Word: shah
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Meanwhile, the Shah, recuperating in Panama (Mexico had refused to readmit him), was beyond U.S. jurisdiction. In Paris, a nephew of the Shah was assassinated on orders of Ayatullah Sadegh Khalkhali, the revolution's hanging judge. In Iran and in the U.S., people were digging in for a long haul...
...been Foreign Minister until replaced by the truculent Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, publicly doubted the wisdom of the hostage taking. Now he seemed to be saying, though without much consistency, that the hostages would be released after a five-member U.N. fact-finding commission released its report on the Shah's crimes and the U.S. met Iran's conditions: admission of guilt, recognition of Iran's right to seize the Shah and his assets, and a pledge of noninterference. Ghotbzadeh, on the other hand, was saying that Iran could hold the hostages "more or less forever." The militants repeatedly...
Iranian process servers demanded that Panama deport the gaunt and wasted Shah, who flew to Egypt at the invitation of President Anwar Sadat. In the U.S. at the beginning of April, President Carter called a dawn press conference to say that he saw progress in the hostage crisis-undetected by anyone else-and won the Kansas and Wisconsin primaries that day with a boost from his TV announcement. A week later, Carter ordered the remaining Iranian diplomats out of Washington and five other U.S. cities, imposed an economic embargo on Iran, and said that claims of U.S. firms against Iran...
...could not persuade the newly convened Majlis to act. The summer dragged on. Ramsey Clark defied Carter's half-hearted travel ban and attended a conference in Tehran on "Crimes of America." The militants released Richard Queen, a hostage suffering from multiple sclerosis. On July 27 the Shah died, an event that months before might have been useful but now seemed almost irrelevant to the crisis. Richard Nixon was the only notable American at his Cairo funeral...
...Prime Minister. The letter was the first direct communication between the governments since before the April raid. Khomeini replied, giving conditions for the hostages' release, and for the first time did not mention the necessity of an American apology. The Ayatullah demanded merely the return of the Shah's fortune, the unfreezing of Iranian assets, cancellation of U.S. claims against Iran, and a pledge of noninterference. But a day later, as the Majlis considered appointing a commission to study the hostage issue, the speaker of the assembly, Muslim Hard-Liner Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, insisted that...