Assassination of Paul R. Shaffer and John H. Turner
Colonel Paul R. Shaffer (1930–1975) was a
Background
According to the US ambassador to Iran, Richard Helms, the American presence in Iran during the 1970s was too large, estimated at 10,000–40,000 people. American personnel and arms had relocated to Iran due to the arms embargo against Turkey and withdrawal of Americans from Vietnam.[8]
In the leadup to the assassination, security for American personnel had deteriorated so much that senior officers had been assigned bodyguards. Two weeks before the two Iranian government officials had been assassinated in Tehran and nine political prisoners had been killed in
Assassination
On 21 May 1975, terrorists stopped the car carrying Colonel Shaffer and Lieutenant Colonel John H Turner. One vehicle blocked the car from the front while another vehicle rammed it from behind.[8] They ordered the Iranian driver to lie down, and then shot and killed the Americans at point-blank range. The shooting happened when the two officers were on their way to work at an Iranian military base in south Tehran.[1][9][2][10] Hours after the attack, American officials received an anonymous call, which said the assassinations were retaliation for "Government atrocities against political prisoners".[11] The Iranian government identified the terrorists as "young leftists"[11] (according to another source it said "Marxist guerrillas"[1]).
Individuals belonging to a Marxist element of the MEK[12] (also known as Peykar)[13] were identified as responsible.[by whom?] Vahid Afrakhteh was accused and charged by an Iranian army tribunal, and was sentenced to death by firing squad.[14] Afrakhteh (one of the founders of Peykar)[15] confessed that he had led the cell that gunned down Col. Paul Shaffer and Lt. Col. Jack Turner, also saying that his immediate superiors at the time had close links with the Marxist Habash group.[16]
According to some sources, the
According to The Bulletin, a newspaper of Bend, Oregon, "a group identifying itself as the Revolutionary Republican Movement of the Armed Forces of Iran" also claimed responsibility.[23]
Aftermath
In response to the assassinations, the
In 2005 a memorial was built by the War on Terror Foundation to honor Col. Shaffer.[25] In 2017, the family of Jack Turner filed a $35 million lawsuit against the MEK and Iran.[26]
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Daily Kent Stater 22 May 1975". Kent State University.
- ^ a b "Desert Sun 21 May 1975" – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
- ISBN 978-1-351-47913-4.
The most notable actions of the Marxist Mojahedin were assassinations of Savak general, of two American military advisers, and a failed attempt against an American diplomat, all in 1975
- ISBN 978-0-16-090501-8.
Referred to in the Iranian press as the 'Iranian People's Strugglers', and later known as Peykar, this group led by Tagui Shahram, Vahid Arakhteh and Bahram Aram was one of several underground groups waging a covert war against the Shah's secret police, SAVAK. Afrakhteh, who later confessed to the killings of Americans, was executed
- ^ Iran Almanac and Book of Facts, Volumen 15. 1976.
Ten terrorists were sentenced to death... The condemned terrorists were Vahid Afrakhteh... The terroirsts were charged with the murders of Brigadier-general Reza Zandipur, United States Colonels Hawkins, Paul Shaffer and ack Turner, the U.S. Embassy's translator Hassan Hossnan
- ASIN B07FBB6L8Y.
- ^ a b Ervand Abrahamian (1989). The Iranian Mojahedin. Yale University Press. p. 142.
- ^ a b c Andrew Scott Cooper (2012). The Oil Kings: How the U.S., Iran, and Saudi Arabia Changed the Balance of Power in the Middle East. Simon & Schuster. pp. 255–256.
- ^ "Desert Sun 28 August 1976" – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
- ^ "Terrorists Kill Iranian Employe of U.S. Embassy". The New York Times. 4 July 1975.
- ^ New York Times.
- ^ "Chapter 8 -- Foreign Terrorist Organizations". U.S. Department of State.
- ISBN 978-1-351-47913-4.
- ISBN 978-0-313-22206-1.
- ASIN B07FBB6L8Y.
- ^ "Clippings of Latin American political, social and economic news from various English language newspapers". ISLA. 12. April 1976.
- ISBN 978-0-8330-4701-4.
- Harper's.
- ^ Global Terrorism Database [Data file], National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), 1975-05-21, 197505210002
- ^ Dennis Pluchinsky. Anti-american Terrorism: From Eisenhower To Trump – A Chronicle Of The Threat And Response: Volume I: The Eisenhower Through Carter Administrations. World Scientific. pp. 54–55.
- ^ Albert V. Benliot (2001). Iran Outlaw, Outcast Or Normal Country?. Nova Science Publishers. p. 99.
- ISBN 978-0-16-090501-8.
- ^ "Group claims responsibility for Iran deaths". The Bulletin.
- OCLC 298116347.
- ^ http://www.waronterror.org/the-memorial/
- ^ "Trump Cabinet pick paid by controversial Iranian exile group". Associated Press. 24 April 2021.