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Guests of the Ayatollah

Guests of the Ayatollah

byMark Bowden
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Clem
5.0 out of 5 starsInteresting, in depth, thorough
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on May 29, 2022
The are few international events over the last fifty years that are remembered with as much infamy as the Iran Hostage Crisis of 1979-1980. I was fairly young at the time and wasnโ€™t familiar with the intricacies, yet I distinctly remember the anger and sorrow of my fellow citizens. Before November 4, 1979, I would guess most Americans couldnโ€™t find Iran on the map. Nor were they familiar with names such as the Ayatollah Khomeni, or the recently exiled Shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.

When this book was written 25 years after the crisis, my guess is many still didnโ€™t know much of the details, which was the entire point of this book. This is an excellent read. Itโ€™s a long read at about 700 pages, but it never feels that way. Mark Bowden knows how to keep this story at a high enough level to where he never gets mired too low in the weeds with too much detail.

The main focus is the hostages. The individuals that had the misfortune of simply working at the American Embassy in Tehran and were very familiar with the hostility of the residents of this country. When the tempers flared on that ignoble day and the compound was stormed by the radical students, the American workers at the embassy werenโ€™t too concerned. They had all been through this before to some extent.

Well, as the dots get connected, it soon becomes apparent that this is not a temporal event to exorcize political futility. This is the real deal. Soon the crisis is the headline on every newspaper and the leading story on every news network for months. Like most tragedies, the longer it goes on, the more the public forgets. No one expected the captives to be held hostage for a grueling 444 days, and after the first months pass, much of world forgets about the prisoners.

There are a lot of names to keep track of within this book. Iโ€™m not sure how many of the 53 hostages that Bowden focuses on, he goes back and forth rather quickly, and I had trouble keeping track of every hostage, their backgrounds, their roles, their history, etc. Yet this really doesnโ€™t take much away from the overall reading experience. When we read about the travails of each hostage, the โ€œwhoโ€ really isnโ€™t as important as the โ€œwhatโ€. Which brings me to the title of this book. Although I would never minimize the horror that these individuals endured, the author asserts that the hostages, for the most part, were treated better than one might imagine. In some instances one might be able to argue that they were โ€œguestsโ€ as opposed to โ€œhostagesโ€. Some of the captors were much more friendly than others, and things such as Christmas parties and the ability to write letters home were part of the captivity. During the middle of the ordeal, Iran finds itself at war with neighboring Iraq, and the students even entertain the possibility of arming their captives to assist them in fighting the enemy. Thatโ€™s not to say it was all sunshine and roses. There were plenty of times when the captives would be beaten or isolated, usually for insubordination and for insults hurled by the hostages themselves. And we can never kid ourselves into thinking that anytime someone is a โ€œhostageโ€, that it could ever be acceptable or tolerable.

One of the more unlikely elements of this tragedy is that Iran really didnโ€™t have any kind of structural government in place, so the students who raided the embassy and started the whole event really didnโ€™t have any authority to do so. Once the crisis started, you almost got the impression that the captors, and the country itself, really didnโ€™t know what to do next. Their only demand was that the Shah be returned, but once that became obviously impossible, you could tell that this whole event was perpetrated by amateurs. Add the fact that the country was essentially run by the hardcore cleric Khomeni, there wasnโ€™t really much that could be done other than wait for some sort of unknown future event to somehow unfold to change the situation.

The author also spends good portions of the book describing the U.S. government under Jimmy Carterโ€™s efforts to end the standoff, the planning and failure of the rescue attempt, and also the history of the relations between Iran and the United States. Sadly, what many Americans at the time failed to acknowledge was the fact that the United States wasnโ€™t exactly squeakly clean when they orchestrated a coup in Iran back in 1953 that ousted leader Mohammed Mosaddegh that put the Shah back on the throne. Letโ€™s just say that the motivation of the United States was a far cry from anything altruistic or philanthropic.

The chapters are also nice and brief. Most chapters are about 10-15 pages long which helps with such a thick volume. This also allows us to never get bored and we can quickly jump from one part of the story to another. As someone who reads a lot of history, I wish many authors would learn such a method. The author also includes an epilogue that tells the reader โ€œwhere are they nowโ€ 25 years after the conclusion of this horrific event.

Overall this was a great account of an infamous time in the history of America. Iโ€™m sure there have been multiple books written about this event, but my guess is that this is probably the best one to give the reader a strong sense of the whole picture of everything and everyone involved.
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Sean Claycamp
3.0 out of 5 starsGood book but shorter in the middle would have been better
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on July 30, 2017
It was too long and not because it was overly detailed. It was repetitive at times and some of the details were interesting but felt out of order.
The first third of the book was really great. The story of the hostage takeover and first few months of captivity were excellent. The story of the end game and ultimate release was good as well and could have been more detailed even. He did get slightly political and took a shot at Reagan but I don't think it was intentional.
The middle just started to drag. At times I felt like a hostage to it myself. I am not one to "skip ahead" but I got close a few times.
The discussion regarding the rescue was excellent and perfectly detailed I thought.
The other thing that might have been missing was discussion of what some of our allies did or did not do, could have done, or how their citizens considered the crisis.
I would recommend the book but skipping ahead some in the middle would not be frowned upon.
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From the United States

Alain C. Dewitt
4.0 out of 5 stars Reliving an important episode in recent US history
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on September 17, 2012
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In 1979 when the hostage crisis began I had just turned 12. I recall how this story dominated the nightly news headlines. My father worked for the US Department of State so our family probably followed this story a little more closely than most.

(In fact our family has a very tangential connection to the story. My father was a Regional Security Officer. This means that he was in charge of security for all the agencies doing business under the auspices of the embassy. In late 1979 when the shah of Iran came to Panama, I was one of the first people to hear the news. I recall feeling thrilled that my father would trust me with such a big secret.

I also recall vacationing in London in 1982. We were having lunch in the US Embassy cafeteria and I recognized former hostage Ricahrd Queen. Queen had been released early because he had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.)

This book was quite interesting to read because it gave us an insider's view of the hostage crisis. Bowden interviewed all the living hostages as part of his research for this book. And for those hostages that were deceased he relied on interviews conducted for other books.

For those of us watching at home, it wasn't immediately apparent some of the abuse being suffered by the hostages, but Bowden lays it all bare for the reader. In addition Bowden provides great detail about the living conditions and the various moves of the hostages, the amount of contact they had with each other and the sheer psychological strain they endured.

I learned a lot. For instance, I hadn't known that three of the hostages (L. Bruce Laingen, the mission chief - I attended boarding school with his son; Victor Tomseth, the political chief; and Mike Howland, the assistant security chief) spent almost their entire captivity in the Foreign Ministry, separated from the other hostages.

The nucleus of Iran's grievances against the United States date back to the CIA-sponsored coup in 1953, Operation Ajax, which deposed Mohammed Mossadeq from power and installed the shah with absolute authority. Gradually the shah's rule became more and more oppressive and behind it all Iranians saw the unseen hand of the United States.

When Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Iran from exile, the shah fled the country and the Islamic Republic of Iran was born with Khomeini wielding ultimate authority.

The United States maintained relations with Iran and tried to cultivate contacts with the new regime. I think Bowden shows that the Iranians were so blinded by the past wrongs committed by the United States that they were unable to see that in the Carter administration they would have had a partner willing to try and make up for those past wrongs.

The proverbial straw that broke the camel's back was the US decision - disastrous in hindsight - to admit the shah into the US for medical treatment. The average Iranian learning of this decision assumed that the US was plotting a way to restore the shah to power.

Another huge mistake was, having made the decision to admit the shah to the US, the embassy should have been evacuated, at least temporarily.

The really unique (to me, at least) feature of the book is that Bowden also tells the story from the perspective of the hostage-takers. Here is where the book really excels because Bowden shows that, far from being a well-thought-out, well-orchestrated plot, it was a stunt staged by a group of Islamist students that really spiraled out of control. The students expected the occupation of the embassy to last three days and then they expected to go home. But there was such a groundswell of popular support that it actually toppled the provisional government (Iran was in the throes of the Islamist revolution sparked by the return of Ayatollah Khomeini) and turned the student group into a player in internal politics.

It also had the unintended consequence of leaving the US no-one with whom to negotiate with for the hostages' release. At several different moments the US thought it had reached agreements with representatives of the provisional government only to have the rug pulled out from underneath them by Khomeini.

In the course of his research into this book, Bowden traveled to Tehran and intereviewed as many of the hostage-takers as he could. Some of them have risen to prominence in the government while others have become disillusioned by the theocracy.

Not surprisingly those who attained prominence in the regime stand by their actions as a legitimate course of action. These figures seem to not understand that any benefit attainted by Iran is more than outweighed by the harm of 25+ years as an international pariah.

(An aside: it is apparently without irony that some of the hostage takers protested at US interference in Iran's internal affairs. What do these people think the Iranian government does in Iraq? Afghanistan? Syria? Lebanon?)

With regard to the failed rescue attempt, I have read several books about the special forces community (including Charlie Beckwith's 'Delta Force') and was quite familiar with Operation Eagle Claw. So I didn't learn anything new there. Oh, I did learn that Charlie Beckwith was a jerk.

All in all, though, this was quite a well-written and informative book about an important episode in our relations with the Middle East.
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Kindle Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Close To A Magnum Opus
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on December 16, 2009
Verified Purchase
This is an excellent book and it gives an objective, nearly complete look at the hostage crisis in Iran. It is a compelling chapter in American and Iranian history and this book tells the story so well and from both sides point of view that it should be assigned as a supplemental book in any history course that covers American/Iranian history of the period. While some will complain about the detail involved in the story of the hostages' day-to-day existence while held captive in Iran as "boring," it is a necessary component of the book. After all, this was a crisis that lasted 444 days and understanding the hostages' long-term suffering and boredom is an important part of the story. I also did not find that aspect of the book boring, but I can see where some certainly would lose some interest. However, the book did fall short of perfection. It grieves me to give the book four stars instead of five, but the author missed an important component of the story. While Islam is certainly mentioned and discussed, there should have been a chapter with some of the developmental background of the Ayatollah's early life and an objective discussion of Twelver, Shiite Islam that played such a large part in the Martyrdom complex mentioned in the book and the prevalent belief in predestination that Allah controls all and all will happen as Allah wills along with the end-times death-cult aspect of Iranian Twelver Shiite Islam. It is these aspects of Twelver Shiite Islam that led the hardliners to so ignore the practical implications of their conduct and to take such a ruinous path that continues today with Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons. The book offers no discussion of the full beliefs of the fundamentalists like the Ayatollah that controlled the outcome of the crisis. In fact, some of the hostages themselves are quoted making statements about Islam that reflect what I call an incomplete understanding of Islam. For example, one hostage derides his jailer as not acting like Muhammad because, as the hostage believed, Muhammad had benevolently spared everyone in Mecca when he took the city. While such perceptions of Muhammad are not unusual among many Muslims and such beliefs are certainly readily peddled upon ignorant non-Muslims, the reality is that Muhammad had some critics killed when he took Mecca and the mass conversion to Islam was a result of his large army and fear of what would happen if they did not convert to Islam. Moreover, Muhammad committed many atrocities and for one of the Americans to plead with his jailer to be more like Muhammad was quite ignorant as a fundamentalist Muslim, more well schooled in Muhammad's full history, may well have said OK and chopped off his neck just as Muhammad had done to hundreds of captives. This book, as the full title indicates, was about America's first encounter with militant Islam, but there is no attempt to explain militant Islam and the result is that readers will not obtain the full understanding of what drove the rabid hatred of America and why events that happened decades prior loomed so large in the minds of Iranians. Just what was it in the religion of the Iranians that made them so fervent in their hatred and so ready to believe any rumor about the Americans? It was at its core the influence of Islam on the culture upon which the Ayatollah and his supporters so capitalized. This book is in many ways symbolic of why the crisis occurred and why even today so many of our leaders have a poor understanding of what drives Iranian behavior. It is the inability to explore, discover and admit that real Islam drove the hostage crisis and that the moderates are the ones that have hijacked the religion. One more chapter added to the book discussing the foregoing topics and this book would have been the author's Magnum Opus and a perfect recording of the crisis that would be read, and justifiably so, by many generations to come. Even with its errors of omission, this is still a wonderful book and I suspect that it may remain in print for a long time.
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Bill Slocum
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars When The Flag Had 52 Stars
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on October 12, 2006
Verified Purchase
Nov. 4, 1979 dawned wet and chill on the streets of Tehran, Iran. Life would get much hotter before the day was out. The American embassy would be stormed by hundreds of students, and it would take 444 days before 52 of those captured inside saw freedom again. For them, and many of their countrymen, days went by slowly as the concept of Islamo-fascist terrorism was forcibly introduced upon the global stage.

Mark Bowden's "Guests Of The Ayatollah" tells the present-day (2006) story of the Iran hostage crisis and its aftermath from several perspectives, including the hostages themselves, the hostage-takers, the soldiers sent to rescue them, and the U.S. president who was committed to the hostages' peaceful return, whatever the cost. Somewhat subjective and beholden upon the perspective of a tiny minority of the hostages, "Guests" is nevertheless very readable, addictive, and quite often maddening.

What did the hostage-takers expect to accomplish? They said they wanted Iran's former ruler, the Shah, back to stand trial, but even after the Shah's death the hostages remained captive. They wanted the world to rally around their Islamic revolution, only to be attacked by Iraq while their neighbor Afghanistan was invaded by the Soviets. They did get plenty of media attention, as America looked on and wondered what could be done.

What was really going on, and the part of the book Bowden brings home with the most authority, was an Orwellian takeover of a previously sophisticated, cultured society by a group of narrow-minded goons who wanted to ensure theirs was the only acceptable path. Anti-hostage rallies Bowden likens to 1984's "two minutes of hate" were designed to focus all anger and blame against a distant adversary while power was amassed by a coterie around Iran's new spiritual leader, the Ayatollah Khomeini, a vague character whose hard face concealed a vacillating mind. The students hoped to sway him in a more radical direction, and succeeded more than many of them wanted.

Several of the hostages' stories are told very well, especially that of the defiant Michael Metrinko, who spat contempt at his captors in their own Farsi. Others describe a more complicated time of it, at times giving in and feeling residual guilt. When you are being threatened with death constantly, and deprived of all basic human rights except food and oxygen, it's hard to be brave. Many were, though. All in all, it's amazing all were returned alive given the experiences recounted here, and some degree of heroism no doubt helped.

Bowden spends more time on a failed rescue mission, Operation Eagle Claw, than it merits. Strangely, he all-but-ignores one of the Iran Hostage Crisis's most inspiring sidebars, the escape and rescue of six hostages with the help of the Swedish and Canadian embassies (which provoked a hilarious complaint from the Iranian government about violating diplomatic responsibilities.) Two-thirds of the book is concerned with events before Eagle Claw, in April, 1980, and Bowden skims through the next eight months.

But the book is certainly timely, and very readable. If you are the least bit curious about this freakish footnote that has become a milestone in our new world order, you will want to read this book.
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E.C.
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting, but needed some editing
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 20, 2021
Verified Purchase
I bought and received this book from Amazon in a timely fashion.

This book is a very interesting one on a notable event in US history that is slowly being forgotten. The 50+ hostages held captive by the Iranians left the US mesmerized but dismayed in early 1980s. President Carter and his staff had very little idea about how to rescue the hostages or end it the matter (embassy takeover was an act of war). Unfortunately for Carter, it contributed to him departing the White House after 4 years. It gave a very early glimpse into the dangers of militant/radical Is--m; unfortunately the USA did not appreciate it for that very matter at the time (in part due to the Cold War occupying everyone's attention at the time).

Bowden has good writing skills, but I believed he focused too much attention on the interactions of the Hostages with the Iranian captors (it could be a guide book though on how NOT to conduct yourself when in captivity). Bowden's book would had been more interesting and informative if it focused more attention on the political wranglings/problems and the failed rescue attempt at Desert One. Of course it is easy to second guess anyone, but President Carter made many mistakes at that time. Similarly, Beckwith (the leader of the spec ops at Desert One) comes across as a mercurial alcoholic in the book (perhaps jusified?)....
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Sandra T. Cook
4.0 out of 5 stars upon reading -
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 16, 2022
Verified Purchase
Long winded; or very thorough, depending on point of view. I would have liked to have more pictures. Iโ€™m happy I stuck it out and finished the book.
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TigerTC
4.0 out of 5 stars Should be Read by All Americans
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 12, 2007
Verified Purchase
Mark Bowden's "Guests of the Ayatollah: The First Battle in America's War with Militant Islam" is an excellent account of one of the lowpoints in American foreign policy: the taking of American hostages by Iranian students in 1979. Bowden's meticulously researched narrative is the definitive story of the ordeals that the hostages went through, although he does not cover the diplomatic (and other) aspects of the story as well.

Bowden's story is based heavily on interviews with the hostages and he gives personal, detailed accounts of the hostage-taking and their daily lives. Most of Bowden's book focuses on the first few months of the captivity, and he spends a lot of time on the events on the day they were taken captive and the immediate days afterward. He also does a good job describing the military's training for and execution of the failed rescues mission.

Although this is a very good book, I do have a couple of criticisms: Bowden's narrative, while detailed and flowing, is short on "historical details." For example, Bowden never tells us in his text the date of the initial hostage-taking (you have to read the caption to one of the pictures to find out that it was November 4, 1979). He is also quick to defend Carter's inaction during the crisis by saying that Carter did everything that he could, which I found unconvincing.

Reading this book made me mad - mad at the Iranians, mad at our government's inability to do anything, mad at the couple of hostages who cooperated with their captors, mad at the minority of family members who worked against our interests during the crisis. Some of my earliest memories of "current events" were of this crisis, and failed rescue attempt, and the announcement of their release during Reagan's inauguration. This book is a reminded of what many of us have forgotten. For this reason, if no other, this book should be read by every American. Thankfully, Bowden has written an excellent book to give us all even more reasons to read it.
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Michael Griswold
4.0 out of 5 stars The Iranian Hostage Crisis From All Sides
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 6, 2012
Verified Purchase
I've been on a major Iran kick this summer for some reason. Guests of the Ayatollah is a fairly lengthy 650-700 page look at the Iranian hostage crisis. Perhaps due to Bowden's background as a former sports reporter in Baltimore, the text is fairly easy to read and actually reads like a lengthy novel.

Bowden tries to tackle the crisis from all sides: the Iranian hostage takers, the embassy hostages, the President and his key advisors, the military role in the ill-fated rescue operation, and even the reaction of the American public as we move towards the 1980 election and beyond.

Much of the book is spent inside the embassy through the collective recollections of the hostages however. Overall, I thought Bowden struck a pretty good balance between all these different narratives, but individual opinions will vary of course.

When you're trying to string together as many different perspectives as exist in the Iranian hostage crisis, the reader is bound to be left wanting in one area or another. I thought Bowden did a fantastic job capturing the dynamics between the hostages themselves, rather than merely bouncing them off their Iranian captors.

Would make an interesting companion piece to the new David Crist book The Twilight War, which provides a comprehensive treatment of U.S.-Iran relations from 1979-2011
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Kharabella
4.0 out of 5 stars Great pace, depth, and detail!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 2, 2007
Verified Purchase
This book is thick (700 pages), but well worth reading if you are truly interested in history and culture. Despite the length of the book, it is easy to read and follow, most parts are positively riveting. I was surprised as how quickly I was able to get through it.

All the positives about this amazing book -- which really does read like a novel -- have been repeated several times here, and I don't wish to be repetitive. I will share that one of my few disappointments with the book was that there was no index of key figures. I wanted to be able to quickly remind myself of who someone was and what their role was in the U.S. or Iran, without having to flip backwards to 50 pages or more. I would also have liked to have a short Farsi glossary, because it was difficult to keep track of the heirarchy of the Islamic rulers and so many foreign phrases.

Towards the end, Bowden appears to lose his journalistic neutrality at points (or maybe he didn't intend to appear neutral at all). There are times when it appears that his own judgment is given, rather than a historical viewpoint, or the viewpoint of the hostages or other key figures.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Helpful read
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 3, 2021
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Read this in anticipation of book club for kids reading Persolopis. I was just a tween when it really happened so needed some clarity on events beyond my fuzzy memory. So glad I read it and appreciate how I feel better informed to share timeline of events as well as recollections of the hostages. Given the state of the world we would be better served if people knew our past. This book is a good starting point for better understanding US Iran relations
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jhillman
4.0 out of 5 stars Get the real story about the Iran Hostage Affair
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 13, 2012
Verified Purchase
Recently saw the movie ARGO (which was great entertainment) and it prompted me to buy this book. I was 5 or 6 during the Iran hostage crisis and wanted to better understand what led up to it and if the movie was based in truth or if Hollywood took way too much "artistic license". I purposefully did not buy the book ARGO because I wanted a different perspective. What I found in this book was not only a fantastic accounting of the hostage crisis but also a great history lesson in US / Iranian relations. The book goes into great detail about the overall political climate, the political position of the hijackers and the treatment of the hostages. Ironically, hardly any detail was provided about the six potential hostages (escapees) who were the focal point of ARGO. The book also goes into great detail about the failed rescue attempt and those details are extraordinary. If you are a fan of or curious about the origin of our Special Forces (Delta Force) you will particularly enjoy those chapters despite the failure of the rescue. Although I have not quite finished the book I would highly recommend it if you are interested in the subject.
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