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Simonov
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This Day in History: May 5, 1980

Not Your Usual Border Guard

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by Simonov
This Day in History: April 28, 1944
This Day in History: May 12, 1942
On May 5, 1980, the Iranian Embassy siege was ended by Britain's SAS (Special Air Service) with Operation Nimrod. The siege had begun on April 30th when gunmen of the DRFLA (Democratic Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Arabistan) stormed the Iranian embassy at Princes Gate, South Kensington, London. The DRFLA had taken the people within the embassy hostage as part of their push for the establishment of an independent Arab state in southern Iran. Over the course of five days, negotiations between the British government and the hostage-takers eventually failed and the situation deteriorated until, on May 5th, hostage Abbas Lavasani was killed by the DRFLA. This in turn forced the implementation of Operation Nimrod, assaulting the embassy. Two teams (Blue Team and Red Team) launch simultaneous assaults with Red Team abseiling from the roof and smashing a window to gain entry while Blue Team detonated explosives on the first floor windows. In 17 minutes, the raid was successfully accomplished with the hostages freed and all but one of the terrorists were killed.

The siege brought the British SAS to notability in the public eye for the first time since its establishment during World War II. Though the newfound notoriety was met with disdain by the regiment's members due to their previous obscurity being beneficial to their covert operations, but this new fame vindicated the existence of the SAS and saved it from possible disbandment.

Keywords
male 1,116,251, fox 233,073, vulpine 34,832, red fox 8,244, this day in history 249, tdih 244, sas 11, may 5 2, special air service 1, princes gate 1, iranian embassy siege 1, drfla 1
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Type: Picture/Pinup
Published: 6 years, 11 months ago
Rating: General

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RabbitGTI
6 years, 11 months ago
I never knew the SAS had any involvement in the Iranian embassy siege, I only new of our (Canadian) involvement of which I'm very proud where the Canadian ambassador to Iran at the time Ken Taylor and his wife hid the American hostages in their homes, and got them secretly out of the country. As always, I really like the history lesson you expand on in your descriptions. keep spreading information and increasing knowledge:) I'm happy this siege was successful and vindicated the Special Air Service's existence and proved to others they could get the job done!
moyomongoose
6 years, 11 months ago
And to think the U.S. tried to take credit for it also.
RabbitGTI
6 years, 11 months ago
Yeah, that's why I never saw the "Argo" movie because it was factually inaccurate and didn't tell the story properly. That movie made the U.S look like the heroes when they weren't involved, the same goes for "The great escape" where the Commonwealth POWs escaped Stalag Luft 3 by tunneling under it. The whole Tom, Dick, Harry, and George escapade. It's just principle for me: If you're going to tell a story, then tell it right. Sorry, I don't mean to start anything and I didn't mean to ramble.
Simonov
6 years, 11 months ago
I believe you're thinking of the siege and subsequent hostage crisis which involved the American embassy in Iran.  This one is about the Iranian embassy in London, England.
RabbitGTI
6 years, 11 months ago
That was what I was thinking about, thanks. I never knew about the Iranian embassy being attacked in London England.
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