Culture | The other Iran hostage crisis

The six-day siege that put terror on television

A dramatic rescue attempt ended it and shot Britain’s SAS to fame

Members of the Special Air Service, hooded to avoid identification, fire tear gas at the Iranian embassy in London, United Kingdom on May 5th 1980
Undercover operatives taking coverPhotograph: AP

IN APRIL 1980 gunmen stormed the Iranian embassy in London and took 26 hostages. The assailants were not Islamist fanatics. Nor was this in retaliation for the then-ongoing seizure of America’s embassy in Tehran by the nascent Islamic Republic of Iran, which had taken power the previous year. Instead this was the work of a militant group, the Democratic Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Arabistan, hoping to secure a homeland for Iranian Arabs in the oil-rich province of Khuzestan. Less than a week later their ambitions were crushed when Britain’s Special Air Service (SAS), an elite group of soldiers (pictured), charged into the embassy.

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This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “The other Iran hostage crisis”

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