Word: bazargan
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...messages. Bazargan announced publicly his eagerness to have good relations with the U.S. But he soon ran into trouble from Khomeini's revolutionaries, who formed armed bands all over Iran and arrested hundreds of people, trying them on the spot and executing them...
...first week of September, the West German government informed American diplomats that Iran wanted to open negotiations about the hostages through a secret emissary. The agent was Sadegh Tabatabai, a brother-in-law of Khomeini's son Seyyed Achmed and a former Deputy Prime Minister under Mehdi Bazargan...
...early as October 1979, the Algerians were instrumental in setting up an inconclusive meeting between National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and Iran's then Premier Mehdi Bazargan. After the hostages were seized by the militant Iranians, the Tehran government asked Algeria to represent its interests in Washington. Thus a certain logic was involved when Iran, at the urging of Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, last November asked Algerian Foreign Minister Mohammed Ben Yahia to help arrange a hostage deal...
...have a commanding military presence in the area and-above all-the danger to the hostages. Their captors threatened executions at once if the U.S. made any military move to liberate them. Carter had no choice but to negotiate. He tried dealing with moderate Iranian Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan, who seemed to be sympathetic on the day after the seizure of the hostages. Bazargan resigned his office in frustration the day after that, confessing that it was not his government but Khomeini and his followers who held power. Carter dispatched former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and former Foreign Service Officer...
...shah left Iran in January 1979, and the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini took power following a provisional governments headed by Shahpour Bakhtiar and Mehdi Bazargan. Sullivan wrote in the current issue of Foreign Policy that Brezezinski asked him over an open international telephone line "whether I thought I could arrange a military coup against the revolution...