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7676 Hazard Center Drive call 620 S. Melrose, Suite 101, 92108 ¡ 619-800-4449 24/7 92081 ¡ 760-201-9839 fundamentalists. These terrorists believed their leader was the Mahdi, the redeemer of the Islamic faith, and called on the overthrow of the Saudi Arabian regime. Naturally, this caused ripples of outrage throughout the Islamic world. Radio reports varied, but some in Pakistan erroneously suggested the United States was responsible, and began climbing the walls and trying to pull them down. The staff retreated to the secure communication vault as the embassy was burned down around them. They locked themselves in the building until nightfall, when a Marine snuck out the back door. The Marine found the entire embassy empty and so the 140 people quietly escaped the grounds. A similar 1979 – Islamabad, Pakistan The Masjid al-Haram, or Great Mosque event happened at the U.S. Embassy in of Mecca, the holiest site in the Islamic Tripoli, Libya, at the same time, for the religion, was itself taken over by Islamic same reason. 'PS BEWFSUJTJOH JOGPSNBUJPO DBMM t BEWFSUJTJOH!NJMJUBSZQSFTT DPN shots were fired. Inside, the Marines locked down the embassy and started shooting into the breached wall. Inside the embassy, the three Marines, two Vietnamese, and six American civilians jocked up and prepared for the VC assault. Meanwhile, Marines in their barracks five blocks away proceeded to the embassy a sa quick reaction force, but met with heavy resistance from the VC inside. As dawn broke, military policemen shot the locks off the gates and drove through it in a jeeps as MPs and Marines stormed the grounds. The 101st Airborne landed by helicopter on the roof and cleared the building.
1979 – Tehran, Iran
When the Shah of Iran abdicated the throne in 1979, he jetted around the world from place to place, searching for a country who would grant him asylum. Unbeknownst to much of the world, the Shah was also suffering from terminal cancer. In an act of compassion, U.S. President Jimmy Carter allowed the Shah to enter the U.S. for treatment. The people of Iran saw this act as complicity with a brutal regime and worried the U.S. was setting the stage to reinstall the Shah’s dictatorial regime once more, as they had done in 1953. The Tehran Embassy had been taken over on Feb. 4 and held for three hours before the Foreign Ministry of the new government of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini convinced the attackers to give it back within three hours. On Nov. 4, students at the University
of Tehran planned and stormed the embassy again and would hold hostages for 444 days. The Iranian government used the hostages to secure passage of its Constitution and other Khomeini-era reforms, and hold parliamentary elections. A U.S. military attempt to rescue the hostages the next year failed miserably in the deserts of Iran. After the 1979 embassy takeover, U.S. diplomatic posts worldwide were subjected to mortars, RPGs and vehicleborne improvised explosives, but a U.S. ambassador hadn’t been killed in the course of duty since armed Islamic extremists in Kabul, Afghanistan, killed Ambassador Adolph Dubs in 1979. That all changed in September 2012, when an armed militia stormed a diplomatic compound in Benghazi and killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens. +BO 13