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- <text id=89TT3050>
- <title>
- Nov. 20, 1989: A Game Of Winks And Nods
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 20, 1989 Freedom!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 65
- A Game of Winks and Nods
- </hdr><body>
- <p> In his Inaugural Address last January, George Bush
- obliquely appealed to Iran to work with him for the release of
- nine American hostages held by Islamic groups in Lebanon. Since
- then the U.S. and Iran have carried on a delicate game of winks
- and nods, feints and gestures. The game sometimes requires both
- sides, for their own reasons, to pretend that they are not
- actually playing. And for the Americans, there is always the
- suspicion that the Iranian aloofness is for real.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, a subdued hope of movement surrounded the news
- last week that the U.S. had consented to repay $567 million in
- frozen Iranian assets. The agreement was reached after two days
- of negotiations between State Department legal adviser Abraham
- Sofaer and a senior adviser to Iran's President Ali Akbar
- Hashemi Rafsanjani. The two met in the Hague, site of the
- Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal that was set up as part of the 1981
- deal that freed the 62 American embassy hostages in Tehran. Both
- sides agreed that Iran will be paid most of the balance
- remaining in an account established to settle claims from U.S.
- banks that made loans to the Shah's government before the 1979
- Islamic revolution.
- </p>
- <p> Several months ago, Iran informed the tribunal that in its
- view most of the claims had been paid out. Tehran wanted the
- balance, now about $820 million, that remained of the $1.4
- billion the account originally held. In 1987 the Reagan
- Administration had unsuccessfully resisted a similar $500
- million claim by Iran against a different account. This time the
- Bush Administration responded by dispatching Sofaer to the
- Hague. As part of the deal that was eventually reached, Iran
- agreed that $243 million from the account will be transferred
- to a third fund, covering claims against Iran by individual
- American citizens and corporations.
- </p>
- <p> Iran has several times linked any effort on behalf of the
- hostages to the release of Iranian assets. It calculates those
- to be worth far more than the amount unfrozen last week,
- including perhaps what it claims are $12 billion in weapons
- purchased from the U.S. but never delivered. So the Iranians'
- public response to the deal in the Hague was lukewarm. Perhaps
- leery of giving domestic hard-liners grounds to charge that the
- Islamic republic is negotiating with the Great Satan, Deputy
- Foreign Minister Mahmoud Vaezi described the deal as a decision
- made by the Hague tribunal and not by Washington. "It has
- nothing to do with the U.S. Administration's goodwill," he
- insisted.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the deal had been reviewed in the White House by
- the National Security Council and approved by George Bush, who
- had been urging the State Department to press ahead in the
- complicated claims-settlement process. At his press conference
- last week the President admitted to a hope that the agreement
- would eliminate a further obstacle to cooperation by the
- Iranians. "I'd like to get this underbrush cleaned out now," he
- said. "I hope they will do what they can to influence those who
- hold these hostages."
- </p>
- <p> But with memories of the Iran arms-for-hostages swaps still
- fresh, American officials too have been careful to reject
- suggestions that the two nations are conducting anything like
- hostage negotiations. "You want to do things that are
- justifiable on their own merits and defensible in terms of U.S.
- interests," said a State Department official. "And if Iran wants
- to take it as a signal, fine."
- </p>
- <p> The next "signal" from the U.S. may be an agreement to pay
- compensation to survivors of those killed in the Iran Air
- passenger plane shot down in July 1988 by the U.S.S. Vincennes.
- The U.S. has already begun paying families of non-Iranian
- passengers, but compensation to Iranians, who account for most
- of the 290 people aboard, has been held up by a lawsuit the
- Tehran government is pursuing against the U.S. in the
- International Court of Justice.
- </p>
- <p> Iran's Rafsanjani is believed by Washington to be anxious
- to dispose of the hostage issue quickly so he can open his
- war-ravaged country to the outside world. But powerful
- hard-liners still want to block any contact with the West.
- Former Interior Minister Ali Akbar Mohtashami, one of the most
- intransigent of the revolutionary mullahs, was excluded from
- Rafsanjani's government earlier this year. He can still get mobs
- out into the streets, however, as he proved by leading large
- anti-American demonstrations in Tehran earlier this month to
- mark the tenth anniversary of the seizure of the U.S. embassy.
- </p>
- <p> Events like that make the White House think Rafsanjani
- cannot yet deliver even if he wants to. "We're continuing behind
- the scenes to try to follow certain rabbit trails," the
- President said last week. "So far, they've ended up at dead
- ends." Earlier this month U.S. intelligence sources reported
- rumors that the hostages would be released on the anniversary
- of the embassy seizure. That hope also proved false. Now
- Americans must wait to see if the agreement in the Hague will
- amount to a further move in the hostage game, or just another
- dead end.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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