On 25th Anniversary of U.S. Embassy Siege, Crowd Protests Nuclear Stance
President Bush may have triumphed at home, but he was
burned in effigy here Wednesday. A noisy street demonstration marked
the 25th anniversary of the student takeover of the U.S. Embassy, after
which 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days. Unlike past
commemorations, this one appeared to be focused on the future and the
potential for a major showdown with the United States during a second
Bush term. Bush and not Jimmy Carter, who was president during the
1979-81 hostage drama, was at the center of the protest. Three massive
photographs of the president served as a backdrop for speakers who
criticized U.S. foreign policy. The subtext throughout the protest was
the escalating dispute between the United States and Iran over Tehran's
nuclear energy program. "Nuclear technology is our right, and we are
not going to surrender our rights to the United States or Europe,"
vowed one of several banners waved by teenage schoolgirls in a crowd of
thousands. The crowd gathered outside the sprawling former American
compound, which is now a training center for Iraq's elite Revolutionary
Guards military unit. The two-hour rally ended with a statement, read
to roaring chants of "Allahu Akbar," or "God is great," that Iran would
never give up its right to nuclear technology. [more]
Pictured above:
Thousands of Iranians rally near the former U.S. Embassy to mark the
anniversary of the siege that kept 52 Americans hostage for 444 days.