Today, several hundred militant students attacked the British embassy compound in Tehran, removed the British flag, burned it, and replaced it with Iran’s flag. According to Mehr News, the embassy staff fled through the back door while the students were busy burning framed photos of Queen Elizabeth II and Winston Churchill in the embassy garden. The protesters also allegedly crushed a statue of the late Shah of Iran while chanting “Death to the Shah!” Law Enforcement Forces managed to clear the protesters away from the embassy compound, but according to IRNA a second wave of attacks managed to break through the police lines and seize the embassy.
The students attempting to capture the British embassy subsequently released a statement in which they stress that “seizure of the British embassy has taken place with 33 years of delay… the embassy of the Old Fox should have been seized earlier.” The statement also maintains that the attack was “conducted by revolutionary students,” and that the move had “not been ordered by any organization or institution.”
However, all evidence points to the contrary.
On November 21, the British government imposed new sanctions against Iranian financial institutions, including the Central Bank. The Iranian parliament countered this move by calling for a downgrade in diplomatic relations with Britain. Two days ago, Fars News Agency, which is close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), ran an editorial titled “Is the British Embassy any different than the United States Den of Espionage?” and yesterday leaders of the Student Basij, a component of the IRGC, openly announced that “students will soon seize the embassy of the Old Fox.”
Interestingly, prior to the attack. Basij leaders called the impending seizure of the British embassy the “third revolution.” In official Islamic Republic parlance, the “first revolution” refers to the revolution of 1979, which removed the Shah from power, while the “second revolution” refers to the November 4, 1979, seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran. Thus, the Basij is trying to depict its attack against the British embassy as another turning point in the history of the Islamic Republic.
There are some similarities between the seizure of the U.S. embassy and the attack against the British embassy, and history indeed seems to be repeating itself. However, the repetition seems to be “first as tragedy, then as farce.”
Embracing the seizure of the embassy and hostage taking in 1979, Grand Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini systematically used documents taken from the embassy to purge moderate elements within the revolutionary elites whom the hardliners accused of being American spies. In this way, Khomeini managed to consolidate his power in Iran. However, the hostage affair also resulted in Iran’s diplomatic isolation, which paved the way for Iraq’s invasion of Iran in 1980.
As darkness sinks over Tehran, the Law Enforcement Forces seem to have the embassy compound under control. The regime may believe that the orchestrated attack has intimidated the British government and demonstrated its strength to the Iranian public. The British government and the European Union should convince the regime that it is wrong. Once again the Islamic Republic has shown itself to be an immature and irresponsible country. In response, the mature and responsible regimes of the world should close their embassies in Tehran to teach the regime a lesson.
— Ali Alfoneh is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
I'm sorry, but I really cannot imagine that the British Embassy had a statue of the SHAH in it. Perhaps the "militants" brought their own...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIn any event, we know that the White House no longer has a statue of Churchill.
But Whitehall has one really fine DVD collection of a snot-nosed professor reading his two autobiographies he wrote before age 50.
Talk about objects out of place.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI remember when Britain was a real country filled with real men. This is the kind of thing it used to do to swarthy foreigners that mistreated it's government representatives: External Link
Does Britannia still carry a trident these days? External Link
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI'm not sure the US should be throwing stones when discussing government responses to the seizure of an Iranian embassy.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI don't think the Carter Administration should be throwing stones, no. Luckily I'm not the "US", I'm just me.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseCarter's in the White House again, too.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI whiff a cardigan sweater speech coming, too!
That speech was the first time I ever swore in front of my dad -- the F word, no less. I had an activity in mind for ole Jimmuh.
No spanking, neither. So, that was also my first experience with partisan decision-making!
:)
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe minimum response to the thuggery of a religious fascist tyranny is cutting it off completely from the civilized world. Let's not forget that the American hostage taking was sanctioned by the then zealot terrorist leader, khomeini, and that in a country where people are tortured and murdered in the streets for peacefully protesting against the regime, this act of vandalism and thuggery must have been sanctioned by the regime's current terrorist leaders.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse"Students"? Please, let's dispense with that canard.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseOh, what?
You don't think the Muslim Brotherhood thugs that are taking over Egypt are sufficiently "co-ed" dorm rats, now?
Technically, I suppose, people who are brainwashed by Taliban at madrassas are "students" in some sense. They are "learning".
There is a reason the leftist media sees such people as "students" -- it is called projection.
Most leftists can relate to that brainwashing educational process. It's a prerequisite for a phD these days.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAnd yet, we're continually told by media members that it's the youthful "students" in Iran that are so emphatically pro-Western and pro-Democracy. In fact, its for this reason that we couldn't possibly bomb the Iranian nuke plants because that would needlessly alienate all those youthful supporters of America and the West.
My first tour in Iraq, which was before things went sideways, I couldn't believe how much Western music was played, particularly Western music from the 1980s. Lionel Ritchie in Iraq is like David Hasselhoff in Germany: Ritchie is a god in Iraq. Nope, I'm not making that up. But, as much as the Iraqis liked (and continue to like) some aspects of Western pop-culture, they REALLY hate America - which is seen as a useful tool of the Zionist - Zionists of course are responsible for everything that is bad in Iraq, or any other Middle East country.
Just because kids have access to iTunes and like some Western music, like Jay-Z or whatnot, doesn't mean that they don't hate everything else about the West. Yes, I know that seems counter-intuitive, but it what it is.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThere are only two things that come to mind every time I read about the lunatics running Iran:
1) An evacuation warning issued throughout the country;
2) Tactical nukes.
Or, we can spend fifty more years watching the certifiably insane impinge humanity's ability to coexist. I'd just as soon get this over with.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAs I recall, Khomeini didn't embrace the US embassy takeover right away. He sought to defuse the situation, but as it escalated he quickly tried to get ahead of the story by publicly throwing in with Ahmadinejad and his pals(yes, I think that's him in the photo leading one of our blindfolded hostages out of the building).
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThose aren't "students", and they weren't "students" in 1979. They are the regime's brown shirts, and they do the regime's bidding. It was true when Khomeini was running things, and it is still true today.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse"In response, the mature and responsible regimes of the world should close their embassies in Tehran to teach the regime a lesson."
Ooh! Zap! Well, that'll learn 'em.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseWhat a sad state of affairs the world is in...
In the past, the worlds' mature and responsible regimes would have invaded and burnt their capital to the ground or some other such expeditionary fun.
Can VDH or Derby or even Steyn chime in with what has been done in the past?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseNo, that typically did not happen. Found this earlier today:
Embassies Under Siege : A Review of 48 Embassy Takeovers, 1971-1980
External Link
2/3rds of hostage-takers in those years got away with it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI'm sorry, Colonel. I was not considering 1971 to be "past enough". I was thinking of a time before World War 2. It seems since then the borders of the civilized world have rapidly and decisively retreated. Those statistics do not surprise me at all.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseYeah, no doubt there was more of an as*-kicking mentality around the planet before all the pansies took over.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSavages.
We should make regime change in Iran job #1 (and no, we don't have to use US forces in order to accomplish this).
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse