ADMINISTRATION WELCOMES 'ENCOURAGING' SIGNALS FROM IRAN ON HOSTAGES

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96-00789R000401020008-7
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RIFPUB
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U
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 26, 1998
Sequence Number: 
8
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Publication Date: 
March 8, 1990
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NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP96-00789R000401020008-7.pdf120.87 KB
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Approved For Release 2000/0j 96- 0789R0 0 08-7 C., lop, Aow. Administration Welcomes `Encouraging' Sign Iran said that Rafsanjani, after several By Ann Devroy months in office marked by a power strug- Washington Post staff writer gle with. extremists who oppose his plans to Amid increasing signs of significant improve relations with the West, is now changes inside Iran, and hints of secret di- consolidating his control. That consolida- plomacy, the Bush administration yesterday tion, they said, was the most positive sign welcomed "encouraging" signals from Teh- that five years of Western efforts to free 18 ran on the fate of the American hostages. hostages might reach fruition. In Tehran, President Ali Akbar Hashemi Officials yesterday cited as a significant Rafsanjani told journalists that Iran wanted to sign.the arrival of a special mission from the solve the hostage problem. "My feeling is World Bank in Tehran to review an Iranian that the issue of the hostages is moving to- request for economic assistance. The ne- wards a solution," he said at a news confer- gotiations followed a two-month battle in ence after the return of Mahmoud Hashemi, the Iranian parliament, which approved a his brother, from visits to Syria and Lebanon Rafsanjani plan to borrow about $27 billion where he met with officials and Shiite Mos- from foreign countries despite initial oppo- lem leaders. sition from ' hard-liners. The money would U.S. government and outside experts on finance an ambitious five-year project to ns rrom Iran on nos.tage6 really is happening-the president, [Sec- retary of State James A.] Baker and [nation- al security adviser] Brent Scowcroft." Gary Sick, who handled Iranian matters on President Jimmy Carter's National Security Council staff and now observes Iran from Co- lumbia University, said yesterday: "I am as optimistic as I have ever been. I think this is it. I really do .. . I see this [release of the hostages] as the next step. He '[Rafsanjani]. needs iY and he is doing this not because he cares about the hostages. but simply to rein- force his position domestically." Sick interpreted Rafsanjani's decision to publicly predict a solution to the hostage cri- sis as a sign of his growing control of the gov- ernment. But like several administration of- ficials, Sick cautioned, "Things can always go wrong, especially in Lebanon." In Lebanon yesterday, a group calling-it- self the Revolutionary Justice Organization said it had no intention of releasing`tivo American hostages it has been holding. They are Joseph Cicippio of Pennsylvania and Edward Austin Tracy of Vermont, an author. There are six other AmericanJLUs- tages among the 18 from the West. The new optimism was triggered by a se- ries of editorials in Iran's Tehran Times 'over the past 10 days calling for the first time for an "unconditional" release of foreign captives held by pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon. In addition to the editorials, a senior Hez- bollah official, Hussein Mussawi, has ex- See HOSTAGES, A32, Col. 1 rebuild Iran's economy and infrastructure, devastated by the war with Iraq. White House press secretary Marlin Fitz- water said the administration was "encour- aged by the comments" of Rafsanjani. The remarks, Fitzwater added, "are certainly more hopeful than we have heard in the more distant past." A senior administration official described the attitude of officials at the White House as "one of we wait and sit and read tea leaves and read cables and feel optimistic, but many of us have been through this be- fore. We are more optimistic, yes, but there is no sign of imminent release" of the hos- tages. Another senior official said: "We think nothing is going to happen. immediate- ly. But I think only three people know what pressed lope for an early release of the hostages, according to the of- ficial Iranian news agency. In the past, Mussawi spoke out strongly against concessions to the West and unconditional release of the hos- tages. Hezboliah's spiritual guide, Sheik Mohammed Hussein Fadlal- lah, last week voiced optimism and called for an end to the hostage cri- siS,in his Friday sermon. Two Iranian government envoys went to Damascus and Beirut in an unannounced visit two days ago to consult with Syrian officials and Shi- ite clerics. Sources in Beirut said Mahmoud Hashemi, director of the Middle East department at the Iran- ian Foreign Ministry, and Mahmoud Akhtari, Iran's ambassador to Syria, traveled to Beirut from Syria. Sources in Washington said Syr- ian Foreign Minister Farouk Charaa was planning to visit the Iranian capital in the next two days.. ; The mission from the World Bank is the second to Tehran in the past three months. The bank had cut off loans to Iran after the 1979 explosion in oil prices raised Iran's income beyond the ceiling for bank. assistance. The move coincided with the seizure of U.S. hostages. Iran, again eligible for assistance, requested it in September, prompt- ing the visits by the World Bank teams. While the United States has no direct control over. World Bank loans, its voting rights and pressure on allies could thwart an Iranian ef- Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789R00040102000W to obtain the credits. A White House official said the United States would oppose such funding, .. A- X11 ornnnmi" tips to iran.