The Times: The Bush Administration is investigating allegations
by former US hostages in Iran that the countrys newly elected President was one of the student leaders responsible for holding them captive 25 years ago.
In a move that could have serious diplomatic repercussions, the White House said that the allegations had raised many questions about President Mahmoud Ahmadinejads past and that it was looking into the facts.
New President was ringleader of US embassy seizure, say hostages
Some held hostage in ’79 say Iran’s chief was a captor
International Herald Tribune: A new cloud appeared over the U.S. relationship with Iran on Thursday as President George W. Bush said a host of questions had been raised by allegations by several former American hostages that the president-elect of Iran was among their captors after radicals seized the American Embassy in 1979.
US renews Iran travel warning
AFP: The US government on Thursday renewed a warning against travel to Iran, saying anti-US hostility had increased the threat of kidnapping. But a State Department official said the warning was not linked to growing controversy over the past of Iran’s president-elect, Mahmood Ahmadinejad, who has been accused of taking part in the 1979 hostage taking at the US embassy in Tehran.
US lawmakers flock to support Iran sanctions bill
AFP: Allegations that Iran’s president-elect played a key role in the 1979 US embassy takeover in Tehran has given new impetus to a House of Representatives bill slapping sanctions on the regime. House lawmakers on Thursday gave renewed support to The Iran Freedom Support Act, introduced by Republican Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. The legislation, introduced by Ros-Lehtinen in January, already had 250 co-sponsors before the revelations, but the number of backers rose to over 300 after revelations that Iran’s hardliner president-elect, Mahmood Ahmadinejad, may have played a role as a hostage taker.
US calls on Iran to come clean over president’s past
AFP: The United States pressed Iran Thursday to come clean over the past of its new president-elect, amid charges he played a key role in taking US diplomats hostage in Tehran 26 years ago. The State Department issued the call after President George W. Bush said the accusation leveled by five former hostages against Iranian hardliner Mahmood Ahmadinejad “raises many questions.”
Bush says wants answers on Iran leader’s past
Reuters: President George W. Bush said on Thursday he
wanted answers on whether Iranian President-elect Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was a leader in the 1979 U.S. Embassy siege as some former hostages have said.
Several of the Americans who were held said they recognized
the ultraconservative Tehran mayor — who was elected president in a landslide on Friday — as a ringleader in the hostage-taking.
Bush: Iranian leader’s past will draw scrutiny
AFP: US President George W. Bush said Thursday that the charge that Iran’s hardline president-elect was a key player in the dramatic 1979 takeover of the US embassy in Tehran “raises many questions.”
Five survivors of the 444-day siege of the embassy have said they remember seeing Ahmadinejad, while Iranian veterans of the embassy standoff have denied that the hardliner was involved.
Photo shows Irans new President as 1979 US hostage-taker
Iran Focus: London, Jun. 29 – Iran Focus has learnt that the photograph of Irans newly-elected president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, holding the arm of a blindfolded American hostage on the premises of the United States embassy in Tehran was taken by an Associated Press photographer in November 1979.
White House taking seriously claims against Iran’s new president
AP: The White House said Thursday it is taking seriously the allegations of some former American hostages who say the believe that Iran’s president-elect was one of their captors in the late 1970s. “I think the news reports and statements from several former American hostages raise many questions about his past,” White House press secretary Scott McClellan said of the Iranian president-elect Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “We take them very seriously and we are looking into them to better
understand the facts.”
Irans President-elect set to meet hard-line allies
Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Jun. 30 Irans newly-elected President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will jointly meet with four of the failed hard-line presidential hopefuls this evening where they are expected to reach an agreement over senior cabinet posts. Ahmadinejad, himself an ultra-conservative who is set to take office on August 4, will meet with Ahmad Tavakkoli, Mohsen Rezai, Mohammad-Baqer Qalibaf, and Ali Larijani.


