Iranians marked the 1979 seizure of the US embassy today, a day before Americans elect a new president, with some demonstrators indifferent to the US vote and a few wondering if it could help rebuild ties.
Iran has been a focus of the foreign policy debate in the US campaign before tomorrow's vote. Both candidates, Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain, say they will toughen sanctions. Mr Obama says he is prepared to engage in direct talks.
Kayhan International, a hardline English-language daily, said in a column that it did not matter who won the US race.
"Hopefully either of the two would be presiding over the end of the US domineering system, whose den of espionage was taken over this day in 1979 by Tehran University students, in a move that nipped in the bud the plots of the White House against the newfound Islamic Republic," it wrote on its front page.
The United States cut ties with Tehran in 1980. Washington now says it is considering opening a US interests section in Tehran, which would mean sending diplomats. It says this would show the United States was against Iran's government not people.
But amid "Death to America" chants outside the former US mission, some wondered if tomorrow's vote could bring change.
"There is a good possibility there would be a change in their outlook toward Iran with the coming of the new president. I am very optimistic, especially if Obama is elected," Ahmad Abdullahi, a 34-year-old school teacher, told reporters.
He was among thousands gathered around the old embassy walls that radical students scaled on November 4th, 1979, and then held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. The Iranian date of the takeover was the 13th day of Aban, which this year falls on November 3rd.
"In my opinion, McCain will be president. Whoever becomes the president -- other than George Bush -- will be more logical," said Ramin Kermani, a 22-year-old chemistry student.
Bush labeled Iran part of an "axis of evil" in 2002, a move that angered the Islamic Republic particularly after it helped in the 2001 US-led war to topple Afghanistan's Taliban.
Iranian analysts say officials in Tehran may privately prefer Obama but they are not counting on a major US policy shift. Some demonstrators on Monday echoed that view.
"I don't think their imperialist instinct would allow any change in their behavior and demeanor toward Iran or any other country," said 71-year-old pensioner Aboutaleb Mirzaie.
Debate in Iran about ties has grown as politicians start maneuvering before the Islamic Republic's own presidential race in June. Critics say president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has isolated Iran with his fiery speeches against Washington and the West.
But Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, put a damper on such discussion last week by saying Iran's hatred of America ran deep and differences were more than a few policies.
Yet Iranians insist their differences are with the White House not Americans -- a view shared by the Kayhan editorial.
When a photographer tried to take a picture of one Iranian demonstrator, his subject shouted with a big smile: "Don't take my picture, they won't give me a visa."
Reuters