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Edward B. Johnson, the second CIA officer in Iran for the 'Argo' rescue mission, dies at 81

Obit Edward Johnson CIA Argo
September 09, 2024

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) โ€” Edward B. Johnson, who as a CIA officer traveled into Iran with a colleague to rescue six American diplomats who fled the 1979 U.S. Embassy takeover in Tehran, has died, the agency confirmed Monday. He was 81.

Johnson's identity for decades had been hidden from the public, with him known only by the pseudonym โ€œJulioโ€ after fellow CIA officer Antonio โ€œTonyโ€ Mendez published a book recounting the operation. The 2012 Academy Award-winning film โ€œArgo,โ€ directed by and starring Ben Affleck, didn't include the second man on the team.

Yet a painting at the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, offered a faceless acknowledgment of Johnson's existence. And in 2023, the CIA itself revealed Johnson's identity in a podcast highlighting the agency's work to free the diplomats hiding at the Canadian ambassador's residence in Tehran.

Edward B. Johnson, the second CIA officer in Iran for the 'Argo' rescue mission, dies at 81
Obit Edward Johnson CIA Argo

โ€œWorking with the six โ€” these are rookies,โ€ Johnson recounted in an interview aired by the podcast. โ€œThey were people who were not trained to lie to authorities. They werenโ€™t trained to be clandestine, elusive.โ€

Johnson died Aug. 27 in his sleep in Virginia after suffering from pneumonia, the CIA told The Associated Press on Monday.

โ€œEdโ€™s legacy will continue to inspire those who walk the halls of Langley for generations to come,โ€ the agency said in a public statement.

His family in a statement honored him as having โ€œa name that whispered through the corridors of intelligenceโ€ through his work.

โ€œHe was, at once, the ordinary man next door โ€” husband, father, grandfather, brother, uncle and friend โ€” and an extraordinary agent of the state,โ€ they said.

Many specifics about Johnson's professional life as a spy remain vague, as much of what is known about him publicly comes from the CIA podcast first identifying him, called โ€œThe Langley Files.โ€ Johnson, who went by Ed, described coming to the CIA after serving as an infantryman in the U.S. Army. He studied French in university, picked up Spanish from growing up with Cuban and Puerto Rican friends and later learned Arabic after teaching English in Saudi Arabia.

He traveled through Egypt and Jordan and studied at Sorbonne University before being hired by the CIA. He met his wife, Aileen, while in Paris, his family said.

โ€œIt was after after having gotten the on-the-ground experience in the Middle East and the educational experience and the language into play ... that I was considered to be a good candidate,โ€ Johnson said.

Johnson served in the CIA's Office of Technical Service overseas at the time of the hostage crisis. It began when Islamist students came over the fence at the U.S. Embassy compound in Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979. While initially planned to be a sit-in like a previous storming, it soon became a 444-day hostage crisis.

Six U.S. Embassy employees, however, had slipped away amid the chaos. They ended up in the home of Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor. Several plans came and went before U.S. President Jimmy Carter agreed to what became known as the โ€œCanadian Caperโ€ โ€” posing the officials as part of a Canadian film crew scouting locations for a fake, knock-off โ€œStar Warsโ€ film called โ€œArgo.โ€

Armed with Canadian passports, Mendez pretended to be an Irish filmmaker while Johnson was "an associate producer representing our production companyโ€™s ostensible South American backers," Mendez later recounted in an internal CIA document. He described Johnson as having โ€œconsiderable exfiltration experienceโ€ during the Cold War with the Soviet Union, without elaborating.

Landing in Tehran on Jan. 25, 1980, the men end up using a local map to try and find the Canadian Embassy. They ended up at the Swedish Embassy โ€” just across the street from the American Embassy, patrolled by armed students. A local embassy guard didn't understand them, as neither man spoke Iran's Farsi language โ€” a conscious decision the CIA made not to raise suspicions as their Farsi-language experts might be recognized.

Then one of the student revolutionaries walked over. As a conversation progressed, the men realized the student spoke German after studying abroad for a year. Johnson ended up getting written directions from the student, who even hailed a taxi for them and refused a tip.

โ€œI have to thank the Iranians for being the beacon who got us to the right place,โ€ Johnson said.

The men ended up with the six Americans, providing them scripts, props, fake histories and training on how to pretend to be a film crew. Johnson and Mendez worked on final preparations on the passports and exit slips, the scene represented in the painting at CIA headquarters.

โ€œThe biggest thing I think we did was to convince them that you can, you can do it โ€” as simple as that,โ€ Johnson remembered.

On Jan. 28, 1980, the CIA officers and the six Americans flew safely out of Tehran on a Swissair flight. Both Johnson and Mendez received the CIA's Intelligence Star, its second-highest award for valor, for the operation. He retired from the CIA in 1995 and worked as a contractor while exploring a passion in photography, his family said.

โ€œEven as the world celebrated his heroism, he remained a ghost, a figure shrouded in anonymity,โ€ his family said. โ€œFor decades, his identity was a closely guarded secret. It was only in the twilight of his life that he finally emerged from the shadows, a legend in his own right.โ€

Johnson was born July 29, 1943, in Brooklyn. He is survived by his wife, five children, nine grandchildren, other family and friends, his loved ones said.

In the decades since the โ€œArgoโ€ rescue, there's been a broader reckoning over the CIA's actions in Iran, particularly the 1953 CIA-led coup that overthrew the country's prime minister to cement the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. That action lit the fuse for the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the more than four decades of enmity between Tehran and Washington that followed.

The two-part podcast revealing Johnson's identity acknowledged that, with a CIA historian calling the 1953 coup โ€œone of the exceptionsโ€ to the agency's efforts to bolster democracy worldwide.

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