U.S. Embassy, Tehran
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The Embassy of the United States of America in Tehran (Persian: سفارت آمریکا در تهران) was the United States, American List of diplomatic missions in Iran, diplomatic mission in the Pahlavi Iran, Imperial State of Iran. Direct bilateral Iran–United States relations, diplomatic relations between the two governments were severed following the Iranian Revolution in 1979, and the subsequent Iran hostage crisis, seizure of the embassy in November 1979.


History

The Diplomatic mission, embassy was designed in 1948 by the architect Ides van der Gracht, the designer also of the United States Ambassador to Turkey, Embassy of the United States in Ankara (Turkey, Republic of Turkey). It was a long, low two-story brick building, similar in architectural style to many American high schools built in the 1930s and 1940s. For this reason, the building was nicknamed "Henderson High" by the local embassy staff, referring to Loy W. Henderson (1892-1986), who became America's ambassador to the Pahlavi Iran, Empire of Iran, to its Imperial government and the Shah of Iran (emperor), just after construction was completed in 1951. The List of diplomatic missions of the United States, U.S. diplomatic mission has been defunct and the building has not been used by the Americans and their United States Department of State since the Iran hostage crisis of 1979-1980. Since then, the United States federal government has been represented in Iran to the successor Islamic Republic of Iran by the Protecting power, Protecting Power agreement with the Protecting power, United States Interests Section of the friendly neutral Diplomatic missions of Switzerland, Embassy of Switzerland in Tehran.Embassy of Switzerland in Iran – Foreign Interests Section
, Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (page visited on 4 April 2015).
The name given to the compound by the embassy's illegal occupiers and still used by many Iranians is variously translated as the "den of spies", "espionage den," "den of espionage", and "nest of spies". After the fall and violent occupation of the American Embassy, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps used it as a training center, and continue to maintain the complex. The brick walls that form the perimeter (the embassy grounds are the size of a city block) feature a number of Anti-Americanism, anti-American murals commissioned by the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, government of Iran. The site has also housed a bookstore and a museum. Part of the embassy has been turned into an anti-American museum, and several Iranian college / university student organizations maintain offices in the former U.S. embassy complex. As of January 2017, the site is open to the Iranian public and foreigners. The decorative Great Seal of the United States is badly damaged, but still visible overhead at the building's entryway. The Muslim Student Followers of the Imam's Line published documents seized in the embassy (including painstakingly reconstructed shredded documents) in a series of books called "Documents from the US Espionage Den" (, ). These books included telegrams, correspondence, and reports from the United States Department of State and Central Intelligence Agency, some of which remain classified information, classified to this day.


U.S. Interests Section of the Swiss Embassy

When diplomatic relations were broken, the United States appointed Switzerland to be its protecting power in Iran. Informal relations are carried out through the United States Interests Section of the Swiss Embassy. Services for American citizens are limited. The section is not authorized to perform any U.S. visa/green card/immigration-related services. As of 2024, U.S. visa/green card services and interviews for Iranian citizens are conducted at U.S. Embassies and Consulates in other locations, namely Embassy of the United States, Ankara, Ankara, Dubai, and Embassy of the United States, Yerevan, Yerevan whose U.S. Embassies and consulates are staffed with Persian language, Persian-speaking consular officers. In February 2009, the General Command of the Law Enforcement of Islamic Republic of Iran, Iranian police arrested Marco Kämpf, the Switzerland, Swiss diplomat acting as the First Secretary of the US Interests, after finding him in a compromising position in his car with an Iranian woman he had promised to marry. He was immediately recalled to Switzerland.


Former Iranian Embassy in Washington, D.C. (United States)

The U.S. State Department seized the former Embassy of Iran, Washington, D.C., Iranian Embassy at 3003-3005 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. in Washington, D.C. in retaliation for the invasion, seizure and occupation of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran since 1979-1980. The Iranian Interests Section for any activities in the United States, operates out of the Embassy of Pakistan, Washington, D.C., Pakistani Embassy (for the Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Pakistan).


See also

* Iran hostage crisis * Iran–United States relations * List of ambassadors of the United States to Iran * Embassy of the United Kingdom, Tehran * Tehran American School * Consulate-General of the United States, Tabriz


References


External links

* hosts a gallery of photographs taken from inside the US Embassy during the crisis. * 400 Pages of Still-Classified CIA and State Dept Documents Seized From the US Embassy in Tehran.
متن کامل و تحلیل اسناد لانه جاسوسی آمریکا (The Full Text and Analysis of the Documents from the US Espionage Den)

Inside The Former US Embassy In Tehran, IranDocuments from the U.S. Espionage DenPhotograph of the embassy gates, 2008
(on flickr)
Virtual Embassy of the United States, Tehran
(not a physical presence in Iran) {{DEFAULTSORT:Embassy of the United States, Tehran Iran–United States relations Buildings and structures in Tehran Defunct diplomatic missions of the United States, Tehran Diplomatic missions in Tehran, United States Iran hostage crisis