The Washington Post – Britain withdrew all its diplomatic staff from Iran on Wednesday and ordered the Iranian Embassy in London closed, after supporters of Iran’s ruling clerics ransacked the British Embassy and residential compound. European member countries were scheduled to meet in Brussels on Thursday to decide whether their embassies would remain open in light of the attack, which was a stark escalation of long-simmering anti-Western sentiment. Norway closed its embassy for the day on Wednesday, and Germany’s Foreign Office announced that it was recalling its ambassador from Iran for consultations.
Hague, who called it “fanciful” to think Tuesday’s attack on the British Embassy in Tehran could have happened without the implicit sanction of the Iranian government, said London would not sever all diplomatic ties. He said the two nations would continue to keep some lines of communication open to deal with issues such as Iran’s nuclear program and human rights.
“They say that the students’ behavior was ‘shameful,’ ” Larijani said in a previously scheduled news conference Wednesday, referring to British reactions to the storming of the compounds. “It is the British government’s behavior which is shameful because they have behaved in a hostile manner toward our people for the past five decades,” he added, according to the semiofficial Iranian Students’ News Agency. “
Let them go,” Ahmad Bakhshayeshi Ardestani, an influential analyst who is running for parliament, said of the British. “They will return to Iran because the United Kingdom needs Iran more than it needs them.”
One parliamentarian proposed that the European could make do with a single embassy in Tehran, representing all 27 member nations. Saying that the bloc is planning to integrate its foreign policy, Mehdi Mehdizadeh, a member of parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, was quoted by the Atynews Web site as saying that one embassy is enough.
But another member of parliament, Mohammad Mehdi Shahryari, denounced the incursion, which British Prime Minister David Cameron called “outrageous and indefensible” and the White House said it condemned “in the strongest terms.”
“Based on the diplomatic rights, the regulations that the embassies follow and the fact that we have accepted that this country have an embassy in Iran, then, occupying the British Embassy was a mistake,” Shahryari said.
The Alef Web site, which is aligned closely with key members of parliament, also was critical.
“Why did they do this at this moment in time?” an editorial posted on the Web site asked. It said Iran’s government should take steps against Britain, instead of “giving permission to anarchy in the name of Islam and the revolution.”
