-
10-year-old girl, Holocaust survivors among Bondi Beach dead
-
Steelers edge towards NFL playoffs as Dolphins eliminated
-
Australian PM says 'Islamic State ideology' drove Bondi Beach gunmen
-
Canada plow-maker can't clear path through Trump tariffs
-
Bank of Japan expected to hike rates to 30-year high
-
Cunningham leads Pistons past Celtics
-
Stokes tells England to 'show a bit of dog' in must-win Adelaide Test
-
EU to unveil plan to tackle housing crisis
-
EU set to scrap 2035 combustion-engine ban in car industry boost
-
Australian PM visits Bondi Beach hero in hospital
-
'Easiest scam in the world': Musicians sound alarm over AI impersonators
-
'Waiting to die': the dirty business of recycling in Vietnam
-
Asian markets retreat ahead of US jobs as tech worries weigh
-
Security beefed up for Ashes Adelaide Test after Bondi shooting
-
Famed Jerusalem stone still sells despite West Bank economic woes
-
Trump sues BBC for $10 billion over documentary speech edit
-
Chile follows Latin American neighbors in lurching right
-
Will OpenAI be the next tech giant or next Netscape?
-
Khawaja left out as Australia's Cummins, Lyon back for 3rd Ashes Test
-
Australia PM says 'Islamic State ideology' drove Bondi Beach shooters
-
Scheffler wins fourth straight PGA Tour Player of the Year
-
Security beefed up for Ashes Test after Bondi shooting
-
Wembanyama blocking Knicks path in NBA Cup final
-
Amorim seeks clinical Man Utd after 'crazy' Bournemouth clash
-
Man Utd blow lead three times in 4-4 Bournemouth thriller
-
Stokes calls on England to 'show a bit of dog' in must-win Adelaide Test
-
Trump 'considering' push to reclassify marijuana as less dangerous
-
Chiefs coach Reid backing Mahomes recovery after knee injury
-
Trump says Ukraine deal close, Europe proposes peace force
-
French minister urges angry farmers to trust cow culls, vaccines
-
Angelina Jolie reveals mastectomy scars in Time France magazine
-
Paris Olympics, Paralympics 'net cost' drops to 2.8bn euros: think tank
-
Chile president-elect dials down right-wing rhetoric, vows unity
-
Five Rob Reiner films that rocked, romanced and riveted
-
Rob Reiner: Hollywood giant and political activist
-
Observers say Honduran election fair, but urge faster count
-
Europe proposes Ukraine peace force as Zelensky hails 'real progress' with US
-
Trump condemned for saying critical filmmaker brought on own murder
-
US military to use Trinidad airports, on Venezuela's doorstep
-
Daughter warns China not to make Jimmy Lai a 'martyr'
-
UK defence chief says 'whole nation' must meet global threats
-
Rob Reiner's death: what we know
-
Zelensky hails 'real progress' in Berlin talks with Trump envoys
-
Toulouse handed two-point deduction for salary cap breach
-
Son arrested for murder of movie director Rob Reiner and wife
-
Stock market optimism returns after tech selloff but Wall Street wobbles
-
Clarke warns Scotland fans over sky-high World Cup prices
-
In Israel, Sydney attack casts shadow over Hanukkah
-
Son arrested after Rob Reiner and wife found dead: US media
-
Athletes to stay in pop-up cabins in the woods at Winter Olympics
'Hostage diplomacy': longstanding Iran tactic presenting dilemma for West
Iran since the Islamic revolution has employed the tactic of arresting Westerners in a bid to extract concessions from its foes, in a strategy of "hostage diplomacy" that has long presented Europe and the United States with a dilemma, observers say.
Iranian authorities this week released two French nationals, Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris, from jail in Tehran after more than three years.
They had been convicted on charges of espionage but their families said they were innocent tourists unwittingly caught up in a wider game being played out between Tehran and the West.
France described the pair, as well as several other French nationals detained in Iran who were recently released, as "state hostages". Over the last years, dozens of Europeans and Americans have been detained in similar circumstances.
The strategy has long antecedents, going back to the seizure of the US embassy in Tehran in November 1979 by Islamist radicals in the wake of the revolution, which saw dozens of Americans held for 444 days into early 1981.
"Iran has pursued hostage diplomacy since the founding of the Islamic Republic in 1979," said Jason Brodsky, policy director of US-based think tank United Against Nuclear Iran.
"It uses hostages as pawns to extract concessions that it could not otherwise achieve from the United States and its allies," he added.
The Islamic republic denies it has any strategy of hostage taking and all foreigners jailed are convicted after due legal process.
- 'Not the only ones' -
Such concessions include unfreezing assets or the release of Iranian nationals convicted in the United States, Europe and elsewhere on charges such as sanctions violations, assassination plots, or terrorism, he said.
"What the Iranian regime is practising is state-sponsored hostage taking, also known as hostage diplomacy," added Daren Nair, a security consultant who has for years campaigned for detainees' releases worldwide.
"And the Iranian regime are not the only ones to do that. The Venezuelans do it, the Russians do it, the Chinese do it," he added.
For Clement Therme, an academic at France's Universite de Montpellier Paul-Valery, who closely follows the issue, the policy is "a pillar of Iranian foreign policy".
"Over time, there are arrests and releases, during periods of rapprochement and tension. But it's the intensity that varies, and the practice continues."
The release of Kohler and Paris, who have yet to be allowed to return to France, came after France freed on bail Iranian woman Mahdieh Esfandiari, detained in Paris on charges of spreading terror propaganda.
Tehran had explicitly linked the two cases, although the French foreign ministry has declined to comment on any deal.
- 'Piecemeal manner' -
The release of Western nationals detained in similar circumstances over the last years was often timed with Tehran receiving something in return after painstaking and ultra-secret diplomacy.
The cases of several British citizens, including dual national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, were linked to a payment owed by the UK to Iran for tanks ordered by the ousted shah that were never delivered. That debt was eventually settled and Zaghari-Ratcliffe and two other Britons were released in 2022.
In 2023, five Americans held in Iran, including the US-Iranian businessman Siamak Namazi who had been imprisoned for eight years, were released in a scheme that saw $6 billion of Iranian assets unfrozen in South Korea.
The release of British-Australian academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert by Iran in 2020 came after Thailand freed three Iranian men jailed over a 2012 bomb plot.
But despite the recent releases, others remain held by Tehran, including Swedish-Iranian academic Ahmadreza Djalali, sentenced to death in 2017 on espionage charges his family vehemently rejects.
British couple Lindsay and Craig Foreman have been held in Iran since January on espionage charges after Iranian authorities seized the pair while they were on a round-the-world motorbike trip.
Brodsky said Europe and the United States should consider imposing a wholesale ban on travel to Iran by their nationals. But he acknowledged too that Washington and its allies had treated "this problem in a piecemeal manner" for too long.
"The US government should be working collectively with its allies to impose a range of multinational penalties on the Islamic Republic the moment any hostage from these countries is taken by the Iranian regime -- this includes sanctions and diplomatic isolation," he said.
T.Bondarenko--BTB