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Robert Levinson, Ex-FBI Agent Gone Missing In Iran, Appears As Hostage In Video

AP    
First Posted: 12/09/11 01:27 AM ET Updated: 12/10/11 09:11 AM ET

WASHINGTON -- The family of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who vanished years ago in Iran, issued a plea to his kidnappers Friday and, for the first time, released a hostage video they received from his unidentified captors.

The video message released on the Levinson family's website publicly transformed the mysterious disappearance into an international hostage standoff. Despite a lengthy investigation, however, the U.S. government has no evidence of who is holding the 63-year-old father of seven.

"Please tell us your demands so we can work together to bring my father home safely," says Levinson's son David, seated beside his mother, Christine.

The video plea represents a sharp change in strategy in a case that, for years, the United States treated as a diplomatic issue rather than a hostage situation. Christine Levinson, who lives in Coral Springs, Fla., has issued many public statements over the years, but she typically directed them to her missing husband or to the government of Iran.

In the hostage video, which the family received in November 2010, Levinson pleaded with the U.S. government to meet the demands of the people holding him, whom he did not identify.

The 54-second hostage video showed Levinson looking haggard but unharmed, sitting in front of what appeared to be a concrete wall. He had lost considerable weight, particularly in his face, and his white shirt hung off him. There were no signs of recent mistreatment. But Levinson, who has a history of diabetes and high blood pressure, implored the U.S. to help him quickly.

"I have been treated well. But I need the help of the United States government to answer the requests of the group that has held me for three and a half years," Levinson says. "And please help me get home."

His voice weakens and breaks as he speaks of "my beautiful, my loving, my loyal wife, Christine," as well as his children and his grandson.

"I am not in very good health," he says. "I am running very quickly out of diabetes medicine."

The Associated Press saw the video soon after it arrived last year but did not immediately report it because the U.S. government said doing so would complicate diplomatic efforts to bring Levinson home.

Now, those efforts appear to have stalled, U.S. relations with Iran have worsened and Levinson's family has stepped out of diplomatic channels to appeal directly to the kidnappers.

"We are not part of any government and we are not experts on the region," David Levinson says. "No one can help us but you. Please help us."

In the nearly five years that Levinson has been missing, the U.S. government has never had solid intelligence about what happened to him. Levinson had been retired from the FBI for years and was working as a private investigator when he traveled to the Iran in March 2007. His family has said an investigation into cigarette smuggling brought him to Kish, a resort island where Americans need no visa to visit.

The prevailing U.S. government theory had been that Levinson was arrested by Iranian intelligence officials to be interrogated and used as a bargaining chip in negotiations with Washington. But as every lead fizzled and Iran repeatedly denied any involvement in his disappearance, many in the U.S. government believed Levinson was probably dead.

The surprise arrival of the video, followed by a series of photographs, quickly changed that view. But they did little to settle the question of his whereabouts. The video, in fact, contained tantalizing clues suggesting Levinson was not being held in Iran at all, but rather in Pakistan, hundreds of miles from where he disappeared. The photographs, which arrived a few months after the video, contained hints that Levinson might be in Afghanistan, according to several U.S. officials, who insisted on anonymity to discuss the sensitive case.

The video prompted Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to announce publicly in March that Levinson was alive, and she urged the Iranians to help find him. Though the legacy of the 1979 hostage standoff with Iran looms over all relations between the two countries, Clinton did not refer to Levinson as a hostage in March and she softened the U.S. rhetoric toward Tehran.

The video also helped initiate a series of discreet discussions between U.S. and Iranian officials, conversations that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in September were producing good results.

Not long after Clinton's remarks, the Levinson family received a series of photos of Levinson dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit like the ones worn by detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. In these photos, Levinson's hair and beard were much longer and he looked thinner.

In each photo, he wore a different sign hung around his neck. One read, "Why you can not help me."

Investigators determined that the video was routed through an Internet address in Pakistan, suggesting that Levinson might be held there. Also, Pashtun wedding music played faintly in the background, officials said. The Pashtun people live primarily in Pakistan and Afghanistan, just over Iran's eastern border.

The photos, however, traced back to a different Internet address, this one in Afghanistan.

Authorities don't know whether those clues mean Levinson was being held in Balochistan - a rugged, arid region that spans parts of Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan - or perhaps in the lawless tribal region along the border of Pakistan and Afghanistan. These areas are home to terrorists, militant groups and criminal organizations.

None of these groups has a clear motive for picking up Levinson. But an American hostage, particularly one who used to work for the U.S. government, would be considered a valuable commodity to any of them.

Over the past year, the hopefulness that initially followed the arrival of the video has faded. The meetings with the Iranians have not provided a breakthrough and U.S. officials said the government was no longer as optimistic about the future of those talks.

"We don't know what else to do," David Levinson says in the video released Friday. "Please tell us what you want."

Some U.S. officials believe the Iranian government routed the video through Pakistan as a way to blame Levinson's disappearance on someone else - most likely the anti-Iran terrorist group Jundallah. But as with every other possibility, the U.S. has no proof.

The video was accompanied by a demand that the U.S. release prisoners, but officials said the United States is not holding anyone matching the names on the list. It's possible some of them may have been held by the Pakistani government at one point, but officials say the demand doesn't offer any indication of who might be holding Levinson and there's been no more communication about it.

U.S. authorities have repeatedly analyzed the video and the apparently scripted remarks Levinson made, looking for clues.

For instance, Levinson said a "group" had held him for three and a half years, a word choice that could suggest a criminal organization or terrorist group, rather than a government. And he said he had been held "here" for that time, suggesting he had not been moved.

Levinson's dire warning about his diabetes medication is perplexing. He vanished years ago. Whoever is holding him must have had access to diabetes medicine at one point. Was he running out of medication because he was moved somewhere else? Or was it simply intended to add even more urgency for the U.S.?

Relations with Iran, meanwhile, have worsened. The Justice Department recently accused Iranian intelligence agents of plotting to assassinate Saudi Arabia's ambassador in Washington. Then a United Nations watchdog released a report warning of Iran's nuclear ambitions, prompting the United States and its Western allies to issue new sanctions against Iran's financial system.

Most recently, a high-tech, stealth CIA drone was captured by Iranian officials while on a surveillance mission over Iran. The embarrassing mishap put sophisticated technology in Iranian hands and provided public evidence of the kind of spying that's been long suspected.

The one bright spot in Washington's relationship with Tehran was the release of two American hikers from an Iranian prison in September. The U.S. worked behind the scenes to secure that release but officials said Levinson was not part of those discussions.

"All I want is for our family to be whole again," Christine Levinson said in the video, in a message directed toward her husband. "We love you. We miss you every day. We will not abandon you."

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Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON -- The family of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who vanished years ago in Iran, issued a plea to his kidnappers Friday and, for the first time, released a hostage video they received fr...
WASHINGTON -- The family of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who vanished years ago in Iran, issued a plea to his kidnappers Friday and, for the first time, released a hostage video they received fr...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
12:06 PM on 12/12/2011
Being a retired FBI agent who happened to go there to investigate a cigarette smuggling ring and got caught?To me this just doen't sound right,perhaps it's just me but ig I was a retired FBI agent the last place I'd goto trying to investigate a cig smuggling operation would be Iran.Now I'n wondering if this is really the truth or our government is hiding something which they do a lot of
01:09 AM on 12/12/2011
an ex-fbi agent in iran... doesn't sound like he's ex anything.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
prfktstrngr527
Eternal vigilance is the price of li berty. Ida B.
11:16 PM on 12/11/2011
In Iran, investigating... Cigarettes? Why risk your life for cigarettes?
04:32 PM on 12/11/2011
NOW THAT FBI AGENT MUST FEEL AND MUST KNOW WHAT IT IS TO BE A MUSLIM DETAINED BY THE US GOVERNMENT.

WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND.
02:06 PM on 12/10/2011
If he is in Pakistan, what is that title for? You definitely have no respect for the people of US. You keep saying lies over and over to spread the hate. Our government knew that he is in Pakistan more than a year ago, but kept saying Iran kidnapped him. Shame!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kye154
10:12 AM on 12/10/2011
Can't hardly feel sorry for Levinson, as he knew that Iran was off-limits for Americans vernturing over there, particularly for anyone ever associated from our intelligence agencies, or law enforcement agencies, who would be considered prize captives. The warnings have been put out by the FBI before, and also through the State Department, ever since the time the American Embassy was seized in 1979. But, whatever his excuse was for eing over there, you have to say, he looks a whole lot better than the picrtures of himself before capture. He really looks much nicer as the Iranian diet certainly slimmed him down . Prior to his capture, he looked like a fat pig.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chedet
Le Panda
12:48 AM on 12/12/2011
He's not even in Iran.
08:35 PM on 12/09/2011
This guy would be released in less than hour if Regan was in office
10:09 PM on 12/09/2011
Did you bother to watch the AP video or just read the headline? Nobody knows who has him or what they want, emails were tracked to Afghanistan, video to Pakistan.
07:22 PM on 12/09/2011
Stupid actions have stupid consequences.
06:18 PM on 12/09/2011
Have the kidnappers identified themselves and made any demands?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tampamurray
Raised Right
05:52 PM on 12/09/2011
Great Country we have ... the Government pays $1.5 Million to secure the release of 3 spoiled kids who, through their own carelessness or intent, wound up in a prison in Iran. Yet, they apparently are unwilling to pay anything to help this man who worked for the Government for 35 years.
06:19 PM on 12/09/2011
Sultan of Oman paid, not the US government.
07:22 PM on 12/09/2011
They US govt paid for them... 3 years later. Keep up.
12:10 AM on 12/12/2011
"Keep up"? Where can I find the article that proves the US gov't paid for their release?
04:15 PM on 12/09/2011
The video seems so surreal! Every video I have seen similar to this one raises the same question. Why do the people in the videos seem so robotic in their motions, so monotone in voice and like a soulless machine in their delivery? Are they directed to act like this so the third world countries can grasp or relate to the content? On the other hand, is it the way they were trained to act in order to keep the captures from the believing they might have the upper hand in the situation? Being a Red, White and Blue, Blooded American it is difficult to watch an American family in that position speak without showing any emotions on video!
04:07 PM on 12/09/2011
THAT FBI AGENT MUST NOW UNDERSTAND HOW THE INNOCENT MUSLIMS IN GITMO FEELS! WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
07:22 PM on 12/09/2011
I doubt it. There are many differences between the two. And just to be clear, Iran is the one who walks away smelling like roses.
07:44 PM on 12/09/2011
YOUR POST IS CLOSER TO REALITY THAN MINE. I WAS PUTTING BOTH EQUAL FOR THE SAKE OF NOT GETTING MOBBED BY E-DIOTS....BUT YOU ARE RIGHT...WE ARE WORSE THAN IRAN.
04:07 PM on 12/09/2011
US DETAINS THOUSANDS OF MUSLIMS ILLEGALLY WITHOUT TRIALS AND MOST ARE INNOCENT. WE ALSO T.ORTURE OUR DETAINEES.
04:07 PM on 12/09/2011
US DETAINS THOUSANDS OF MUSLIMS ILLEGALLY WITHOUT TRIALS AND MOST ARE INNOCENT. WE ALSO T.ORTURE OUR DETAINEES.

THAT FBI AGENT MUST NOW UNDERSTAND HOW THE INNOCENT MUSLIMS IN GITMO FEELS! WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND!
03:44 PM on 12/09/2011
Why is it always Iran that is holding hostages? Do we know where he really is? I guess we are supposed to get all revved up to invade Iran. Impossible task. The war mongers need to get over it.