Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Argo by Antonio Mendez


Argo review
By BRETT WARNKE
Antonio Mendez and Matt Baglio’s new book, Argo:  How the CIA and Hollywood Pulled off the Most Audacious Rescue in History, Viking Press, $26.95
In the hopes of freeing hostages, President Reagan infamously gave the green light for money to be raised from the sale of illegal weapons to Iran and using the cash to conduct an unconstitutional foreign policy of supporting contras in Nicaragua.  The President told his advisors in private, “Well, the American people will never forgive me if big, strong President Reagan passed up a chance to free the hostages over this legal question.[1]”  President Carter, too, felt the need to get tough with Iran.  He approved the bungled Operation Desert Claw, a failed attempt to rescue hostages in the U.S. embassy who Iran’s reactionary government held for 444 days.  It was only after Carter’s 1980 defeat that some of the hostages were released, six others escaped by another means.
That lesser known escape is the subject of Antonio Mendez and Matt Baglio’s new book, Argo:  How the CIA and Hollywood Pulled Off the Most Audacious Rescue in History.  The story is not a history of the tumultuous policy disputes or a gripping political tale.  For that better and more interesting book, see David Crist’s excellent new book The Twilight War:  The Secret History of America’s Thirty Year Conflict With Iran.
Mendez, a CIA agent and the author of two other books, details an operation that tricks the Iranian government into allowing a Hollywood team into the country as a kind of PR move.  Mendez calls the plan an “elegant solution” that the government—internationally reviled for kidnapping diplomats and executing rivals—may have even welcomed.  Sadly, Mendez’s book I s a series of non-events and irrelevant technical details.  It is less la Carre’ and more I don’t care.  And for the larger questions like how did the well-funded and extremely powerful CIA not see the Iranian revolution coming?  Mendez has “no easy answer.”  The dialogue and what we glean from it is unmemorable and the reader is constantly introduced to scores of characters—their backgrounds, features, favorite drinks—but never informed why this information is pertinent or relevant to his story.  At bottom, this book is an amazingly interesting magazine article that has been huffed and puffed into book form.  A pithier version, say, in the form of a movie, would be a better medium.    

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