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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Robert Tait in Washington

Freed American decries Iran’s ‘vile path to profit’ of holding foreigners hostage

Siamak Namazi and other former detainees arrive at the Doha international airport in Qatar on 18 September 2023.
Siamak Namazi and other former detainees arrive at the Doha international airport in Qatar on 18 September 2023. Photograph: Karim Jaafar/AFP/Getty Images

An American citizen freed in a complex exchange deal after being imprisoned for nearly eight years in Iran has urged the Biden administration to launch a “gamechanging global endeavour” to end the Islamic regime’s longstanding practice of holding foreign nationals hostage.

Siamak Namazi, 51, was one of five US citizens released on Monday under the terms of an agreement that saw five Iranians facing charges in the United States granted clemency and Iran being given access to $6bn of previously frozen oil revenues.

The prisoners’ release was hailed by President Joe Biden, who immediately announced fresh sanctions on the hardline former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the country’s powerful intelligence ministry over the still undetermined fate of Robert Levinson, a retired FBI agent who vanished after visiting an island off Iran’s southern coast in 2007.

Biden also called on Americans – including those holding dual US-Iranian nationality – to avoid visiting Iran, which has been at loggerheads with Washington since 52 American embassy employees were held hostage in Tehran for 444 days in the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic revolution.

However, Namazi – himself a dual national and the longest-held of the five detainees after being imprisoned for 2,898 days, most of them inside Tehran’s notorious Evin prison – in a statement called for a radically different approach to deter state-sponsored hostage taking.

“Over the past 44 years, the Iranian regime has mastered the nasty game of caging innocent Americans and other foreign nationals, and commercialising their freedom,” he said after flying from Tehran to Doha, calling Evin prison a “dystopian United Nations of Hostages”.

“We must urgently channel the grievous pain of the victims of this wickedness into the kind of measures that would upend the cost-benefit calculations of Tehran’s foul business. For if we keep this vile path to profit free of risk and toll, this venal regime will keep treading on it. Again and again.

“It is only if the free world finally agrees to collectively impose draconian consequences on those who use human lives as mere bargaining chips, that the Iranian regime and its ilk will be compelled to make different choices. Sadly, until then, we can anticipate more Americans and others falling victim to state hostage-taking.”

Namazi’s comments are likely to be seized on by Republicans who claimed that Iran is likely to use the unfrozen $6bn to fund terrorist activities.

US officials insisted that the money will be restricted to “humanitarian transactions” involving food, medicine and medical supplies, and agricultural products.

“This is not a payment of any kind,” a senior administration official said in an issued statement. “No funds enter Iran, nor do any funds get paid to Iranian companies or entities. At bottom, these are Iranian funds – payment made by South Korea to Iran for purchases of oil years ago, including during the last administration – moving from one restricted account in Korea to another restricted account in Qatar.”

The funds were frozen in 2019 as a result of ramped-up sanctions imposed by the Trump administration as part of its policy of “maximum pressure” on Tehran. They related to oil bought from Iran by South Korea the previous year under a sanctions-waiver scheme.

Biden, meanwhile, sought to shift the spotlight back to Iran by raising the plight of Levinson, whose fate has been a subject of speculation since he was reported missing in 2007, during Ahmadinejad’s rumbustious presidency. His family announced that he was presumed dead in March 2020, after concluding on the advice of US officials that he died in Iranian custody.

Iranian officials have never acknowledged detaining Levinson, while US officials believe he was held and interrogated by the country’s intelligence agency as a possible bargaining chip.

A retired FBI officer, he was initially reported to have visited Kish – an island frequented by tourists and not requiring a visa for entry – on a freelance investigation of illicit cigarette smuggling in March 2007.

Interviewed by Charlie Rose on CBS five years later, Ahmadinejad did not deny that Levinson was being held and implied there had been talks of a prisoner exchange.

An investigation by the Associated Press published in 2013 reported that Levinson had been working for the CIA on an unauthorised intelligence-gathering operation at the time of his disappearance.

Biden declared hostage taking of US citizens a “national emergency” in an executive order issued in July last year.

• This article was amended on 19 September 2023. An earlier version incorrectly described Charlie Rose as “the late Charlie Rose”.

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