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- <text>
- <title>
- (1980) Canada To The Rescue
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 07779>
- <link 07636>
- <link 07637>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- February 11, 1980
- WORLD
- Canada to the Rescue
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A wave of thanks to a neighbor for saving six diplomats from
- Tehran
- </p>
- <p> It had none of the lightning-flash finesses of Entebbe, none
- of the bloody ferocity of Mayaguez. Yet once again, however
- fleetingly, the frustration of dealing with the irrational acts
- of militants had been lifted by a single daring and dramatic
- deed. The cunning maneuver executed by Canadian diplomats in
- secreting six Americans in hostile Tehran for almost three
- months and then spiriting them to safety last week provided a
- heartening interlude in Washington's still unsuccessful struggle
- to free 50 hostages from their captors in chaotic Iran.
- </p>
- <p> With a spontaneous gush of gratitude, Americans extended
- congratulatory hands across the border. It was as though the
- U.S. were almost surprised to find that it had a friend after
- all. Where other allies had nervously shunned sanctions and
- offered only rhetoric against Iran, Canada had literally come
- to the rescue. In Detroit, billboards facing Canada suddenly
- sprouted Canadian maple leaves and appreciative messages like
- THANK YOU, CANADA. The Canadian embassy switchboard in
- Washington was overwhelmed by Americans wishing to convey warm
- sentiments: "Brilliant move." "Courageous feat." "Well done."
- In Fergus Falls, Minn., Radio Station KBRF got an enthusiastic
- response to its suggestion that listeners send I LOVE YOU
- valentine messages to Flora MacDonald, Canada's Secretary of
- State for External Affairs, who, as her nation's top diplomat,
- had proudly confirmed the rescue story.
- </p>
- <p> On an official level, the U.S. Congress unanimously rushed
- through a resolution--the first ever of its kind--expressing
- "its deep appreciation and thanks to the Government of Canada."
- As reporters watched, Jimmy Carter picked up a telephone in his
- Oval Office and told Canadian Prime Minister Joe Clark of the
- American people's appreciation for "a tremendous exhibition of
- friendship and support and personal and political courage." The
- rescue had already given Clark a big boost in his uphill drive
- to retain his office in the Canadian elections, Feb. 18.
- </p>
- <p> Back in the U.S., the happy but professionally restrained
- diplomats appeared one by one before a televised press
- conference at the State Department. In an oddly stiff ceremony,
- each gave name and title: Mark Lijek, 28, a consular officer;
- his wife Cora, 26, a consular secretary (both from Falls Church,
- Va.); Joseph D. Stafford, 29, a consular officer; his wife
- Kathleen, 28, a consular secretary (both from Crossville,
- Tenn.); Robert Anders, 54, a consulate officer (from Port
- Charlotte, Fla.); and Henry Lee Schatz, 31, an agricultural
- attache (from Post Falls, Idaho). Anders read a carefully
- prepared statement thanking reporters for keeping their
- sensitive secret for so long but saying of their colleagues
- still held captive: "We must not and will not forget them"
- Then the six paid a solemn, low-key visit to the White House,
- where the President termed them "six brave Americans" and
- declared, "We all love you."
- </p>
- <p> The escapees had been warned by the State Department not to
- disclose details about how they had been hidden and how they had
- escaped. This was to protect any foreigners, as well as
- Iranians, who had been helpful but still remained in Iran.
- Privately, some Canadian officials said they were "extremely
- upset" that the story of the escape had been broken by Jean
- Pelletier, a Washington correspondent for Montreal's La Presse
- and son of Canada's ambassador to France. Like a number of
- newsmen, including correspondents and editors of TIME, Pelletier
- had long been aware that the six had been hidden in Tehran and
- had kept the secret. When Pelletier learned that the Americans
- were out of Tehran, he felt the news would quickly become
- public, and his newspaper decided to break the story. This
- destroyed a Canada-U.S. plan to hide the escapees in Europe
- until the fate of the 50 U.S. hostages still held in the embassy
- was resolved.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the secrecy, the available facts provided a
- fascinating tale of intrigue, involving CIA-doctored documents and
- bold "rehearsals" in Tehran on how to slip the Americans past Iranian
- airport inspectors. The plot's mastermind and instant hero was
- Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor, 45, a gregarious diplomat whose
- gravelly voice and hearty laugh had made him a popular
- intermediary between visiting Westerners and Iran's
- unpredictable government officials. His superiors, Prime
- Minister Clark and Secretary MacDonald, let Taylor direct every
- detail of the risky rescue.
- </p>
- <p> The escape of the six began on the rainy day of the storming
- of the U.S. embassy in Tehran on Nov. 4. While the assault
- centered on the main embassy building, five of the six escapees
- were working in an adjoining consular section within the
- compound. Mark Lijek had been processing visas that morning.
- Among his visitors was Kim King, 27, a tourist from Oregon who
- had stayed on in Iran for six months to teach English to local
- businessmen. He had both overstayed his visa and lost his
- passport, with its date-of-entry stamp, and he sought Lijek's
- help in acquiring new papers.
- </p>
- <p> Then, as King tells it, a woman working in a front office
- shouted, "They're coming over the wall!" King peered through
- the two windows, protected by a grillwork made of bricks, in
- Lijek's second-floor office. He saw the men on the wall and
- heard others moving on the roof. He did not see any weapons and
- heard no shooting. "We weren't afraid," he recalled. "We
- thought they probably were the police."
- </p>
- <p> An Iranian attacker broke a window in a nearby men's room and
- tried to enter through it. Said King: "A Marine went in there
- and knocked him out of the window and fired tear gas."
- </p>
- <p> As the Marine guards radioed other Marines to help gather all
- the office occupants together for protection, the lights
- suddenly went out and the radio equipment was silenced. "It got
- very dark in the room, because of the grillwork on the windows,"
- King said. "We realized then that we had to get out."
- </p>
- <p> The Americans grouped together in a back room on the
- building's ground floor. Among them, according to King, were
- Lijek, Anders and Kathy Stafford. The Marine managed to jimmy a
- back door, which had been bolted automatically as a security
- precaution. The door opened onto an alley. "Mark and I looked out
- the window upstairs," said King, "and it was clear as far as we
- could see. We went back down. I opened the door and we walked
- out."
- </p>
- <p> The fugitives split up after walking about four blocks. They
- agreed to meet later at the British embassy. But by the next
- day the student militants had taken control of that embassy,
- too, holding it for about five hours. As King was not a U.S.
- diplomat, his problems were more financial than political.
- Equipped with new documents, he managed to borrow money for air
- passage home and flew out on Nov. 9.
- </p>
- <p> For the American diplomats, however, there was no such easy
- way out. One of the carefully guarded secrets is just where they
- stayed in the days between fleeing their offices and Nov. 8,
- when one of them called the Canadian embassy to seek refuge.
- By then Kathy Stafford and Mark Lijek had somehow been reunited
- with their spouses. Ambassador Taylor later said his staff had
- been "unanimous" in wanting "to do everything we could to help."
- On Nov. 10 the five Americans who had worked in the consular
- section showed up at the Canadian embassy. it was not until
- Nov. 22 that the sixth American, Schatz, also joined the group.
- He had escaped the siege because his office was outside the
- embassy compound. He had since been staying with "friends."
- </p>
- <p> The six Americans spent more than two tedious months in the
- home of Canadian diplomats, reading whatever they could get their
- hands on. They played so much Scrabble, as Anders later
- explained, that "some of us could identify the letter on the
- front by the shape of the grain on the back of the tile." Said
- Taylor at a press conference in Ottawa: "I'd nominate any one
- of them for the world Scrabble championship. They are also
- probably the six best-read Foreign Service officers." Some of
- the six spent the time at Taylor's residence, others at the home
- of Roger Lucy, 31, the embassy's first secretary. A few also
- stayed temporarily in a safe house--until the landlord decided
- to show it to the prospective buyers.
- </p>
- <p> While the U.S. State Department kept close relatives of the
- six informed that the missing diplomats were safe, the relatives
- were not told who was harboring them. But as more reporters
- picked up bits of the story, Taylor worried about a leak that
- would send Iranians hunting down the missing, and endanger his
- own embassy staff as well.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor devised a plan. On the pretext of keeping in tough with
- the three U.S. diplomats being held under house arrest at the
- Iranian Foreign Ministry, Taylor ingratiated himself with local
- officials as a friendly and neutral diplomat. He learned just
- what documents and procedures would be needed in the processing
- of embassy personnel in and out of Tehran under the erratic
- Ayatullah Khomeini government. He began sending some of his own
- staff on unnecessary flights to establish a travel pattern and
- to study the clearance procedures.
- </p>
- <p> The Canadian Cabinet met on Jan. 4 and approved a rare secret
- directive to issue Canadian passports to the six Americans--although not in their own names. The Americans were given the
- names of fictitious Canadian businessmen or technicians who would
- have valid reasons to travel to Tehran. U.S. sources have
- conceded that the CIA provided "technical assistance." This
- apparently consisted of helping to fabricate the necessary
- Iranian visa stamps.
- </p>
- <p> On Jan. 19, Taylor got a scare. Someone called his home and
- asked to speak to "Mr. or Mrs. Stafford." Taylor's wife
- Patricia replied that no one by that name was there. But the
- caller insisted that he knew they were. With that, the escape
- plan was speed up. The Americans, safe for so long in their
- hideaway, were not sure they wanted to run the risk of trying
- to board a plane. Taylor convinced them that the danger of
- staying was growing ever greater.
- </p>
- <p> Taylor gradually reduced the size of his embassy staff. From
- a total of 20, it was dropped to 11 and finally to 4. Taylor
- chose last Monday, in the uncertain aftermath of Iran's
- presidential election, to make his move. The six Americans
- nervously but successfully showed their false papers to Iranian
- airport officials and boarded regularly scheduled flights to
- Frankfurt. Then they went into two days of rest and debriefing
- at a U.S. Air Force hospital near Wiesbaden in West Germany,
- before flying to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. There they
- were reunited with their relatives. Then it was on to
- Washington and back to heroes' welcomes in their home towns.
- On Monday Taylor and three staffers flew quietly to Europe and
- the Canadian embassy was closed.
- </p>
- <p> Back in Tehran, the outwitted captors of the U.S. hostages and
- government officials were apoplectic. "This is illegal, it's
- illegal!" raged one of the militants guarding the U.S. embassy.
- Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, just defeated in
- his quest for the presidency, vowed: "Sooner or later, somewhere
- in the world, Canada will pay." Whatever "hardness or harshness"
- now befalls the American hostages, he threatened, "it's only the
- Canadian government that will be responsible for it."
- </p>
- <p> Regardless of the understandable elation in Canada and the
- U.S., the fight to free the hostages remains one of the Carter
- Administration's most nettlesome difficulties. So far, the U.S.
- has been deliberately delaying the imposition of its planned
- economic sanctions against Iran in the hope that its new
- President, Abolhassan Banisadr, may yet help resolve the hostage
- problem. But as the hostages start their fourth month of
- captivity, there is no real cause for optimism.</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-