Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

1981 in Iran

1981
in
Iran

Decades:
See also:Other events of 1981
Years in Iran
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei after assassination attempt

The following lists events that happened during 1981 in Iran.

Incumbents

Events

January

  • January 5 – For the first time since Iraq had invaded its territory in September, Iran launched a counterattack, concentrating its armies at Sousangerd. After 18 months, Iraqi forces had been driven out of Iran, which then began a drive toward capturing Iraqi territory. The war would continue until 1988.[1]
  • January 11 – Iran dropped a demand that the United States deposit 24 billion dollars in gold into an Algerian bank as a condition of the release of 52 U.S. Embassy workers being held hostage in Tehran, settling instead for the release of the nearly 8 billion dollars of Iranian assets that had been frozen in American banks.[2]
  • January 20 – On Jimmy Carter's last day as 39th President of the United States, he had hoped that the 52 American hostages in Iran would be allowed to leave before his term expired at noon. At 6:18 am Washington time, the escrow papers were completed to transfer $7,970,000,000 in Iranian assets from U.S. banks to the Bank of England. At 8:04 am EST, the Algerian intermediaries notified both the U.S. and Iran that the transfer was complete. The Boeing 727 carrying the hostages, Air Algérie Flight 133, was boarded at 8:20 pm Tehran time (11:50 am EST), but did not depart until 35 minutes later, after Ronald Reagan was sworn into office as the 40th U.S. President.[3] The plane left Iranian airspace an hour, landing in Athens for refueling, then arriving at Algiers at 2:10 am local time the next day, where the former hostages were transferred to two Medevac planes and flown to Wiesbaden Army Airfield in West Germany.[4]
  • January 25 – The fifty-two Americans, who had been held hostage at the U.S. Embassy in Iran, returned to United States soil at 2:54 pm, as the plane carrying them landed at Stewart Air National Guard Base in New York. The group, who had been freed five days earlier, had flown from West Germany and were greeted by a crowd of 300,000 well-wishers. "[5]

June

By year's end, the government had announced a total of 1,656 executions before a firing squad.[10]

October

See also

References

  1. ^ Saskia Gieling, Religion and War in Revolutionary Iran (I.B.Tauris, 1999) pp20-22
  2. ^ "Iran drops $24 billion demand", Syracuse Herald-American, January 12, 1981, p1
  3. ^ Jimmy Carter, Keeping the Faith: Memoirs of a President, excerpt in TIME Magazine, October 18, 1982
  4. ^ "Yesterday's chronology of events Archived 2012-04-03 at the Wayback Machine, AP report January 21, 1981
  5. ^ 300,000 greet the 52", Syracuse Herald-Journal, January 26, 1981, p1
  6. ^ Said Amir Arjomand, The Turban for the Crown: The Islamic Revolution in Iran (Oxford University Press US, 1989) p146
  7. ^ Dilip Hiro The Iranian Labyrinth: Journeys through Theocratic Iran and Its Furies (Nation Books, 2005) p135
  8. ^ "23 executions bring Iran total to 195", Deseret News (Salt Lake City), July 13, 1981, p1
  9. ^ Michael Axworthy (2013). Revolutionary Iran: A History of the Islamic Republic. Oxford University Press.
  10. ^ "Iranian Parliament Member Assassinated", Spartanburg (S.C.) Herald, December 29, 1981, p1