| The week of the Rescue Attempt an Admiral came to our ship to brief us on coming events. The Rescue Attempt was still secret,
                           but he informed us that something was   up. He knew he couldn't say, but he did have a great hint.                
 We
                           were all on the flight deck for this formation, and he gave us good praise about how the squadron was flying during ship to
                           ship operations, and then started talking about liberty in Mombassa coming up. He then said, "If nothing happens in the
                           next 5 days, you will be getting liberty in Mombassa on schedule. So, if NOTHING    HAPPENS, expect to hit Mombassa in 5 days."
 
 We all knew what that meant, but exactly what, we did NOT know.
 
 Sadly, this was the result of what
                           we did not know, that a separate force was going in to grab the hostages, and that the mission failed at the first staging
                           point.
 
 
 
 
 US-Iranian Relations and the Hostage Crisis 
 In the Persian Gulf region, Iran was an important ally of the United
                           States. The two nations had common interests relating to the oil industry and security matters evolving from Soviet expansion
                           in the area. However, the regime of the shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, was considered repressive and corrupt by Western
                           standards. Large numbers of devoted Shiite Muslims were vigorously opposed to the western-oriented rule of the shah and were
                           determined to remove him from his throne and establish a fundamentalist Islamic republic.
 After World War II began, Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union became allies to prevent Germany from
                           taking over Iran. Their interest in protecting Iran was not only for Iranian oil, but Iran was also a direct route to the
                           Soviet Union, to which the United States was sending war supplies. In the late summer of 1941, both the Soviet Union and Britain
                           invaded Iran, and the shah was driven into exile. When the United States entered the war in late 1941, it also occupied Iran.
                           The exiled Shah, who died in South Africa in the summer of 1944, was replaced as ruler of Iran by his 22-year-old son, Mohammed
                           Reza Pahlavi, and ruled at the consent of the occupying Allied powers. The young Shah began to court the United States, which
                           favored an independent postwar Iran. After the war, Great Britain and the United States both withdrew their military forces
                           from Iran, but the Soviet Union at first refused to leave the northern provinces, in attempts to get that area to secede from
                           Iran and join the Soviet Union.
 
 
 During the war, an Iranian politician named Mohammed Mossadegh had gradually risen
                           to power, and became prime minister of Iran in 1951, heading a nationalist party that wanted to end all foreign interference
                           in Iranian affairs. As Mossadegh became more and more dictatorial, he soon was competing with the Shah for control of Iran.
                           For support, the Shah relied more and more firmly on the United States. It was not long before many Iranians began complaining
                           about the United States having too much influence in Iranian affairs. What the Iranians did not know was the extent the United
                           States was supporting the shah.
 
 In the spring of 1953, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) made plans to topple
                           Mossadegh from power, claiming the Iranian prime minister was scheming to let the Soviet Union's communists regain much of
                           the old Russian control within Iran. The CIA's plan for getting involved in Iran's internal political affairs was called Operation
                           Ajax. In the spring and early summer of 1953, CIA agents hired mobs of Iranians to stir up trouble throughout the country.
                           The CIA sponsored uprising against Mossadegh and his nationalists began in mid-August, and on August 19 he was forced to flee.
                           He was arrested in flight, and was sentenced to three years in prison.
 
 While the Shah seemed to have triumphed, the
                           strong current of anti-Americanism grew as word began to leak out about the secret role played by the United States in keeping
                           the shah on his throne. The Shah ignored any misgivings his subjects might have had about American intervention. Instead he
                           seemed more determined than ever to stamp out any opposition to his leadership that might remain among his people. The Shah
                           further protected his dictatorial reign by signing oil agreements with several European countries as well as the United States.
                           These agreements assured Iran of more than sufficient income to create economic prosperity.
 
 Unfortunately, most of
                           this money was used by the Shah, his aides, and other wealthy Iranian businessmen before the poor could benefit from any of
                           it.
 
 
 
 Meanwhile, the shah and the United states continued to expand their friendship. Both    military and economic aid were extended
                           to    Iran by the Eisenhower and Kennedy  administrations. When Johnson took over as President, the shah made it clear that
                           Iran   would protect American interests in the  Persian Gulf region. To aid Iran in this role   the United States sent a military
                           mission as  well as continued the military aid. This   eventually led to further misunderstanding  between many Iranians and
                           the United  States.  
 In 1964, the Iranian legislative assembly passed an extremely controversial law that   gave
                           American military personnel serving    there the same immunity from Iranian law that all foreign diplomats enjoyed. This meant
                           that American troops and their officers,    as well as their families, could not be tried for any crimes they may have committed
                           in Iran. Its passage increased the resentment    the average Iranian citizens felt toward all Americans. They felt they were
                           being discriminated against, and that once again a    foreign power was in at least partial control of their government.
 
 One of the people who was most outspoken in opposition to this agreement was the Ayatollah Rhuollah Khomeini. He
                           accused  those who promoted the agreement as traitors, and this accusation included the shah. Because Khomeini was a well-known
                            Muslim religious leader, the shah could not risk having him imprisoned. what he could and did risk was having Khomeini deported
                           from the country and sent into exile in Turkey on November 4, 1964. Khomeini made public his vow to one day even the score
                           not only with the shah but also with the United States. Indifferent to the threats of Khomeini and his followers, the shah
                           continued to maintain control of the country well into the 1970s.
 
 Iranian dissidents lashed out not only at
                           the shah's regime but also at the United States. In the early 1970s, several American  military men were assassinated, and
                           in the mid-1970s, three American civilians were killed in Teheran. An unsuccessful kidnap  attempt was even made on the U.S.
                           Ambassador to Iran, Douglas MacArthur II. Bomb threats were also made against various  American installations, and the offices
                           of the U.S. Information Service and the Peace Corps were actually bombed.
 
 When Richard Nixon became president,
                           he not only continued, but increased the flow of military aid. When Jimmy Carter took  office in 1977, the shah made some
                           effort to install a more liberal government in Iran. He did so due to the increasing unrest  among his people, especially
                           among the Shiite Muslims. In addition, the shah had been informed by his doctors that he was  suffering from possibly incurable
                           cancer. This diagnosis made the shah more concerned about the future of the Pahlavi reign. The teenage heir apparent could
                           not rule effectively without the full support of the Iranian people, not merely the forced     acceptance of yet one more
                           dictatorial head of a police state. The shah's attempts at political reform included holding elections  more often and giving
                           more underprivileged people government jobs. But such efforts were perceived as "too little, too late." By  that
                           time, the religious opposition to his oppressive reign gave every indication of developing into a revolution. Carter and his
                             administration gave full support to the shah, but massive Muslim religious demonstrations made it clear that American support
                           would probably not be enough to keep the Pahlavi regime in power. During 1978 and into early 1979, riots against the shah's
                           regime took place in several Iranian cities. The distant leader of this revolutionary overture was the Ayatollah Khomeini,
                           who had been exiled by the shah and was now living in Paris, France.
 
 Exile did not silence Khomeini. He issued
                           proclamations calling for the downfall of the Pahlavi regime and demanding a revolution by the poor and oppressed Iranians.
                           These proclamations were distributed throughout Iran and soon the exiled ayatollah became a legendary folk hero to his people.
                           In his attacks of the shah, the ayatollah simultaneously attacked the United States for its support of the Iranian police
                           state. Sensing defeat, and a potential bloodbath of a civil war, the shah and his wife and family and a small group of aides
                           boarded the royal Iranian Boeing 707 aircraft on January 16, 1979, and flew out of the country, never to return. The self-exiled
                           shah had hoped to seek refuge in America, but President Carter made it clear that the     United States would not welcome
                           the shah. Consequentially, the shah had to find temporary homes in Egypt, Morocco, the  Bahamas, Panama, and Mexico. Once
                           the shah fled the country, the Iranian revolution became a full-blown affair. In the midst of the revolutionary chaos the
                           Ayatollah Khomeini returned and became the nation's new leader. American interests in the Persian Gulf region were clearly
                           threatened. Quickly the United States lost access to Iranian oil and saw the cancellation of $7  billion of uncompleted arms
                           contracts. Within Iran, anti-American tempers continued to erupt. On Valentine's Day 1979, revolutionary forces in Tehran
                           overran the United States embassy, seizing seventy employees for more than two hours. On February 26, the State Department
                           announced the evacuation of the families of all embassy personnel and urged any Americans remaining in Iran to leave as soon
                           as possible.
 The Carter administration hardly knew what to make of the ayatollah. Accustomed, like its predecessors, to thinking exclusively
                           in terms of the Cold War, it was unable to adjust to a fundamentalist religious revolution that denounced the United States
                           and     the Soviet Union equally, and therefore feared that Khomeini would allow a Soviet penetration of Iran, and eventually,
                           the entire     Middle East. That fear was heightened by the United States' surrender of sensitive listening posts along the
                           Iranian border with     the Soviet Union, used to monitor Soviet Missiles.  
 It was almost universally believed in
                           Iran that the CIA would attempt a repeat performance of 1953. Actually, Carter had no  intention of trying to restore the
                           shah, and formally recognized the new Islamic government. The Iranians, however, could not believe that the United States
                           would abandon the shah, and as long as he was alive, they anticipated another CIA coup. Several  influential political leaders
                           were able to pursuade President Carter to allow the shah to enter the country -- for humanitarian  reasons -- to be treated
                           for his cancer. It had been argued that it was disgraceful that the United states had turned its back on one  of her oldest
                           and closest friends. Carter's primary concern was the safety of the American embassy. Fearing another assault, Carter decided
                           to permit the shah entry after the Tehran government indicated it would take no retaliatory action if he came only  for medical
                           treatment. The shah entered the United States on October 22, and survived the gall bladder surgery on October 26.
 
 Iranian
                           students poured into the streets to protest, demanding that the United States return the shah, and his multimillion dollar
                           fortune to Iran. At first these protests seemed to be no more than what had been going on since Khomeini's return, but on
                           the  morning of November 4, 1979, exactly one year before the United States Presidential election, a mob of around 3,000 students
                           stormed the embassy's gate, overran the guards, and took the sixty-six people inside hostage, in the name of Khomeini. The
                           civilian government responded to Carter's immediate protest by assuring him that they would do everything in their power to
                           secure the release of the hostages unharmed. But the fact was that they had no power beyond that which Khomeini allowed them
                           to exercise, and he was quick to support the students, who had become overnight heroes in Iran.
 
 News of the embassy
                           takeover caused an instant sensation in the United States. Television newscasts were filled with     on-the-scene pictures
                           of the dramatic event which was virtually unprecedented in American history. The media, by giving the crisis an extremely
                           high level of coverage, including nightly TV "specials" on the situation, added to the emotional response of the
                           American people, and showed huge mobs of crazed Iranians in Tehran chanting "Death to America, Death to Carter, Death
                           to  the shah." Representations of Uncle Sam and Carter were burned and numerous American flags were spat upon trampled,
                           and     burned in the street. More importantly, American television audiences were shocked to see blindfolded members of the
                           United     States Marines embassy guard, with their hands tied behind their backs, as they were paraded before TV cameras.
                           Everywhere  the American public demanded that the government take some sort of retaliatory action. Several hundred people
                           gathered in front of the Iranian embassy in Washington D.C. shouting "Go Home" and "Let our people go!"
                           Their rage, their very presence seemed to be saying "We've had enough!" The D.C. police had roped off the sidewalk,
                           ironically providing the Iranian building the very protection the embassy in Iran lacked. Sales of Iranian flags went up across
                           the nation and Americans burned them in protest. Meanwhile, throughout the United States, Iranian students demonstrated in
                           support of their country, denouncing the  White House and demanding the shah's immediate extradition. These demonstrations
                           prompted a violent backlash across the  nation as anger and frustration had risen as the days passed and the hostages were
                           not released. The crisis instilled a new sense of patriotism as Americans supported the President. Iranian-Americas faced
                           problems that hadn't been seen since  Japanese-Americans had been interned during World War II: some were booted out of their
                           jobs; others had their property vandalized; and their children were taunted in school. While the nation poised for action,
                           the administration worked to soothe public passion, fearful the demonstrators might precipitate a riot, which would have been
                           highly publicized in Iran, and might have caused Americans to be harmed in retaliation. News from Iran had already indicated
                           Khomeini's intent to have the hostages  tried as spies.
 
 President Carter ordered the Pentagon to prepare a contingency
                           plan for military action to rescue the hostages. The greatest     problem was the inaccessibility of the American embassy
                           compound - located more than 600 miles from the nearest operating     aircraft carriers and deep within the heavily populated
                           urban center of Tehran. He also ordered the fifty thousand Iranian     students in the United States to report to the nearest
                           immigration office. Cater also suspended arms sales to Iran, froze Iranian     assets in American banks, and announced an
                           embargo on Iranian oil, which obviously did not help the Energy Crisis.
 
 More important than his actions, were Carter's
                           public statements which had the effect of enormously enhancing the value of the     hostages to the Iranians. The President
                           made it clear to the Iranians and the world that the lives of the hostages were his first     priority. He met repeatedly
                           with the families of the hostages; he confessed to reporters that virtually his every waking moment     was spent worrying
                           about the fate of the captives; to the great frustration of Senator Edward Kennedy, Carter refused to     campaign in the
                           early months of the election year, adopting a "Rose Garden" strategy that limited his public appearances so he 
                           can devote his full time to the hostage crisis; he allowed the crisis to dominate American foreign policy for the remainder
                           of his     administration.
 
 The only concession the demonstrators made was to release all of the non-American hostages
                           as well as all the blacks and most of the women. The blacks were released, the Muslims said, because they were victims of
                           American opressors. The women were freed because the Muslims did not wage war against women. During this period of early confusion,
                           six Americans -- four men and two women -- escaped from the embassy by simply walking out and making their way to the Canadian
                           embassy. The number of hostages was down to 52, but these people will be held, their captors claimed, until all their demands
                           were met. These demands, announced in February 1980 were the return of the shah to Iran for trial, the return of the shah's
                           wealth to the Iranian people, an admission of guilt by the United States for its past actions in Iran, plus an appology and
                           a promise not to interfere in   Iran's affairs in the future. These were clearly unacceptable demands, especially the first
                           one, as the shah had left the United  States in December to take up residence in Panama. In response to the demands, Carter
                           threatened new sanctions against Iran unless some progress was forthcoming.
 
 The public was more supportive of Carter
                           than it had been a few months earlier, but was becoming more impatient with each  assing week because of the apparent impotence
                           in dealing with international crises. Citizens of all ages who normally paid little ttention to foreign affairs sat transfixed
                           in front of their television sets, breathlessly following each new twist and turn of events -- even when not much was happening,
                           which was usually the case. Television quickly domesticated the foreign scenes and characters by bringing them into the intimacy
                           of our living rooms. During the first few months of the siege, about one-third of the     three networks weeknight newscast
                           time was devoted to the hostage story. ABC even created a regular thirty-minute nightly program The Crisis in Iran: America
                           Held Hostage, which premiered on Day 5 of the crisis and promised to broadcast as long as the crisis lasted. By March 1980,
                           ABC executives responded to the early success of this news special at eleven-thirty P.M. by creating a regular news program,
                           Nightline, which focused on major news events, including the hostage crisis. On Day 74, CBS     anchor Walter Chronkite concluded
                           his nightly news broadcast by announcing the number of days the hostages had been held     captive, and maintained that practive
                           until the end of the crisis. In December 1979, the wife of the senior foreign officer being held hostage, Penelope Laingen,
                           tied a yellow ribbon around a tree on the lawn of her Maryland home. Yellow ribbons sprouted all over the country, and the
                           song "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree" was revived with a new meaning that helped unite the country against
                           Khomeini.
 
 As the nation prepared to enter the fifth month of the crisis, President Carter's frustration level grew
                           from the inactivity in the     release of the hostages. On April 7, he announced the severing of diplomatic relations with
                           Iran, the implementation of a     complete economic embargo against Iran, an inventory of financial claims against Iran to
                           be paid from Iranian assets in the     United States, and told Iran's diplomats to leave the country within twenty-four hours.
                           Carter also gave the approval for a     military attempt to rescue the hostages. The fact that a small plane had successfully
                           penetrated Iranian airspace and had     examined a potential rescue staging site without being detected, convinced Carter
                           that such a mission was feasible.
 
 The top secret mission was called Eagle Claw, and began at about dawn on April
                           24, 1980, when eight helicopters were launched     from the U.S. aircraft carrier Nimitz sailing in the Arabian Sea off the
                           southeast Coast of Iran. At the same time, six transport     aircraft took off from an undisclosed location for a rendezvous
                           with the helicopters at a place in the Iranian desert called Desert     One, several hundred miles southeast of Tehran. From
                           Desert One, the combined rescue team was supposed to fly to Desert Two. There, the raiders were to board trucks for a further
                           50-mile trip into Tehran. In Tehran, the raiders were to hide briefly     near the US embassy where they were to be aided
                           by several Iranians who had been hired by the CIA. The raiders were then to     storm the American embassy, kill whoever tried
                           to stop them, free the hostages, and board the helicopters to carry the freed     prisoners to Desert One. At Desert One,
                           the freed prisoners would be flown out of the country on board the aerial transports.     The actual storming of the embassy
                           and freeing the prisoners was estimated to take only about two hours.
 
 Unfortunately Operation Eagle Claw broke
                           down in its early stages. Shortly after the helicopters took off from the Nimitz on     their 600-mile flight to Desert One,
                           one of the choppers was forced down by rotor blade trouble and a ssecond chopper returned     to the Nimitz after its pilot
                           was blinded by a sandstorm. The six remaining helicopters reached their rendezvous point with the     transports, but one
                           of the six had to be scrapped because of partial hydraulic failure due to the constant blowing of sand in the     high desert
                           winds. Apparently, the possibility of a sandstorm during the operation had not been taken into consideration.
 
 Because
                           the plan called for six operating helicopters, the mission was aborted. During refuling for the return flight, the sandstorm
                               continued, and three additional helicopters were declared inoperable. One of these damaged choppers accidentally collided
                           with a     transport. Both vehicles burst into flames, killing eight American servicemen. The survivors abandoned the scene,
                           leaving the     four remaining helicopters, with weapons, maps and a number of secret documents regarding the operation, and
                           the dead bodies     behind in the flaming wreckage. A few hours later, in the early morning, Carter went on national television
                           to report to the     American people on the disaster that had just occured. The President behaved with great dignity; he made
                           no excuses, sought no     scapegoats, and accepted absolute personal responsibility.
 
 Although initial reaction
                           to the tragic mission was supportive of the President, the failure of the rescue attempt did more to     undercut the Carter
                           presidency than any other single event. even before this incident, the hostage crisis had become a political     liablility
                           for the President. As details of the botched plan were revealed, it became another one of the many failures that     Americans
                           attributed to the President. There was little hope for another rescue mission, since Iran had put its guard up and     dispersed
                           the hostages to various locations in Tehran. The fiasco of the rescue mission, however, provided Carter a convenient     moment
                           to abandon his Rose Garden campaign in favor of a more public candidacy.
 
 An impass in the hostage crisis had been
                           reached, to continue through the summer of 1980. On July 27, the shah died of cancer, but any hope that his death would improve
                           the hostage situation proved futile In September, Khomeini stated four conditions for the release of the hostages: the United
                           States must return the shah's wealth; cancel all financial claims against Iran; free Iranian assets in the United States;
                           and promise never to interfere in Iranian affairs. Notably absent was the earlier demand that the     United States appologize
                           for its past policies in Iran. Although negotiations were still required on all these points, their presentation offered the
                           best hope yet that an end to the crisis was possible, even imminent. Chances greatly improved after September 22, when Iraq
                           invaded Iran and full scale war began between the two countries. The war suddenly made the U.S. economic sanctions, especially
                           the freeze on Iranian money in United States banks, painful for Iran because its military forces were largely American equipped.
                           The need for spare parts and the cash to buy them and other goods grew as oil production in Iran fell to almost nothing. A
                           few weeks later, Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Rajai came to the United States to present     Iran's case against Iraq
                           to the United Nations. He said at a New York press conference that Washington now seemed ready to cooperate in resolving the
                           hostage situation. Carter also received word that the hostages had been returned to the American embassy in Tehran and that
                           there seemed to be a consensus among Iraninan leaders that it was time to free the American captives.
 
 By the middle
                           of October, the momentum of the campaign had shifted in Carter's favor. Carter's rivals realized they were at a     tactical
                           disadvantage.
 
 Although he was vulnerable on his handling of the hostage issue, Carter's challengers had to be careful
                           in their criticisms or risk being perceived as undercutting the president during a national crisis. They also faced the reality
                           that the rescue attempt, despite its failure, had demonstrated that President Carter was prepared, under certain circumstances
                           to take great risks to resolve the     hostage crisis. They worried that a sudden breakthrough in the negotiations, or some
                           unexpected development concerning the hostages, could instantly divert public attention away from the campaign. The Republicans
                           wanted to ensure that the Iranian hostage issue would not be used to promote the reelection of Jimmy Carter. They were particularly
                           concerned about the possibility of an unexpected development, outside the control of the campaign, that might shift public
                           support to the President. If the sudden release of the hostages in Iran happened at a sensitive moment in the campaign, the
                           elation of the American people could relieve doubts about Carter's leadership and swing many voters to ensure Carter's reelection.
                           It was therefore crucial for the Republicans to adopt a comprehensive strategy to defend themselves against a possible release
                           of the hostages prior to the     election.
 
 The Reagan-Bush campaign began to organize an extensive and sophisticated
                           intelligence operation designed to penetrate key     agencies of the United States government and to provide early-warning
                           information to the campaign regarding any hostage     developments. Many of them were angry, bitter, unemployed CIA covert-operations
                           personnel, cut by Carter in the fall of 1977     in the wake of the worst scandals in the history of American intelligence.
                           They volunteered to work with the Reagan-Bush     campaign, especially given the addition of a former CIA chief as the vice-presidential
                           candidate. In addition, there were     individuals within the White House who were committed to the defeat of Jimmy carter,
                           and his replacement by Ronald Reagan.
 
 By October 1980, the Reagan-Bush campaign had organized an aggressive intelligence
                           penetration of its own government. The     agents who functioned in the most sensitive areas of the government -- the Pentagon,
                           the intelligence agencies, the State     Department, the White House -- were providing regular intelligence reports on the
                           most highly classified policies and operations.
 
 Beginning in early October and rising to a climax in the weeks
                           before the election, news reports asserted that military equipment was being assembled or was actually on its way to the Middle
                           East as part of a last minute attempt for the release of the hostages. These and other similar reports were all characterized
                           by a wealth of convincing details. In reality, nothing was moving and these reports were part of a deliberate program of disinformation
                           fed to the media by credible anonymous sources as part of a propaganda campaign to keep public attention focused on a possible
                           "October Surprise" by the Carter administration. This  campaign strategy worked in its primary objective in keeping
                           the Carter administration off-balance and on the defensive. The White House was reduced to issuing constant denials that never
                           managed to catch up with the many leaks to the Reagan-Bush campaign and the media. This strategy also succeeded in planting
                           the notion in the public mind that the Carter administration was  preparing a maneuver to free the hostages just before the
                           election. On October 7, 1980, it was announced in the New York Times the creation of an "October surprise committee"
                           by the Republican campaign staff. The purpose of this committee, comprised of ten foreign-policy experts, was to be alert
                           for any last minute surprises, including the possible release of the     hostages, and to develop contingency plans to deal
                           with them. In reality, the committee itself was part of the contingency plan. By dramatizing the possibility of a sudden move
                           by Carter just prior to the election, the creation of the committee planted the idea in the public mind that any such move
                           should be viewed as a desperate attempt by Carter to hold on to the presidency.
 
 As the campaign was in the final
                           stretch, just two days before election day, Carter received word from Iran that the Iranian  parliament had chosen to approve
                           the four points which were compatible with what Khomeini had announced in September.  Carter, after flying back to Washington
                           from campaigning in Chicago, concluded that the differences were still quite significant, and could not accept their proposal
                           without further discussions. In his announcement to the American people, he said that the  proposal was a good and constructive
                           move, and could lead to positive results. It was understood that the hostages would not be  released before the election because
                           of the intense negotiations required. The Carter administration was also aware of the     potential backlash against the president
                           that this latest announcement would have, but remained optimistic that a breakthrough had been made in the hostage crisis,
                           which would ultimately bring about the liberation of the Americans.
 
 Hours before the polls opened, all three networks
                           carried the latest news from Iran, stories from the campaign trail, with Carter and Reagan trying to avoid questions on the
                           possible release of the hostages, and concluded not with stories about the  Presidential election the next day, but with a
                           commemoration of the anniversary of the captivity. These included film clips of the  President's announcements of the embassy
                           takeover, the failed rescue mission, and the outrage of the American people. All three networks took their viewers on an emotionally
                           wrenching review of the past year. Rather than drawing the contrasts between the     two men who wanted to be President, the
                           news was a strong reminder of the Carter administration's impotence in achieving an honorable release of the hostages.
 
 On November 4, a majority of voters expressed their displeasure by rejecting the president's bid for reelection. Reagan's
                           victory  put additional pressure on Khomeini, who could hardly expect the incoming administration to offer as favorable deal
                           as the outgoing Carter administration. After Carter's defeat, he demonstrated that he was still president for the next ten
                           weeks, and that he had an agenda to pursue regardless of the election results. News from Iran continued to be encouraging
                           as Khomeini gave  permission to the militants holding the Americans to turn them over to the Tehran government. Prime Minister
                           Mohammed Ali Rajai appointed a commission to work out the terms for the release of the hostages, using Algeria as Iran's intermediary
                           with   Washington. The negotiations were long and complex. While the Tehran government wanted Washington to return the shah's
                            wealth, the president did not have the legal power to do so. December 21, Iran demanded $24 billion for the captives to be
                           deposited into Algeria, which was reduced on January 6 to $20 billion, and another reduction a week later to $8 billion. On
                           Carter's last morning in office, the Iranians agreed to a deal that gave them $8 billion worth of Iranian assets that had
                           been frozen, $5 billion of which was set aside to pay off Iran's debts to American and European banks, in return for the release
                           of the hostages, who flew out of Tehran that day. After 444 days, Khomeini was left with a bankrupt and divided country that
                           was involved in a dangerous and expensive war with Iraq.
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