Iran marks 1979 US Embassy takeover amid nationwide protests
Iran on
Friday marked the 1979 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran as its theocracy
faces nationwide protests after the death of a 22-year-old woman earlier
arrested by the country’s morality police.
Iranian
state-run television aired live feeds of various commemorations around the
country, with some in Tehran waving placards of the triangle-shaped Iranian
drones Russia now uses to strike targets in its war on Ukraine. But while
crowds in Tehran looked large with chador-wearing women waving the Islamic
Republic’s flag, other commemorations in the country appeared smaller, with
only a few dozen people taking part.
Iran’s
hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi, speaking to people gathered in front of the
former U.S. Embassy, criticized those protesting the theocracy.
“Anyone
taking the smallest step in the direction of breaching security and riots, must
know that they are stepping in the direction of enemies of the Islamic
Revolution,” he said. “Americans think they can execute the plan they carried
out in some countries like Syria and Libya here. What a false dream!”
Demonstrators
also waved effigies of French President Emmanuel Macron and Saudi Crown Prince
Mohammed bin Salman. Signs and chants from the crowd called out: “Death to
America! Death to Israel!”
The
demonstrations that have convulsed Iran for more than six weeks after the death
of Mahsa Amini mark one of the biggest challenges to the country’s clerical
rulers since they seized power in the 1979 Islamic Revolution. At least 300
protesters have been killed and 14,000 arrested since the unrest began,
according to a Human RIghts Activists in Iran, a group that’s been monitoring
the crackdown on demonstrators.
Hard-liners
within Iran long have bussed government workers and others into such Nov. 4
demonstrations, which have a carnival-like feel for the students and others
taking part on Taleqani Street in downtown Tehran.
This year,
however, it remained clear Iran’s theocracy hopes to energize its hardline
base. Some signs read “We Are Obedient To The Leader,” referring to 83-year-old
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has final say over all matters of
state in the country. The weekslong demonstrations have included cries calling
for Khamenei’s death and the overthrow of the government.
The annual
commemoration marks when student demonstrators climbed over the fence at the
embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, angered by then-President Jimmy Carter allowing the
fatally ill Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to receive cancer treatment in the
United States.
The students
soon took over the entire, leafy compound. A few staffers fled and hid in the
home of the Canadian ambassador to Iran before escaping the country with the
help of the CIA, a story dramatized in the 2012 film “Argo.”
The 444-day
crisis transfixed America, as nightly images of blindfolded hostages played on
television sets across the nation. Iran finally let all the captives go the day
Carter left office on Ronald Reagan’s inauguration day in 1981.
That enmity
between Iran and the U.S. has ebbed and surged over the decades since. The U.S.
and world powers reached a nuclear deal with Iran in 2015 that drastically
curtailed its program in exchange for the lifting of international sanctions.
However, then-President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the deal in
2018, sparking years of tensions since.
Late
Thursday in California at a rally before the U.S. midterm elections, President
Joe Biden also stopped his speech to address a crowd that held up cellphones
displaying the message “FREE IRAN.”
“Don’t
worry, we’re gonna free Iran,” Biden said in an aside during a campaign rally
for Democratic Rep. Mike Levin. He added, “They’re gonna free themselves pretty
soon.”
In his
speech Friday, Raisi referenced Biden’s comments.
“Maybe he
said this because of a lack of concentration...He said we aim to liberate
Iran,” Raisi said. “Mr. President! Iran was liberated 43 years ago, and it’s
determined not to become your captive again. We will never become a milk cow.”
Biden had
said he was willing to have the U.S. rejoin the nuclear deal, but talks have
broken down. Since the protests began in mid-September, the American position
appears to have hardened with officials saying restoring the deal isn’t a
priority amid the demonstrations.
On Friday,
some protesters waved giant placards of atoms as a reminder that Iran now
enriches uranium to its closer than ever to weapons-grade levels.
Nonproliferation experts warn Iran now has enough enriched uranium to make at
least one nuclear weapon if it chose, though Tehran insists its program is
peaceful.