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In the 1979 hostage crisis, why did Iran free 10 Black Americans before the others?

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Since the United States launched a joint military campaign with Israel on Iran in February, many commentators and historians have revisted a chapter of modern history: the 1979 Iran hostage crisis. On 4 November, a student demonstration outside the US embassy in Tehran erupted into an all-out assault on the compound, and 66 Americans were taken hostage. It was the culmination of decades of tension, beginning with the US and Britain’s role in installing the Shah of Iran to safeguard energy interests, and ending with a popular uprising that toppled his oppressive regime and drove him into exile. As many recalled this chapter, one detail has taken on renewed resonance: 16 days into the standoff, 13 hostages, including three white women, four Black women and six Black men, were released. Iranian people gather before the entrance of the United States embassy compound in Tehran, Iran, on 6 November 1979, on the third day of the occupation of the building.…

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