Namazi previously spoke with Amanpour by phone in March 2023 from inside Iranâs notorious Evin Prison, in what was an unprecedented interview. He was the longest-held Iranian-American prisoner, excluded from three separate deals that freed other detained Americans during the Obama and Trump administrations.
âThe smell of freedomâ
On 18 September 2023, Namazi stepped off the plane and onto American soil. At the top of the airplane steps, he paused to breathe in the air. It was, he tells Amanpour, a tribute to what his uncle had told Namazi and his brother Babak when they first immigrated to the United States in 1983.
âCan you smell that?â Namaziâs uncle asked his young nephews. âThat is the smell of freedom.â Forty years later, Siamak Namazi emerged into the night air after eight years in prison. âI remembered what he said. And I felt it this time. I felt the smell of freedom.â
Now, he says, âthe most dominant feeling that I have is gratitude⊠particularly (towards) President (Joe) Biden, who made a very difficult choice and struck the deal.â But, that said, he explains it has been âvery difficultâ to adjust to life outside.
After so long behind bars, he even had to set an alarm to remind himself just to leave the apartment. âI remember once I hadnât left for three days, and I realized why. I just wasnât used to doing that.â
Today, he is still putting together the pieces of his life. âItâs an eight-year earthquake that hits your life â and it leaves a lot of destruction.
âBut I would say I do feel very free in the US â and I tried to live the freest life I could, even when I was in Evin.â
âThey wanted a death sentenceâ
Namazi was born in Iran and, after moving to America age 12, he had returned to his country of birth many times. In 2015, he went back for a funeral and felt little reason to worry. It was a period he describes as âthe peak of Iran-US relations,â with high-level delegations from both countries in Vienna, Austria, to negotiate what would become the Iran nuclear deal, or JCPOA.
But at the airport, as he tried to leave, he recalls how everything changed. He was approached âby a man in a plain suit who said, âCome with me.ââ Namazi says he refused and asked for identification. Then, as the man went to get a uniformed official to enforce his demand, Namazi urgently messaged his brother: âPulling me aside at airport.â
âAfter that, I was interrogated off site illegally for three months and then I was finally arrested. I was charged formally with cooperating with a hostile state â referring to the United States of America.â It took six years for him to secure his full file and discover exactly what he was accused of.
He says that Iranâs authorities claimed that âfor three decades, (Namazi) had been building a network within Iran to infiltrate and topple the Islamic Republic with the cooperation of the hostile US state. Now, I was arrested at 44. So, these guys are pretty much claiming that when I was learning to skateboard with my buddy Dave in White Plains, New York, I was actually subverting the Islamic Republic.â
While today he almost laughs at the absurdity of the âridiculousâ charges he faced, he knows the danger he was in. âThey wanted a death sentence for me.â
Namazi was not naĂŻve. He knew that the real reason he was being taken was to function as a bargaining chip for the regime. That, he says, gave him some comfort â but not for long.
âI assumed that because Iâm a hostage and I have value, they will not harm me. Unfortunately, that assumption was proven wrong.â
âProfound effectâ
Soon after his arrest, Namazi says, he was âthrown in a solitary cell⊠the size of a closet.â When facing his interrogators, he says he was told that âunless you cooperate⊠you are going to be here until your teeth and your hair are the same color. And our methodology of how weâre talking is going to change.â
That, he says, was a clear threat of violence.
In all, Namazi endured around eight months of solitary confinement, along with what he calls âunutterable indignities.â He was blindfolded and beaten, but the worst was the âhumiliation,â he says.
âThat Iâm not comfortable talking about,â he tells Amanpour. âAnd I mean unutterable â because it had a profound effect on me. I still havenât even gotten to talking about it fully in therapy.â
Eventually, Namaziâs mother was permitted to visit. The first visit was before he was beaten, but even then, his appearance had changed so much that she didnât recognize her own son. âI looked like Saddam (Hussein) when they pulled him out of that hole. I had (a) long beard,â he recalls. âI remember her sobbing and I remember trying to make her laugh by telling her, âI look like Saddam.ââ
After that visit, he says, the beatings began, and lasted for weeks. âItâs much scarier than I could tell you,â Namazi recalls with emotion â particularly as he knew that the Canadian-Iranian photographer Zahra Kazemi had died in similar circumstances in 2003. âI knew how unsafe I was.â
After weeks of this, his mother was permitted to visit again â and this time, Namazi was prepared. He says his guards warned him to say nothing of his mistreatment and flanked him as he entered the room. âEven before sitting, I say, âHi, mom. These guys have been torturing me. I need you to go public on this.ââ Recalling the moment today, Namazi is almost overcome by emotion. âI put her through a lot.â
During his eight years of captivity, Namazi saw other prisoners being released in deals between the US and Iran on three separate occasions â despite, he claims, the US government being fully aware of the torture and abuse he was suffering following correspondence between his parents and the State Department.
Feeling abandoned by his government, Namazi decided he faced a choice: he could either be patient and try to stay sane, trusting that the authorities would eventually negotiate a deal that secured his freedom; or he could fight.
âI think part of my reaction to the unutterable indignities was that I have to gain my own respect back for myself. I had to fight them.â
High-risk interview
âI fought every day, every single day,â Namazi says. âI had a program: Iâd get up, it was organized, you know, think about how to be a pain in the ass.â
As the years went by, Namazi tried many things, including smuggling out an opinion piece for The New York Times and going on hunger strike. But, he says, âI basically got no love back.â More was needed. So Namazi suggested to his pro bono lawyer in the US, Jared Genser, that perhaps it was time to do an interview.
In the end, Namaziâs calculus was remarkably simple. If he did the interview, he might be beaten up and thrown back in solitary. âI knew I could live (with) that,â he says. But if he chose not to do the interview, and there was no deal to free him, heâd always wonder if it couldâve got him out.
Speaking to Amanpour today, he says, is a little less high-stakes. âIt is such a joy to be talking to you and not worrying about someone dragging me to a solitary cell somewhere because of it,â he tells her.
As Amanpour brought the phone interview to an end, Namazi made one last request: to address Biden directly, appealing to him âto just do whatâs necessary to end this nightmare and bring us home.â
Coming home
This âdesperate measureâ was one way that Namazi felt he could get attention and try to lend some urgency to the ongoing negotiations.
He sees it as a crucial lesson for anyone in a similar situation: âIf you are taken as a hostage, you need to make noise.â This creates more âpolitical valueâ for a US president to make what otherwise might be a âpolitically costlyâ deal to release someone, he believes.
In September 2023, Namazi was finally released along with four fellow dual nationals: Emad Shargi, Morad Tahbaz, and two other prisoners whose identities were not disclosed by officials at the time.
The unfreezing of Iranian assets under the deal prompted intense criticism from former President Donald Trump and his allies â despite Trump having agreed to two prisoner swap deals with Iran during his time in office. Before it was finalized, 26 Senate Republicans wrote to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen to argue that it set an âincredibly dangerous precedent.â
But Namazi says he knew that, without a deal, he wasnât getting out â a point his interrogators made âextremely clear.â
âWe have a duty to get out our people from foreign dungeons when they have done nothing,â he adds, and âunfortunately, we have to make distasteful deals to get out our people.â
More importantly, Namazi feels he is more aware than most of the nature of the Iranian regime.
âIâll tell you something: no one is as angry, no one is as disgusted at the fact that the Islamic Republic, this horrible regime, profited from blighting my life, than me and the other hostages and our families.
âI spent 2,989 days in their dungeon⊠They have done things that Iâm not able to tell my therapist yet, and I still, I canât even speak about it⊠I am upset that they profited from this. But what other choice is there? Are you just going let an American rot?â
No debriefing
Safely back in America, Namazi is full of ideas for changing how the US deals with hostage diplomacy. He likens it to âa game of rugby. We need to stop playing political chess with it. Itâs different.â
He argues that the West can do far more to deter this sort of hostage-taking, from cracking down on international money-laundering that funds the lavish lifestyles of autocrats and their cronies, to restricting the visas they receive when visiting the United Nations in New York.
And itâs not just an American problem: Evin Prison is âa dystopian United Nations of hostages,â Namazi says, with many countriesâ citizens behind bars.
âWe can upend this business model very quickly. We have to make it unprofitable,â he says.
Namazi believes he could offer more but says he was not debriefed by the US government on his many interactions with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
He also feels there was a notable lack of support structure once he arrived in the US.
In reflecting on the year since his release, Namaziâs focus returns to Biden.
Emotion in his voice, Namazi tells Amanpour that, eventually, heâd like to meet the man who freed him.
âI would really love to shake President Bidenâs hand one day. I really would.â