“I've been a hostage for seven and a half years now.” US citizen Siamak Namazi is the longest serving American in Iranian prison. Now, he’s speaking in an unprecedented interview from inside Evin prison to plead President Biden to get him released. “This is a desperate measure.”
“I know what it feels like to be left behind and I wouldn’t wish it upon my worst enemy,” Siamak Namazi tells me from inside Evin prison. He is pushing for President Biden to get him & his two jailed compatriots, Morad Tahbaz and Emad Sharghi, freed. “We’re all in this together.”
“I’ve never had any response” to his letter to President Biden, imprisoned American Siamak Namazi tells me in an emotional conversation from Iran’s Evin prison. “This is what makes things particularly painful… I have not heard anything.”
“My very humanity has been taken away from me, not just my freedom,” says Siamak Namazi, still imprisoned in Iran for over 7 years now. “Human traffickers have more rights than I do.” He recalls how in the first two years of his ordeal, “I spent months caged in a solitary cell.”
Siamak Namazi is the American imprisoned longest in Iran, over seven years, yet never released with other dual nationals. When he wasn’t released with others in 2016, “I was completely devastated, shattered, despondent,” he says. “One day I realize everyone’s gone and I’m left.”
“If you want to get me bawling, talk about my dad,” says Siamak Namazi, an American imprisoned in Iran for over 7 years. Though now free, his father Baquer was jailed for years, and Siamak tells me it filled him with guilt. “My dad is my hero… [yet was] arrested because of me.”
As our unprecedented conversation from inside Evin prison drew to a close, imprisoned American Siamak Namazi wanted to be sure he delivered one clear message direct to President Biden. Watch.
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Having spent most of my career covering forces in the field, I am sad & alarmed by this purge of a distinguished man with a trailblazing combat & leadership record in the US military, & that of two women who despite the odds, reached the very pinnacles of military leadership.
In 2022, I interviewed General C.Q. Brown, an impressive scholar-soldier with an amazing life story: edition.cnn.com/audio/podcasts…
Having covered the U.S. military in combat, crisis, and peace enforcement all over the world, I have seen how a truly representative military has made the US so powerful and safe.
Since stepping down as Germany’s chancellor, Angela Merkel’s legacy has come under scrutiny – particularly over reliance on Russian gas and the rise of the far right. But Merkel insists it doesn’t make sense to look at these in hindsight, when I spoke to her in DC this week.
“President Trump lives off actually acting unconventionally and, in this way, draws the attention of people to himself,” Angela Merkel tells me. Nonetheless, “looking back… we were actually able to get to sensible agreements with him.”
“I think [Trump] smells when people are a little bit afraid of him. And when you’re not, then you can enter into good talks with him,” says former German Chancellor Angela Merkel – adding that she wasn’t afraid when she dealt with him.
Last time I interviewed Siamak Namazi, he was inside Iran’s Evin Prison. A year after his release, he says he’s more relaxed for our second interview: “It is such a joy to be talking to you and not worrying about someone dragging me to a solitary cell somewhere because of it.”
In the year since he was freed from Iranian prison, Siamak Namazi tells me that adjusting to normal life “is a very difficult process. I remember having to set an alarm to remind myself to leave the apartment… I just wasn’t used to doing that.”
After he was freed from 8 years of imprisonment in Iran, Siamak Namazi says there wasn’t much government support. Nor did the US government debrief him, he says, despite the fact that “I’ve clocked the most hours negotiating with the Revolutionary Guards.”
“By targeting our civilians… [Russia is] trying to break our will to win,” says General Oleksandr Syrskyi, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. I spoke to him at an undisclosed location near the frontlines, in his first TV interview as Ukraine’s top commander.
Russia planned a new attack from Kursk before Ukraine’s incursion, General Syrskyi tells me. “We moved the fighting to the enemy’s territory so that he could feel what we feel every day… In addition, we took a sufficient number of prisoners. We created an ‘exchange fund’”.
“We are doing everything we can not to lose Pokrovsk,” Ukraine’s top commander General Oleksandr Syrskyi tells me. “Over the past six days, the enemy has not advanced a single meter in the Pokrovsk direction. So our strategy is working.”
The National Rally was “surprised” that Macron called parliamentary elections so soon after the EU elections, Marine Le Pen @MLP_officiel tells me. As the left and center coalesce against her party ahead of the second round, I asked her how it feels to be considered so dangerous.
@MLP_officiel French soccer star Killian Mbappé has urged his compatriots not to vote for the extremes. The National Rally’s Marine Le Pen tells me she’s “not much of a football enthusiast,” but that his intervention “is starting to not be well received in our country.”
@MLP_officiel In 2017, Marine Le Pen outlined to me a plan to negotiate with the EU – and then to consider a referendum on quitting. Six years later, does she stand by that? “No,” she tells me. “We’re not going to leave the European Union.”
Renowned Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh has been arrested and beaten after attending the funeral of Armita Geravand, according to her husband and fellow human rights campaigner Reza Khandan.
Iranian teenager Armita Geravand fell into a coma after allegedly being assaulted by Iran’s morality police for not wearing a headscarf. On Saturday, Iranian state media reported that Geravand had died. edition.cnn.com/2023/10/28/wor…
According to Khandan, Sotoudeh attended Geravand’s funeral and “was arrested and remains in the Vozara Detention Center after being physically assaulted. She will be transferred to the prosecutor’s office at Evin prison [on Monday] where a decision about her case will be made.”