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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Thu Aug 6, 2015, 07:51 AM Aug 2015

Iranian Hostage Crisis: West Germany's Secret Role in Ending the Drama

http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/how-gerhard-ritzel-helped-end-the-iranian-hostage-crisis-a-1045268.html



In 1981, Jimmy Carter said the world could never know West Germany's role in the negotations for the release of 52 hostages from the US Embassy in Tehran. New research sheds light on the important part the country played in ending the crisis.

Iranian Hostage Crisis: West Germany's Secret Role in Ending the Drama
By Klaus Wiegrefe
August 04, 2015 – 05:30 PM

The day after the last day of his presidency, Jimmy Carter flew to Frankfurt to greet 52 American diplomats who had been held as hostages for about a year by radical students in United States Embassy in Tehran. Now they were being attended to in a US Air Force hospital in Wiesbaden, near Frankfurt, and Carter wanted to express his sympathy.

On Jan. 21, 1981, the ex-president had warm, but mysterious, words for his German hosts. At the time, Helmut Schmidt, a member of the center-left Social Democrats, and Hans-Dietrich Genscher, of the liberal FDP, were leading West Germany in the former capital city of Bonn. The Germans, Carter said, "helped us in a way I can never reveal publicly to the world."

The race to apportion credit began only moments after the words about Germany's mysterious role had been uttered. Chancellor Schmidt allowed himself to be celebrated by the daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, which wrote that "Bonn appears to have played a decisive role." Foreign Minister Genscher was lauded by the tabloid Bild, which claimed the "release had been negotiated at night at Genscher's." And Middle East negotiator Hans-Jürgen Wischnewski was praised in the daily Die Welt.

The occupation of the US Embassy and the 444-day hostage situation remains one of the most dramatic events of the post-World War II era. It represented the Western world's first encounter with the radical Shiite movement of Ayatollah Khomeini, which was violating the rules of international law. A mob could be seen burning American flags on the embassy property, and for a time Iran and the US appeared to be on the verge of war. In the end, however, everyone claimed to have helped them to reach a peaceful solution.
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