and Assistant Secretary of State Harold Saunders
met in Paris with two unofficial representatives of Iran , French
lawyer Christian Bourguet and Hector Villalon, a shadowy Argentine
in the first of several unorthodox "back channel" dialogues.
Jordan's efforts upstaged the State Department's special task force
on Iran, leading Bani-Sadr to comment later that " rival power
centers had become an American as well as an Iranian phenomenon.
been worked out which would unfold in a series of reciprocal steps.
A U.N. commission of inquiry, consisting of five liberal lawyers
from Algeria, Venezuela, France, Syria and Sr i Lanka would travel
to Iran to investigate the U.S. role in Iran under the Shah as well
as the U.S. complaints against the Iranians for seizing the
hostages. According to the proposal, the U.N. commis sion would
spend about two weeks in Iran gathering inf o rmation before
submitting a report to the U.N transferred to government control
and eventually released, although the timetable for their release
was an open question. The commis sion's work was to include
interviews with the hostages during which it was t o determine
whether all fifty hostages were in the embassy and were in good
health. Washington maintained that the hostages should be released
when the commission completed its work in Tehran. However,
Khomeini, the Revolutionary Council and even Bani-Sad r refused to
admit that there was a direct linkage between the commission's
operation and the release of the hostages instead describing the
commission as a '!fact-finding mission By mid-FebruaGy, an
ambiguous !'gentlemen s agreement had The hostages were t o be Once
the commission returned to New York to report to Waldheim two
previously prepared public statements would be made public in which
the two governments would make general admissions of past mistakes.
The Iranians would acknowledge their error in h o lding the
hostages in violation of international law and the Americans would
acknowledge Iran's past grievances, including an admission of
American intervention in Iran, and would take note of Iran's legal
right to try to recover the Shah's assets Bani-Sa d r had stated on
February 2 that the Shah need not be returned in order to resolve
the crisis, and the militants had insisted that the Shah must be
returned until February 12 when they announced that they would
defer to Khomeini's wishes on the matter Unit e d States was also
expected to promise that it would not interfere in Iranian affairs
in the future The In spite of the fact that the timing of the
hostages' release and the very function of the U.N. commission
itself were subject to differing interpretati o ns in Washington
and Tehran, the nebulous initiative gained momentum throughout
early February. At the 22 beginning of February, Bani-Sadr meted
out harsh criticism of the militants ccupying the embassy,
castigating them as disruptive l'childrenll who had tried to set
themselves up as a Ifgovernment within a government.Il He took
action to reduce their influence by barring them from automatic
access to the state radio and television network.
Bani-Sadr's power was clearly on the upswing in the wake of his c
lear-cut victory in the January 25 presidential elections with 76
percent of the votes cast. Although his latitude was significantly
constrained by the Islamic Republican Party, which was preparing to
compensate for its loss in the presidential election b y attempting
to sweep the upcoming parliamentary elec tions, Bani-Sadr was the
political beneficiary of Khomeini's hospitalization in late January
heart ailment, and reportedly temporarily free from the extremist
influence of members of his personal Khomei n i acted to strengthen
Bani-Sadr's hand, possibly in order to leave Iran with firm
leadership in the event of his own death. In early February
Khomeini appointed Bani-Sadr to be Chairman of the Revolutionary
Council and in late February he unexpectedly app o inted him to be
commander-in-chief of Iran's armed forces. Although Bani-Sadr
claimed on February 13 that the Ayatollah had approved his "secret
plan" for the release of the hostages, subsequent events made it
clear that Khomeini's support was less than t o tal Suffering from
an undisclosed On February 23, the day that the U.N. commission
arrived in Iran, Khomeini abruptly changed the ground rules of the
hostage question by announcing that the Majlis would determine the
condi tions for the release of the hos t ages Parliamentary
elections were scheduled in two rounds on March 14 and May 9
Despite this ominous reversal, the Carter Administration's reaction
was mild. President Carter was optimistic 1 am not cast into the
depths of despair I think progress is bein g made One Admini
stration official admitted that In effect we're proceeding as
though the Khomeini statement was never made Evidently, the White
House was willing to settle for the transfer of the hostages to
government control in the apparent hope that t h e government would
be easier to deal with than the militants. The commission set about
fulfilling,the first part of its mandate, which was to hear Iran's
grievances against the Shah and allegations of U.S complicity in
the Shah's purported crimes, but whe n it tried to fulfill the
second part of its mandate, which included visiting the hostages it
became clear that Bani-Sadr was unable to deliver on his promises.
For days the militants refused to allow the commmission to visit
the hostages. Bani-Sadr and Gh otbzadeh, under attack from
fundamentalist newspapers, publicly denied that there was any
direct linkage between the commission's investigation and the
release of the hostages or that there was any ''point certain" at
which the hostages would be freed. Th e situation improved briefly
on March 5 when Khomeini sent his son Ahmad to the embassy with a
message believed to be an order to hand over the hostages to the 23
Revolutionary Council. The following day the militants announced
that they would relinquish c u stody of the hostages as a result of
intolerable government pressure.Il In Washington, President Carter
let it be known that if the transfer was completed success fully,
he would respond by expressing regret and concern over the course
of America's past r elations with Iran, in an attempt to satisfy
President Bani-Sadr's demand for American self-criticism.
However, the situation deteriorated further on March 8 when the
unpredictable Khomeini delphically announced that he would remain
silent about the propos ed transfer, a seemingly innocuous
statement which immediately led the militants to accuse Foreign
Minister Ghotbzadeh of having lied to them when he said that he had
obtained the ayatollah's approval for the transfer. The militants
subsequently returned to their previous stance, refusing both to
relinquish control of the hos'tages or to permit the U.N commission
to see them.
Despite last-minute pleas from Ghotbzadeh, and the fact that the
U.S. also favored a'delay, the commissioners decided they had
endured enough personal humiliation at the hands of the Iranians
and decided to leave Tehran on March 11 after seventeen confusi n g
days in Iran, their mission rendered impossible by the irreconcil
able differences of rival Iranian power centers locked in a
byzantine struggle for political dominance. When the commission
returned to New York, Secretary-General Waldheim declared that i ts
task had been suspended but not terminated and made it clear that
the commission would issue no report until it had completed its
assigned responsibilities, which included contacting all of the
hostages ECONOMIC SANCTIONS On March 13, Bani-Sadr indicat e d that
he favored congressional hearings on America's role in Iran under
the Shah, a proposal made in November by Congressman George Hansen.
While the Carter Administration rejected this proposal, House
Banking Committee Chairman Henry Reuss signalled his willingness to
take up the suggestion if it would lead to the freeing of the
hostages.
March 25 the White House hardened its position and sent Bani-Sadr a
personal message which set March 31 as a deadline for the transfer
of control over the hostages and threatened unspecified action if
the deadline (later extended to April 1) expired without its terms
being met On On March 29, the Iranian news agency made public a
concllia tory letter from Carter to Khomeini that allegedly
referred to the !'understandabl e reaction of Iranian youth," which
White House spokeman Jody Powell ambiguously disavowed, saying:
Ilmessages may or may not have been transmitted This is a period of
some ferment It turned out that the conciliatory message had been
concocted by Ghotbzade h from oral representations made by Villalon
on behalf of the United States, summarizing what Villalon took to
be the U.S. position on Bani-Sadr's demands for self-criticism. 24
This confusing episode was yet another example of how the Carter
Administratio n's penchant for unorthodox, amateurish diplomacy had
backfired on it.
On April 1, Bani-Sadr indicated that the Revolutionary Council
would accept control of the hostages if President Carter made a
formal promise to refrain from Ilresorting to any propagan da or
"making any provocationut until the Majlis had been formed and
reached its decision on the hostages In an early morning press
conference that same day, just before the polls opened for the
Wisconsin primary, President Carter characterized Bani-Sadr' s
statement as !la positive step" and postponed the imposition of
economic sanctions yet again.
On April 3, the Revolutionary Council, dominated by the Islamic
Republican Party, voted in principle to approve the transfer of the
hostages, but warned that Pr esident Carter's reassurances were not
firm enough and that the transfer could therefore not yet take
place Two days later, Carter informed the Iranians, through Swiss
intermediaries, that there would be no further clarifications and
informed European all i es that if no transfer took place by April
7, he would take stronger measures against Iran. On April 6, the
Revolutionary Council reached an impasse on the question of the
transfer and decided to defer to Khomeini's final consideration. On
April 7, Khomei n i's office announced that Vhe.hostages and the
embassy will remain in the hands of the students until the
formation of the Majlis.Il That same day.President Carter,
maintaining that !!The Iranian government itself can no longer
escape responsibility by hi d ing behind the militants at the
embassy,Il announced the following measures 1. The breaking of
diplomatic relations with Iran (only the second time that the U.S.
had initiated a formal break since Cuba in 1961, the other being
the Republic of China 15 mon t hs earlier 2. The imposition of an
economic embargo of all exports to Iran except food and medicine 3.
The inventory of the $8 billion of frozen Iranian govern ment
assets 4. The cancellation of all visas issued to Iranians for
entry into the United State s and the denial of future visas
Ilexcept for compelling and proven hiunanitarian reasons or where
the national interest of our country requires On April 17, the
President escalated pressures on Iran further by 1 2 3 4 25 Banning
all imports from Iran.
Prohibiting the travel of U.S. citizens to Iran (except for
journalists).
Releasing impounded military equipment, ordered by Iran for use by
U.S. forces or for sale to third countries.
Making preparations to request from Congress the authority to use
the $8 billion of frozen Iran funds to pay repara tions to the
hostages and their families and to reimburse the U.S. armed forces
for the costs incurred responding to the crisis.
The imposition of sanctions,'like most of Washington's actions up
to that point, w as largely symbolic in nature. heri can commerce
with Iran had long since been reduced to negligible proportions by
the freeze on Iranian assets and the refusal of American
longshoremen and the Brotherhood of Railway and Airlines Clerks to
load ships and p lanes bound for Iran. Acting Secretary of State
Warren Christopher outlined the rationale for the sanc tions in his
appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on May 8
Iranian equation is to establish one unalterable constant: as long
as the hostage situation continues, things will get worse for the
Iranian people Our purpose in the constantly shifting while this
was indeed an important point to make to the Iranians it was a
point which would have had a greater impact if it had been made
much earlier in the crisis instead of 155 days after the seizure of
the embassy. By continually postponing the imposition of sanctions,
the White House gave the Iranians time to adjust to the measures
and diversify their sources of imports wherever possible. M
oreover, the constant delays undermined the sense of urgency which
Washington wished to convey both to Iran and to America's allies.
The European allies, relatively more dependent on Iran for oil and
trade than was the United States, were loathe to jeopar dize their
economic stake in Iran for an American administration which was
renowned for its "Carter shocks" sudden policy shifts engineered
without any warning, let alone any meaningful consideration of how
the interests of allies would be affected.
The E uropeans considered U.S. policy toward Iran to be poorly
conceived, poorly defined, poorly implemented and overly politi
cized by the ongoing presidential campaign. However, once the White
House had irreversibly committed itself to economic sanctions the-
E uropean allies reluctantly fell into line on April 22 deciding to
imposed phased economic and diplomatic sanctions on Iran which
included an immediate ban on new contracts and a total embargo on
all exports unless !!decisive progress was made by May 17. 2 6 When
the Europeans met May 18 in Naples to decide upon the second phase
of sanctions, they watered down the April 22 pledge ostensibly in
anger over American "deception" concerning the attempted hostage
rescue mission, and exc.luded from the embargo all c ontracts
signed before November 4. By one estimate, these sanctions would
p4ly affect 8 percent of Europe's $1.1 billion in trade with Iran.
The British, disillusioned by the ineffective fifteen-year embargo
of Rhodesia, diluted their sanctions even furth e r due to a revolt
in the House of Commons several of the "sanctions-busting" experts
who prospered from Rhodesia's economic isolation are reygrted to
have set up shop in Bahrain, a major entrepot for Iran Incidentally
Given the half-hearted European respo n se, the trans-shipment of
embargoed goods from Bahrain and Dubai, the recent upsurge in
Iranian trade with Soviet bloc countries and the chaos which has
already paralyzed the Iranian economy, the U.S. economic sanctions
on balance, will be more important f or political and psychological
reasons than for economic reasons THE RESCUE MISSION On April 24,
President Carter initiated a rescue mission which was subsequently
aborted when three out of eight RH-53 a* helicopters assigned to
the mission broke down ove r the Iranian desert in the first stage
of the operation.. During the withdrawal of the ninety-man ''Blue
Light" commando force, eight men were killed and five injured when
a helicopter and a C-130 transport plane collided in the darkness.
Because it was f e ared that the other four helicopters might also
have been damaged in the colli- sion, the remaining personnel
embarked on five transport planes leaving behind five helicopters,
the wreckage of the accident the bodies of the eight dead and
papers pertainin g to subsequent stages of the operation While the
rescue operation was boldly conceived, the intoler ably high rate
of equipment failure and American dead made its execution a
military embarrassment (The Economist bewailed the Carterian
incompetence" of th e operation Because the demon strated ability
to effectively utilize military force is a prime component of
national power (especially for a country such as the United States,
which has made extensive commitments all over the world to
underwrite the securi t y of its allies), the aborted rescue
mission has also generated unhealthy political fallout for
Washington 14. David Fourquet European Community Scowls as it
Starts Iran Embargo 15. Strategy Week, July 7, 1980, p. 3 Christian
Science Monitor, May 23, 1980 , p. 10 27 The debacle in the desert
is likely to undermine the confi dence of troubled pro-Western
Persian Gulf states in the reliabil ity of American military power
in general and in the effectiveness of the "Carter Doctrine1! in
particular. Moreover, th e timing of the raid itself, led to
unfavorable political repercussions which further strained the
Atlantic alliance. The raid came only three days after the European
Community had voted to apply phased sanctions under the impression
that such sanctions wo uld delay the need for an American military
response. The Europeans once again felt misled by the Carter
Administration, and resented being taken for granted and
manipulated without being consulted on matters which affected their
national interests.
The op eration itself had been on the drawing boards since
November. The original plan reportedly called for a larger force of
600 men and 30 helicopters. However, the strong force plan was
scaled down, apparently because a smaller operation was perceived
to be l ess provocative to Iran's neighbors, more manage able and
more politically acceptable at home. Many analysts later criticized
the small size of the force, the lack of backup forces and the
narrow margin for error which the lack of adequate redundancy impo
sed on the local commanders. Noted strategist Edward Luttwak
suggested that military planners may have been influenced by
presidential meddling in the planning process.
Pentagon consultant Steven Canby, a former Army officer, was
critical of the poor coord ination among the military services the
fuzzy lines of authority during the operation and the overly
elaborate communications system that magnified the role of the
White House and reduced the leadership role of the local
commanders.
A secret report prepar ed by the staff of the Senate Armed Services
Committee for the ranking Republican, Senator John Tower, concluded
that tlmajor erfgrs'l were made in the planning and execution of
the operation. In addition, the report cited insufficient training,
inadequat e equipment maintenance, poor contigency planning and
tlfragmentation of command responsibilityll as reasons for the
failure. other analysts, noting that the helicopters involved had
been extensively pampered by a reinforced maintenance group on
board the a ircraft carrier Nimitz, publicly wondered how
effectively less experienced personnel would be able to service and
operate front-line weapon systems in a future conflict. On August
23 a military review panel organized by the Pentagon reported that
excessiv e secrecy undermined the planning rehearsals and execution
of the operation.
Perhaps the most damaging critique of the aborted rescue mission
was offered by Jeffrey Record, senior fellow at the Institute for
Foreign Policy Analysis. In view of the Ilprofound mistrust of
military power in general" demonstrated by the Carter 16. Ric h ard
Burt Major Mistakes on Iran Mission Noted in Report New York Times,
June 6, 1980, p. Al 28 Administration in its first three years in
office and its Ifno less profound hesitancy to wield power in
defense of threateneC;i interests during the course of t he hostage
confrontation, Record wrote 1s it illogical to assume that an
administration with a record of demonstrable nervousness in
contemplating the use of force would, when force is needed, be
niggardly in supplying it as well as vulnerable to losinp7i t s
nerve when force is actually in the process of being used that the
White House aborted the misfdon due to Soviet detection and
interference with the operation There has also been speculation
Despite the unproductive results of the aborted raid and the r e
signation of his Secretary of State, President Carter, at one
point, pronounced the operation to be an Ilincomplete success11 and
at another point declared that the crisis was Italleviated to some
degree. However, although the raid had llalleviatedfl imme d iate
domestic pressures on his administration to do something concrete
on behalf of the hostages, it had accomplished little for the
hostages themselves. while Secretary of Defense Harold Brown
refused to rule out another rescue attempt, the prospects for such
a mission were extremely poor given the fact.that the mili tants
have dispersed the hostages among many cities. In the months since
the failed rescue mission, the White House has made no discernible
policy initiative to resolve the crisis, aside from signalling its
continued willingness to resume the !!package deal" arrangement
entailing the U.N. commission, which was previ ously sabotaged by
the Iranians.
At this point, American policy seems to have been reduced to a
strategy of waiting for events to run their course and hoping for
the best. The United States has allowed itself to be maneu vered
into a position where it does little but react to the latest press
release from Tehran: a sad state of affairs for a world power, let
alone a superpower THE I RANIAN REACTION TO THE RAID The Iranian
reaction to the aborted rescue mission was relatively subdued.
Ghotbzadeh called the rescue attempt an "act of war," but warned
the militants at the embassy not to act flnervously.ll (The
militants had repeatedly th r eatened to kill the hostages if the
U.S. intervened militarily The hardline religious members of the
government, including the Ayatollah Beheshti, were Wnusually quiet
Defense Minister Mustafa Shamran said, for the first time, that the
hostages should be released, presumably acutely aware of the
vulnerability of Iran to further American military pressures. For
the most part, the 17. Jeffrey Record Military Reputation,
Political Nerve and Desert 1 18. See: Strategy Week, May 19, 1980,
p 1.
Wall Street Journ al, May 8, 1980, p. 25 29 rescue attempt appears
to have been a sobering experience for the Iranians. However, a
study by the Congressional Research Service concluded that the
mission had contributed to the deteriorating domestic political
ppgition of Ira nian moderates, including President Bani-Sadr.
Khomeini attibuted the ttvictorylt over the Americans to Allah and
reminded the Iranian people of Allah's unequivocal support for
Iran's Islamic revolution. Significantly, he warned that if the
United States u sed military force against Iran, the militants
would kill the hostages and Iran would stop the flow of oil through
the Straits of Hormuz In view of the fact that 1 Khomeini's
statement virtually gives the militants advance justi fication for
reprisals aga i nst the hostages, and 2) assuring the undisturbed
flow of Persian Gulf oil to the industrialized West is perhaps
America's most vital interest in the entire Middle Eastern region,
Khomeini's double threat .is a formidable deterrent to U.S.
military action as long as the hostages remain unharmed.
Suddenly confronted with the possibility of armed retribution the
militants reacted by'dispersing the hostages to major cities around
Iran. This move entails increased risks for the hostages since it
breaks the bon d of shared experience between the hostages as a
group, and the militants as a group, and exposes the hostages to
the potential wrath of local groups in their new surroundings the
militants claim that an unidentified gunman fired upon the house
holding th e hostages in Mashad On the other hand, the dispersal of
the hostages also lowers the profile of the militants and reduces
their ability to influence the day-to-day affairs of Iranian
political life. This could make Bani-Sadr's task easier by
dissipating t he atmosphere of revolutionary militancy which the
tlstudentstl continually sought to impose on Tehran.
Another significant repercussion of the rescue mission was the
discredit which it brought upon the Iranian armed forces.
Not only had they been unable to detect or intercept the raiders
but the Iranian Air Force had mysteriously strafed the helicopters
destroying them before all the secret documents had been removed
killing a commander of the Pasdaran in the process. The officer
corps was suspected of r etaining a lingering loyalty to the Shah
and of harboring pro-American sympathies developed in the course of
training programs in the United States.
The prominent role which the American agents were to play in the
final stages of the operation fanned suspi cions about fifth
columnists The growing strength of several Iranian exile groups in
neighboring Iraq, as well as Europe, had already caused 19. See
IRAN: Consequences of the Abortive Attempt to Rescue the American
Hostages," Iran Task Force, Foreign Affa i rs and National Defense
Division Congressional Research Service, May 2, 1980. 30 such
rumors to develop Bani-Sadr contributed to the atmosphere of
paranoia by claiming that the United States had infiltrated a force
of American and Iranian saboteurs into t h e country to subvert the
government In midoJuly, the government disclosed an alleged plot by
Iranian air force personnel to assassinate Khomeini and stage a
coup d'etat seventh coup attempt in six months Bani-Sadr claimed
that this was the At present, it i s unclear whether segments of
the Iranian armed forces have actually attempted to seize control
of the country or whether the fundamentalists are merely playing up
the threat of a coup in order to justify the purge of pro-Western
military officers. Howeve r, the continuing turmoil within the
ranks of the military is symptomatic'of a wider struggle for
control of all Iranian institutions being waged between the Islamic
fundamentalists and the secular moderates.
IRANIAN DOMFSTIC DEVELOPMENTS From the beginning, the fate of the
hostages has been in extricably intertwined with the-course of
Iranian domestic politics.
As prominent symbols of American power in a country undergoing a
xenophobic revolutionary backlash against western influences, the
hostages have b ecome imbued with a highly charged political
symbolism which makes them a factor to be manipulated by contend
ing Iranian political groups presidency in late January, Beheshti's
Islamic Republican Party IRP) has sought to undermine his political
position t hrough veiled attacks in client newspapers, campaigns to
discredit his government appointees and, more recently, outright
criticism of the President himself Since Bani-Sadr's election to
the The Ayatollah Beheshti has used the hostages as a tool in his
ef f ort to discredit Bani-Sadr and the Western-educated ItStan
ford Mafia After Bani-Sadr's landslide election victory Beheshti
hardened his own views on the hostage question and blocked
Bani-Sadr's efforts to negotiate a solution in order to dramatize
the Pr e sident's impotence and keep the pot boiling. By sharply
limiting the powers of the presidency, while enhancing the role of
the Prime Minister, securing IRP control over the state apparatus
and attaining IRP domination of the Majlis Beheshti is working to
reduce Bani-Sadr to a figurehead.
Although he commands considerable popular support, Bani-Sadr has
proved an inept politician unable to translate his popular appeal
into real'political power. A soft-spoken intellectual more
comfortable with political theor ies than with political power
plays, he has been continually out-maneuvered and overruled by his
fundamentalist political rivals. Bani-Sadr has failed to build a
party organization capable of competing with the network of
politically active mullahs, organ i zed down to village level that
the IRP commands. Because he has had no experience in government,
Bani-Sadr is saddled with a nebulous adminstrative 31 style which
has precluded him from consolidating his control of the state
bureaucracy, let alone the cou n try. His propensity to launch into
long-winded speeches without ensuring adequate follow up on his
orders has earned him the nickname Bani-Harf Son of Talk"
(Bani-Sadr means ''Son of Leader" in Farsi The politically
hamstrung President appears to have bee n worn down in much the
same fashion that Premier Bazargan was in the months before the
embassy seizure. By June the Ayatollah Khomeini had joined the
growing chorus of Bani-Sadr's critics and on June 27 he openly
questioned the effectiveness of the Presid e nt's leadership. On
June 28, the embattled Bani-Sadr felt it necessary to submit a
letter of resignation to the ayatollah, to be accepted whenever
Khomeini came to the conclusion that the president was no longer
capable of ruling. Another manifestation of Bani-Sadr's growing
weakness was his inability to name a like-minded prime minister.
After unsuccessfully offering the job to a number of candidates
including Admiral Madani (an ambitious nationalist who refused to
subject himself to the humiliations whic h he knew the
fundamentalists would impose on Bani-Sadr's choice), and Khomeini's
son (a choice which the ayatollah cooly rejected), Bani-Sadr
nominated IRP member Mostafa Mir-Salim as prime minister. Although
this choice was said to be an indication of Ba n i-Sadr's
willingness to compromise with his fundamentalist rivals,
Mir-Salim, a maverick IRP member, was not considered to be
sufficiently militant by the IRP leadership. In the second week of
August, President Bani-Sadr was forced to appoint a hard-line
fundamentalist Mohammad Ali Rajai as prime minister, a choice which
was regarded to be a victory for the Islamic fundamentalists.
Throughout the entire hostage affair the Ayatollah Khomeini has
played a crucial but essentially reactive role in Iranian deli
berations concerning the fate of the hostages. In the tradi tion of
Shiite Islamic teachers, Khomeini prefers to hold himself above the
fray, intervening only when forced by events. The Ayatollah's
equivocal attitude allows him to play factions against ea c h
other, thereby maintaining a situation of controlled anarchy or
''balance of powerlessness which maximizes his own influence over
Iran's affairs. His enigmatic silences are frequently punctuated by
delphic pronouncements which are left to others to inte rpret and
implement.
Khomeini has been a major obstacle to the peaceful resolution of
the confrontation from the beginning sanctioned the l1studentll
takeover of the embassy, dismissed Bazargan's provisional
government and blocked Bani-Sadr's proposed trip to speak before
the U.N. Security Council, as well as the President's ''package
deal" agreement in March and the transfer of the hostages to
government control in April. Because the ayatollah views history as
a ''divine ritualll he perceives the hostage i ssue as an
archetypal struggle between good and evil. He has encouraged
Moslems all over the world to rise up against the United States
declaring This is not a struggle between the United States and It
was Khomeini who 32 Iran, it is a struggle between Is lam and
blasphemy Since he himself is ostensibly responsible for
interpreting and promulgat ing God's will, for him compromise is
tantamount to a denial of that will.
For the foreseeable future, the ayatollah looms large in any
scenario for securing the hostages' freedom, given his authority
over the otherwise unbridled militants (recently demonstrated in
his ability to free ailing hostage Richard Queen on July lo), an d
his de facto veto power over the Iranian government. However, if
the zghty-year-old Khomeini I s heart ailment should prove fatal
there have been reports that an ambulance is permanently parked
outside his house in case of emergency it is uncertain that h is
successor could command the obedience of the militants. Although
they have deferred to Khomeinils order to consign responsibility
for resolving the hostage issue to the Majlis, even this could
change in the event of Khomeini's death THE MAJLIS AND TRE HOSTAGES
At present, the major locus for Iranian decision-making regarding
the hostages is the Iranian parliament the Majlis.
The referral of the hostage crisis to the Majlis is not likely to
produce a quick solution of the problem given Iran's hostile ant
i-American mood (a mood which Khomeini and the militants have
recently sought to heighten with their incendiary remarks about the
alleged I'torturel' of pro-Khomeini Iranian demonstrators following
their late July arrest in front of the White House).
The Majlis is a consultative assembly intended,to be a forum for
discussion rather than decision. Few of its members have any
experience in parliamentary procedure or in government to
traditional Islamic custom, a parliament was not set up for
purposes of leg islative representation, but for the purpose of
arriving at a consensus which itself was inspired by God According
The 270 seats in the parliament were supposed to be filled in the
two-stage parliamentary elections held in the spring.
However, there curren tly are an estimated 30 vacancies due to
cancellation of the spring elections in some provinces and the
disqualification of a number of elected candidates for thinly
veiled political reasons (the militants used I1evidencei1 culled
from U.S. Embassy files t o discredit at least six potential
members Ayatollah Beheshti's Islamic Republican Party appears to be
the only effective party organization in the Majlis and is
estimated by one count to control at least 150 votes, including the
votes of an estimated 80 Islamic clerics.
The militant clerics have made it clear that they are in no hurry
to settle the hostage crisis and deliberations could easily extend
into the fall. When the Majlis was convened in early June, neither
President Bani-Sadr in a speech, nor Kh omeini in a letter, even
mentioned the question of the hostages. In its early 33 weeks the
parliament set about organizing itself and chose hardline IFtP
member Hojatolislam Rafsanjani as speaker. Ramadan, the holiest
month in the Islamic calendar (a mont h of mourning and fasting
which began on July 14), has significantly reduced the level of
activity in the fervently religious body, but the pace of
deliberation should pick up again shortly.
When the hostage issue does come to the forefront it is certain t o
generate heated debate and revolutionary Islamic fervor among the
many ambitious members of parliament who are anxious to acquire a
"revolutionary luster" which would enhance their future political
prospects. While aspiring political figures will have c o
nsiderable incentive to mouth virulently anti-American rhetoric,
there will be relatively few incentives which encourage moderation,
especially if the debates become a three-ring media event.
Conciliation is likely to be viewed as a sign of appeasement an d
moral weakness.
The attitude of Beheshti, who commands the single largest voting
bloc, will be crucial to the course of the consensus building
process, as will the ruminations of Khomeini, observing the
deliberations from afar. The pragmatic Beheshti's a ttitude is
likely to be affected by the status of his continuing power
struggle with Bani-Sadr. If the founder of the IRP can reach an
amenable compromise with Bani-Sadr, or if Beheshti can win their
political battle outright consigning the President to t h e role of
a figurehead or forcing his resignation then there is a strong
possibility that Beheshti would function as a restraining influence
in the parliamentary process. Many observer's feel that Beheshti
would be moved to the same conclusion reached by B azargan and
Bani-Sadr constitutes a threat to Iranian civil authority and
isolates Iran internationally at a time when it faces increasing
pressures from Iraq, the Soviet Union and the United States the
rigid revolutionary fanaticism of the militants A po t entially
explosive subordinate question to be decided by the Majlis is the
issue of spy trials for the hostages. While there is no basis in
Islamic law for the trial of diplomats on spying charges (Mohammad
even explicitly ruled out the applica tion of Is l amic justice to
foreign emissaries), Khomeini has invoked the concept of !Ithe
corrupt of the earth people guilty of crimes against God as the
ostensible justification for such trials. Khomeini's threat to
stage spy trials is in part an extension of his l o ng-fought
struggle against extra territoriality In the early sixties, the
ayatollah was infuria ted when the Shah granted American military
personnel a large degree of immunity from prosecution in local
courts. Since the ayatollah has repeatedly demonstra t ed a highly
developed appetite for revenge since his triumphant return to Iran
in February 1979 it is arguable that his inclination to stage spy
trials is at least partially motivated by a desire to avenge the
perceived humiliation suffered by Iran in the name of
extra-territoriality in the past.
Although Khomeini has held back from issuing a direct order for spy
trials, the embassy militants have vehemently advocated bringing
the hostages to llIslamic justice.Il On May 20 the mili tants
warned the members of the soon-to-be convened Majlis that S,ince a
trial of the spies is the demand of the Imam and the nation, if
anyone in the Majlis does not vote for the trial and sentenc ing it
will be clear that he does not speak for the nation.
The Ayatollah Behesht i has indicated that he favors the trial of
at least some of the hostages but has displayed a degree of
flexibility on the issue. Most deputies in the Majlis are believed
to favor trials of some sort, but there have also been suggestions
that in the event of espionage trials, U.S. policy, not the
hostages themselves, would be in the dock. However, at least three
hostage have been identified as CIA agents and it is this group
which faces the greatest danger of serving as scapegoats in
judicial proceedings.
President Bani-Sadr, aware of American threats that spy trials
would have the !!most serious consequences,Il has persistent ly
lobbied against such trials, arguing in June that if the Americans
were to be tried and some were found to be innocent Ilkhen we would
be faced with the question of why they were kept for seven
rnonths.l1 The President has also pointed out that trials involving
legal counsel would raise questions about Ifwhy the foreigners are
accorded such a privilege but others are deprived of it Because his
political power is visibly ebbing Bani-Sadr is unlikely to wield
much influence over the Majlis.
In any event it should be pointed out that the Majlis is far from a
representative body It is significantly more conser vative and more
fervently Islamic than the Iranian body politic taken as a whole
and it does not reflect the political opinions of many Iranian
ethnic minorities, moderate democrats, or Marxist radicals. Any
decision which it reaches on the question of spy trials is likely
to be i nfluenced as much by domestic political considerations as
by legal Ilevidencell supplied by the militants.
At this point, all the United States can do is reaffirm the
dangerous repercussions which spy trials would impose upon Iran and
adopt a low-key postu re vis-a-vis the hostages for the immedi ate
future to minimize the chances that a sudden flare-up of bilateral
tensions would provoke a harsh response by the Majlis on the
question of spy trials.
CONCLUSION The Carter Ahinstration has found itself at the mercy of
a revolution which it had assiduously attempted to accommodate.
Its concilatory efforts to engineer a rapprochement with Iranian
secular moderates heightened the apprehensions of militant Islamic
35 fundamentalists who were fearful that such a reconciliation
would dilute the Islamic q?ntent of their revolution. The ra d ical
Islamic militants who seized the U.S. Embassy were primarily
motivated by domestic political considerations: the desire to abort
the growing detente between Washington and Iranian secular
moderates, to discredit the Bazargan regime, to undercut the a p
peal of radical leftists, and to find a scapegoat which would
restore the revolutionary solidarity of the disintegrating anti
Shah coalition by diverting attention from Iran's mounting internal
problems medical reasons was more of a catalyst and a conveni e nt
pretext for the invasion of the embassy than it was a source of
motivation The entrance of the Shah into the United States for The
White House made several mistakes early in the crisis which have
persistently undermined the American bargaining position throughout
the confrontation. By publicly declaring the safety of the hostages
to be his predominant concern, President Carter in effect made U.S.
options hostage to the increasingly vociferous threats of reprisals
issued by the militants against the capt i ve diplomats When the
Iranians were confronted with a similar situation in early May, due
to the seizure of their London embassy by three Iranian Arabs, they
downplayed their concern for the twenty hostages taken there and
proclaimed that the hostage Iran i an diplomats were "ready to die
as martyrs for the revolu tion By initially ruling out the use of
force, the President unilaterally reduced the perceived risks which
the militants forced other Iranians to bear on behalf of their
venture, thereby reducing d omestic pressures on the militants to
moderate their demands. By allowing the hostages to become in his
own words an "absolute total obsession," President Carter in effect
made himself the fifty-fourth American hostage and increased the
perceived value of the other hostages to the Iranians.
Once the situation at the embassy had stabilized, the White House
began a marathon round of 'Iroller coaster diplomacy" which
alternately raised and dashed the hopes of the American people in a
willy-nilly manner reject ed outright the bending of principles to
negotiate a hostage release, the Administration allowed itself to
be lured into a diplomatic labyrinth constructed along the
preferred lines of the Iranians. In the course of negotiations,
President Carter mani fes t ed an enormous capacity to be misled by
the Bani-Sadr/Ghotbzadeh Nice Guy/Tough Guy" routine. He repeatedly
made concessions in advance to the Iranians without concrete
guarantees that he would extract concessions from them in return As
a result, the Whit e House made one retreat after another,
sacrificing its own bargain ing leverage and the President's
already depleted credibility in the process Instead of taking a
clearcut stand that First, the United State implicitly accepted the
concept of an internati o nal commission sitting in judgment of the
policies of past American presidents. Then it agreed to staff the
commis sion with Third World and leftist figures sympathetic to the
Iranian revolution. Next, it accepted the proposal, which it had 36
previously e xplicitly rejected, that the commission.would first
examine Iranian complaints before addressing the plight of the
hostages. Once committed to such a shaky venture, it had little
choice but to accept the principle that the ultimate release of the
hostages would be determined by a parliament that had not yet been
elected. By making a l'gen.tleman s agreement" with notorious ly
unreliable authorities, the President mistakenly relied on the good
will of a revolutionary movement that made no effort to disguise
its unequivocal hatred of the United States and of the President
himself.
The questionable judgment displayed in blindly negotiating with the
chimera of an Iranian government that stood little change of
negotiating a diplomatic solution to the confrontati on without
discrediting itself in the process was also displayed in the
President's choice of diplomatic emissaries. Over a period of
several months, the White House assembled a motley group of amateur
diplomats.ranging from Ramsey Clark, the.breast-beati n g unguided
American who later served as America's self-appointed
representative at the !'Crimes of America" conference in early
June, to Hamilton Jordan, who was previously better known for
causing diplomatic incidents than for his skills in resolving the
m. Bourget and Villalon, foreign figures sympathetic to Iran were
chosen to function in the highly sensitive role of intermedi aries.
Even Billy Carter was reportedly called upon to work through his
Libyan contacts, at the suggestion of the Mrs. Carter.
The Iranians must have regarded such a reliance on unorthodox tag
team diplomacy as a sign of desperation a conclusion which was not
likely to lead them to soften their demands.
The Adminstration's diplomatic strategy was to unite the world
against Iran and to divide Iran against itself. However the
President failed to effectively mobilize America's allies to
maximize multilateral pressures on Tehran. Lengthy negotiations
dissipated the sense of urgency and outrage while the on-again
off-again status of for m al sanctions did little to reassure U.S
allies of the steadfastness of American purpose. European allies
were hesitant to follow Washington's policy zig-zags, given their
previous experiences with sudden "Carter shocks and their suspi
cion that the Presid ent was tailoring his response to Iran to fit
his domestic political needs.
The Amercan effort to divide Iran against itself was under mined by
Washington's obsessive search for accommodation with Iranian
moderates, a policy which gave Iranian hardliners a mple ammunition
to discredit those who favored compromise. The Iranians also made a
concerted effort to divide America against itself first by
releasing blacks and women hostages in an obvious attempt to
disrupt the unity of American public opinion, and t h en by
encouraging the flow of a stream of radical American dissidents
liberal ideologues, sympathetic academics and pacifist clerical
activists to Tehran. The Iranians hoped to manipulate these
visitors for propaganda purposes within Iran itself, the inte r na
tional community in general, and the United States in particular.
37 On one such visit, William Sloane Coffin went so far as to
compare the Carter Administration's handling of the hostage crisis
with the American bombing of Vietnam. This rhetorical flo u rish
must have greatly pleased the Iranians, some of whom were
apparently convinced that, given enough time, a large number of
Americans would protest the policies of their government with
respect to Iran in much the same fashion that they had protested t
h e policies of their government in Vietnam The Carter
Administration's handling of the Iranian revolution and the hostage
crisis has unsettled American allies, particularly in the Middle
East, Both the Israelis and the moderate Arab regimes of the
Persian G ulf were troubled by Washington's passive acceptance of
the fall of the Shah, a long-time ally, and its failure to respond
forcefully to a direct attack on its own citizens. Given the slow
motion American response (economic sanctions were not formally imp
o sed until 155 days after.the seizure of the embassy and the
rescue mission was not launched until 172 days afterward), the
timeliness and effectiveness of a U.S. military response in the
event of a future crisis has been called into question. Moreover,
in a region where the concept of national honor is taken extremely
seriously, American restraint is increasingly interpreted as
American weakness.
The hostages have been trapped in an Iranian morality play of good
versus evil in which they have come to symbo lize past U.S. policy
toward Iran. Because of this highly-charged political symbolism,
they have become a factor in the ongoing internal Iranian struggle.
They will be released only when the Iranians come to the conclusion
that it is in their own interest to release them I The hostages are
steadily losing their value in Iranian eyes. Because the Shah has
died, they no longer can entertain the far-fetched hope that the
United States would deliver him to stand trial. They have already
extracted considerable p ropaganda mileage from the hostage venture
and can not hope to extract much more either at home or abroad. Spy
trials would provide marginal propaganda benefits but would entail
considerable risks if the Carter Administration's threats of
reprisals retain a sufficient degree of credibility.
Most importantly, the domestic political goals served by the
occupation of the embassy have been attained to a significant
extent. regime is showing signs that it soon may follow. The
embassy seizure allowed the Islamic fundamentalists to outflank
the.
Marxist left by monopolizing the popular anti-American soapbox and
bought them time to stage a Ilcultural revolution to drive the
Marxists out of the universities as well as other institutions As
long as they held the Ame rican hostages, the fundamentalists had
reason to believe that they could count on the support of the
Soviet-controlled Tudeh Communist party. Now that the Fedayeen and
Mujaheddin have been compelled to restrict their political The
Bazargan regime has bee n swept away and the Bani-Sadractivities,
the fundamentalists have gained a greater degree of latitude to
deal with the Tudeh and do not need the hostages as insurance.
The Islamic fundamentalists will also have steadily growing
incentives to negotiate an end to the hostage impasse. Now that
they have humbled.the secular moderates and eliminated the possi
bility of a rapprochement with the United States that would allow
ltanti-Islamiclt Western influence and values to ltre-contaminatett
Iran, they will be i ncreasingly drawn to the realization that
Iranian leftist groups and their Soviet patrons are their chief
rivals for ultimate control of Iran. The Soviet war against Moslem
insurgents in Afghanistan and reports of Soviet subversion within
Iran (there are already reports that Soviet Azerbaijanis are
infiltrating across the border into the Iranian province of
Azerbaijan), should serve to further underscore this threat.
In order to defuse the appeal of Marxist economic programs to
disgruntled Iranians who are becoming increasingly frustrated by
high unemployment, high inflation and economic chaos, the Islamic
fundamentalists will be subject to growing domestic pressure to
reverge Western trade sanctions and recover Iran's frozen assets.
This action could only occur after the hostages had been released
(while the economic sanctions are relatively minor factors
contributing to Iran's economic malaise, Iranians have demonstrated
a marked tendency to blame all their problems on the .United States
a perception whic h in this case would redound to America-'s
benefit to the logic of such a move, the shrewd Ayatollah Beheshti
is likely to appreciate its benefits, especially once he has
consoli dated his growing political influence within the new
Iranian political order. Given his dominant role in the Islamic
Republican Party and his strengthening hammerlock on Iranian
political life the Ayatollah Beheshti looms large on the horizon as
the key man to deal with in future efforts to free the hostages
Although Khomeini may b e impervious.
If Beheshti should require additional motivation to release the
hostages, he should be made aware that the United States will
become increasingly tempted to offer covert support to
anti-Khomeini exile organizations and ethnic separatist group s
unless a satisfac tory solution to the hostage problem can be
worked out. Military options are likely to prove to be of limited
effectiveness given the strong emphasis placed on martyrdom by the
Shiite revolutionary forces. Moreover, military sanctions w ould
entail the risk of reprisals against the hostages and the risk of
disrupting the vital flow of oil exports from the Persian Gulf.
There are 42 million Shiites living around the rim of the Gulf and
a signifi cant number are scattered throughout the oi l fields of
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait as well as Iran. If provoked to sabotage
Persian Gulf oilfields, they might also be assisted by the Palesti
nian diaspora in the Gulf. However, military options should not be
ruled out, if only to maintain the strength of the American
bargaining position and impress upon the Iranians the certainty of
military reprisals if the hostages are harmed. 39 By one count
there are 282 U.S. embassies and diplomatic posts abroad staffed
with almost 14,000 foreign service personnel in 144 host countries.
In the final analysis, while the United States owes much to the
hostages it does not owe them a deal which would in any way
jeopardize the future safety of American diplomatic personnel
stationed abroad. The United States cannot afford to band its
principles in order to free the hostages.
Such an action would only make overseas Americans hostage to the
ambitions of a proliferating number of terrorist groups all over
the world in the 1980s and beyond.
James A. Phillips Policy Analyst