This is an amazing story and is purportedly true. I've seen some 
corroborating evidence that supports the story from other sources.



http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.05/feat_cia.html

How the CIA used a fake science fiction film to sneak six Americans 
out of revolutionary Iran.

November 4, 1979, began like any other day at the US embassy in 
Tehran. The staff filtered in under gray skies, the marines manned 
their posts, and the daily crush of anti-American protestors massed 
outside the gate chanting, "Allahu akbar! Marg bar Amrika!"

Mark and Cora Lijek, a young couple serving in their first foreign 
service post, knew the slogans - "God is great! Death to America!" - 
and had learned to ignore the din as they went about their duties. But 
today, the protest sounded louder than usual. And when some of the 
local employees came in and said there was "a problem at the gate," 
they knew this morning would be different. Militant students were soon 
scaling the walls of the embassy complex. Someone forced open the 
front gate, and the trickle of invaders became a flood. The mob 
quickly fanned across the 27-acre compound, waving posters of the 
Ayatollah Khomeini. They took the ambassador's residence, then set 
upon the chancery, the citadel of the embassy where most of the staff 
was stationed.

At first, the Lijeks hoped the consulate building where they worked 
would escape notice. Because of recent renovations, the ground floor 
was mostly empty. Perhaps no one would suspect that 12 Americans and a 
few dozen Iranian employees and visa applicants were upstairs. The 
group included consular officer Joseph Stafford, his assistant and 
wife, Kathleen, and Robert Anders, a senior officer in the visa 
department.

They tried to keep calm, and even to continue working. But then the 
power went out and panic spread throughout the building. The Iranian 
employees, who knew the revolutionary forces' predilection for firing 
squads, braced for the worst. "There's someone on the roof," one 
Iranian worker said, trembling. Another smelled smoke. People began to 
weep in the dark, convinced the militants would try to burn down the 
building. Outside, the roar of the victorious mob grew louder. There 
were occasional gunshots. It was time to flee.

The Americans destroyed the plates used to make visa stamps, organized 
an evacuation plan, and ushered everyone to the back door. "We'll 
leave in groups of five or six," the marine sergeant on duty said. 
"Locals first. Then the married couples. Then the rest." The consulate 
building was the only structure in the compound with an exit on the 
street. The goal was to make it to the British embassy about six 
blocks away.

It was pouring rain when they opened the heavy roll-down steel doors. 
The street was mercifully empty. One group turned north, only to be 
captured moments later and marched back to the embassy at gunpoint.

Heading west, the Staffords, the Lijeks, Anders, and several Iranians 
avoided detection. They had almost reached the British embassy when 
they encountered yet another demonstration. A local in their group 
gave some quick advice - "Don't go that way" - and then she melted 
into the crowd. The group zigzagged to Anders' nearby apartment, at 
one point sneaking single-file past an office used by the komiteh, one 
of the gun-wielding, self-appointed bands of revolutionaries that 
controlled much of Tehran.

They locked the door and switched on Anders' lunch-box radio, a 
standard-issue "escape and evade" device that could connect with the 
embassy's radio network. Marines were squawking frantically, trying to 
coordinate with one another. Someone calling himself Codename Palm 
Tree was relaying a bird's-eye view of the takeover: "There are rifles 
and weapons being brought into the compound." This was Henry Lee 
Schatz, an agricultural attach who was watching the scene from his 
sixth-floor office in a building across the street from the compound. 
"They're being unloaded from trucks."

The Iran hostage crisis, which would go on for 444 days, shaking 
America's confidence and sinking President Jimmy Carter's reelection 
campaign, had begun. Americans would soon be haunted by Khomeini's 
grim visage, and well-armed Islamic militants would parade blindfolded 
hostages across the nightly news and threaten trials for the "spies" 
that they'd captured. Everyone remembers the 52 Americans trapped at 
the embassy and the failed rescue attempt a few months later that 
ended with a disastrous Army helicopter crash in the Iranian desert. 
But not many know the long- classified details of the CIA's 
involvement in the escape of the other group - thrust into a hostile 
city in the throes of revolution.

By 3 o'clock that afternoon, the five people huddled in Anders' 
one-bedroom apartment realized they were in serious trouble. As the 
militants seized control, there were fewer English speakers on the 
radio net. Codename Palm Tree had fled. After the last holdouts in the 
chancery's vault radioed their surrender, the only voices coming 
through the box were speaking in Farsi. The embassy was lost. The 
escapees were on their own.

The CIA was in chaos when Tony Mendez arrived at his desk the next 
morning. People dashed through the halls, clutching files and papers. 
Desks were piling up with "flash" cables - the highest-priority 
messages, reserved for wartime situations.

Mendez, 38, had been at the agency during the Vietnam War. But this 
seemed worse. At least then the US had another government to talk to. 
In Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini and the Revolutionary Council refused 
to negotiate. With no diplomatic channels open, clandestine efforts 
were the last hope. But since the revolution had begun a year earlier, 
most of the CIA's intelligence infrastructure in Iran had been 
destroyed. As former head of the Disguise Section and current 
authentication chief of the CIA's Graphics and Authentication 
Division, Mendez oversaw logistical operations behind the tens of 
thousands of false identities the CIA was running. He knew there were 
only three field agents in Iran and that they had all been captured at 
the embassy.

At first, Mendez thought his job was to free the hostages. He started 
suiting up agents to penetrate Iran, and he spent a whirlwind 90 hours 
straight working on a plan called Operation Bodyguard in which a dead 
body double for the Shah would be used to arrange for the hostages' 
release. It was a gorgeous plan, he thought. But the White House 
rejected it.

Then, a few weeks after the takeover of the embassy, Mendez received a 
memorandum from the State Department marked as secret. The news was 
startling: Not everyone in the embassy had been captured. A few had 
escaped and were hiding somewhere in Tehran. Only a handful of 
government officials knew the details because Carter's advisers and 
the State Department didn't want to tip off the Iranians.

Mendez had spent 14 years in the CIA's Office of Technical Service - 
the part of the spy shop known for trying to plant explosives in 
Fidel's cigars and wiring cats with microphones for eavesdropping. His 
specialty was using "identity transformation" to get people out of 
sticky situations. He'd once transformed a black CIA officer and an 
Asian diplomat into Caucasian businessmen - using masks that made them 
ringers for Victor Mature and Rex Harrison - so they could arrange a 
meeting in the capital of Laos, a country under strict martial law. 
When a Russian engineer needed to deliver film canisters with 
extraordinarily sensitive details about the new super-MiG jet, Mendez 
helped his CIA handlers throw off their KGB tails by outfitting them 
with a "jack-in-the-box." An officer would wait for a moment of 
confusion to sneak out of a car. As soon as he did, a spring-loaded 
mannequin would pop up to give the impression that he was still 
sitting in the passenger seat. Mendez had helped hundreds of friendly 
assets escape danger undetected.

For the operation in Tehran, his strategy was straightforward: The 
Americans would take on false identities, walk right out through 
Mehrabad Airport, and board a plane. Of course, for this plan to work, 
someone would have to sneak into Iran, connect with the escapees, 
equip them with their false identities, and lead them to safety past 
the increasingly treacherous Iranian security apparatus. And that 
someone was him.

On the run in Tehran, the escapees were obvious targets. They couldn't 
sneak out on their own; they'd be spotted on the roads and certainly 
questioned in the airport. If they presented diplomatic passports, 
they'd be hustled back to the embassy and interrogated at gunpoint 
with the rest of the "spies."

For the first few days, they quietly slipped between temporary 
hideouts, including the empty houses of those trapped at the embassy. 
They sometimes slept in their clothes in case they had to run. Using a 
phone was dangerous; the imams had tapped into the vast listening 
network the Shah had used to suppress dissent. Each place they stayed 
seemed increasingly vulnerable. Eventually, Anders rang John 
Sheardown, a friend at the Canadian embassy. "Why didn't you call 
sooner?" Sheardown said. "Of course we can take you in."

To minimize the risk, the group was split between the Sheardowns' 
house and the official residence of the Canadian ambassador, Ken 
Taylor. Both homes were in the fashionable Shemiran district in 
northern Tehran. The Qajar dynasty buried its kings here, in the 
foothills of the Elburz Mountains, and the district was now home to 
merchants, diplomats, wealthy civil servants - and a half-dozen 
diplomatic refugees in hiding: the five from the consulate and Henry 
Lee Schatz, the Codename Palm Tree broadcaster. He had hidden in a 
Swedish diplomatic residence for weeks before making his way to the 
Sheardowns.

The accommodations were luxurious. There were books, English-language 
newspapers, and plenty of beer, wine, and scotch. But the guests could 
never leave their quarters. As the weeks went by, a quiet routine 
developed. They cooked elaborate dinners, read, played cards. Their 
biggest daily concern was how to assemble teams for bridge - and 
whether they'd be captured and potentially executed.

As time passed, the threat of discovery was mounting. The militants 
had been combing embassy records and figuring out who was CIA. They 
had even hired teams of carpet weavers to successfully reassemble 
shredded documents. (The recovered papers would later be published by 
the Iranian government in a series of books called Documents From the 
US Espionage Den.) They might eventually figure out the true number of 
embassy staff, count heads, and come up short. Outside, the 
Revolutionary Guards had recently been making a show of force in 
Shemiran, menacing the streets where foreigners lived and coming very 
close to both hideouts. Once, the Americans had to dive away from the 
windows when a military helicopter buzzed the Sheardowns' house. And 
everyone was spooked when an anonymous caller to the Taylor residence 
asked to speak with Joe and Kathy Stafford and then hung up.

Back home, the US and Canadian governments were nervous, too. Hints 
about the escapees had leaked, and several journalists were on the 
verge of piecing together the story. Even as the CIA worked to free 
the six, a wild array of unofficial rescue plans surfaced, mostly 
involving overland routes and smugglers. The CIA held discussions with 
Ross Perot, who'd just snuck two of his Electronic Data Systems 
employees out of a jail in Tehran. At a NATO meeting in December, an 
antsy Flora MacDonald, Canada's minister of external affairs, 
confronted US secretary of state Cyrus Vance and suggested having the 
six Americans make for the Turkish border - on bicycles if necessary.

The Americans sensed the stagnation and growing peril. On January 10, 
1980 - nearly nine weeks after going into hiding - Mark Lijek and 
Anders drafted a cable for Ken Taylor to send to Washington on their 
behalf. Mark later paraphrased its contents: "We need to get out of 
here."

CIA cover stories are generally designed to be mundane and unlikely to 
attract attention. That's how Mendez's plan started out. He would use 
Canadian documentation for the Americans, because of the common 
language and similar culture - and, well, everybody loves Canadians. 
But Mendez still had to figure out an excuse for a half-dozen Canucks 
to be wandering through Iran's theocratic upheaval. There were plenty 
of North American journalists, humanitarians, and oil industry 
advisers in country. But they were either heavily monitored or well 
known to authorities. The State Department thought they could 
masquerade as unemployed teachers, until someone realized that the 
English-language schools were all closed. When the Canadian government 
suggested nutritionists inspecting crops, Mendez dismissed the idea as 
preposterous: "Have you been to Tehran in January? There's snow on the 
ground. And certainly no agriculture."

He was stuck. For about a week, no one in Washington or Ottawa could 
invent a reason for anyone to be in Tehran. Then Mendez hit upon an 
unusual but strangely credible plan: He'd become Kevin Costa Harkins, 
an Irish film producer leading his preproduction crew through Iran to 
do some location scouting for a big-budget Hollywood epic. Mendez had 
contacts in Hollywood from past collaborations. (After all, they were 
in the same business of creating false realities.) And it wouldn't be 
surprising, Mendez thought, that a handful of eccentrics from 
Tinseltown might be oblivious to the political situation in 
revolutionary Iran. The Iranian government, incredibly, was trying to 
encourage international business in the country. They needed the hard 
currency, and a film production could mean millions of US dollars.

Mendez gave his superiors an operations plan, with an analysis of the 
target, mission, and logistics. The task was so difficult that his 
bosses had signaled that they'd be reluctant to sign off on anything 
but an airtight exfiltration mission. But this proposal was detailed 
enough to be approved by them and the White House. Plausibility, as 
they say in the espionage business, was good.

To build his cover, Mendez put $10,000 into his briefcase and flew to 
Los Angeles. He called his friend John Chambers, the veteran makeup 
artist who had won a 1969 Academy Award for Planet of the Apes and 
also happened to be one of Mendez's longtime CIA collaborators. 
Chambers brought in a special effects colleague, Bob Sidell. They all 
met in mid-January and Mendez briefed the pair on the situation and 
his scheme. Chambers and Sidell thought about the hostages they were 
seeing each night on television and quickly declared they were in.

Mendez knew they had to plan the ruse down to the last detail. "If 
anyone checks," he said, "we need that foundation to be there." If 
they were exposed, it could embarrass the government, compromise the 
agency, and imperil their lives and the lives of the hostages in the 
embassy. The militants had said from the beginning that any attempted 
rescue would lead to executions.

In just four days, Mendez, Chambers, and Sidell created a fake 
Hollywood production company. They designed business cards and 
concocted identities for the six members of the location-scouting 
party, including all their former credits. The production company's 
offices would be set up in a suite at Sunset Gower Studios on what was 
formerly the Columbia lot, in a space vacated by Michael Douglas after 
he finished The China Syndrome.

All they needed now was a film - and Chambers had the perfect script. 
Months before, he had received a call from a would-be producer named 
Barry Geller. Geller had purchased the rights to Roger Zelazny's 
science fiction novel, Lord of Light, written his own treatment, 
raised a few million dollars in starting capital from wealthy 
investors, and hired Jack Kirby, the famous comic book artist who 
cocreated X-Men, to do concept drawings. Along the way, Geller 
imagined a Colorado theme park based on Kirby's set designs that would 
be called Science Fiction Land; it would include a 300-foot-tall 
Ferris wheel, voice-operated mag-lev cars, a "planetary control room" 
staffed by robots, and a heated dome almost twice as tall as the 
Empire State Building. Geller had announced his grand plan in November 
at a press conference attended by Jack Kirby, former football star and 
prospective cast member Rosey Grier, and several people dressed like 
visitors from the future. Shortly thereafter, Geller's 
second-in-command was arrested for embezzling production funds, and 
the Lord of Light film project evaporated.

Since Chambers had been hired by Geller to do makeup for the film, he 
still had the script and drawings at his house. The story, a tale of 
Hindu-inspired mystical science fiction, took place on a colonized 
planet. Iran's landscape could provide many of the rugged settings 
required by the script. A famous underground bazaar in Tehran even 
matched one of the necessary locations. "This is perfect," Mendez 
said. He removed the cover and gave the script a new name, Argo - like 
the vessel used by Jason on his daring voyage across the world to 
retrieve the Golden Fleece.

The new production company outfitted its office with phone lines, 
typewriters, film posters and canisters, and a sign on the door: 
studio six productions, named for the six Americans awaiting rescue. 
Sidell read the script and sketched out a schedule for a month's worth 
of shooting. Mendez and Chambers designed a full-page ad for the film 
and bought space in Variety and The Hollywood Reporter. The night 
before Mendez returned to Washington, Studio Six threw a small party 
at the Brown Derby, where they toasted their "production" and Mendez 
grabbed some matchbooks as additional props to boost his Hollywood 
bona fides. Shortly thereafter, the Argo ads appeared, announcing that 
principal photography would commence in March. The film's title was 
rendered in distressed lettering against a black background. Next to 
it was a bullet hole. Below it was the tagline "A Cosmic 
Conflagration."

Mendez slipped into Iran on January 25, 1980, after receiving a cable 
from the CIA director indicating President Carter's personal approval 
that read, "You may proceed. Good luck." He flew in from Europe, where 
he'd obtained a visa at the Iranian consulate in Bonn. "I have a 
business meeting with my company associates," he explained to Iranian 
authorities in Germany. "They're flying in from Hong Kong tomorrow and 
are expecting me." Mendez had broken into a cold sweat in the 
airport - even professionals have their moments of doubt - but he knew 
there was no turning back. He put his faith in the strength of his 
cover story.

As a specialist in forgery and counterfeiting, Mendez arrived with his 
watercolor kit and tools. But the rest of the exfiltration supplies 
had been sent ahead through diplomatic pouch and awaited him at the 
Canadian embassy. Mendez included everything he could think of: health 
cards and driver's licenses, maple leaf pins, receipts from 
restaurants in Toronto and Montreal, the Studio Six business cards, a 
lens for the cinematographer, and the Argo production materials. The 
six passports were what Mendez called "real fakes": genuine documents 
that the Canadian government prepared for the Holly wood aliases 
devised by the CIA. Acquiring those passports had been a coup for 
Mendez; Canadian law prohibits such falsification, but the country's 
parliament held an emergency secret session, the first since World War 
II, to make an exception. Mendez rendez voused with ambassador Ken 
Taylor in his office, retrieved the Canadian passports, and imprinted 
them with Iranian visas. His ink pad was dry from the trip, so he wet 
it with some of the ambassador's scotch and carefully entered dates 
indicating that the six members of the film crew had arrived in Iran 
the day before.

That night the Staffords, the Lijeks, Schatz, and Anders dined with 
the ambassadors of Denmark and New Zealand, along with some staff, at 
the Sheardown residence. The Americans had lit a fire, set out the 
hors d'oeuvres, and were already drinking when Taylor arrived with a 
surprise guest.

"We have prepared for your escape," Mendez announced during dinner. He 
then explained the cover story and presented Kirby's drawings, the 
script, the ad in Variety, and the telephone number of the Studio Six 
office back on Sunset Boulevard. Mendez handed out the business cards 
and passports. Cora Lijek would become Teresa Harris, the writer. Mark 
was the transportation coordinator. Kathy Stafford was the set 
designer. Joe Stafford was an associate producer. Anders was the 
director. Schatz, the party's cameraman, received the scoping lens and 
detailed specs on how to operate a Panaflex camera. Mark Lijek noticed 
that Mendez wore a distinctively British Harris tweed sport coat, in 
keeping with his alias as an Irish film producer.

"What about the airport controls?" Joe Stafford asked.

It was a good question. Mendez knew there were no foolproof 
operations, and this one could hit a significant snag. Iranian 
immigration used a dual-copy embarkation/disembarkation form. There 
were matching yellow and white sheets. Upon entry, immigration kept 
the white copy, which was supposed to be compared with the yellow copy 
when someone left. A CIA contact at the Mehrabad Airport had provided 
the forms, and it had been no problem for Mendez to forge the yellow 
copy. Recent intelligence suggested that immigration agents often 
didn't bother to match the forms.

The Americans were initially nervous about the plan. "Let me just show 
you how this kind of operation works," Mendez said, picking up two 
corks from the many opened wine bottles. He put the corks between his 
thumbs and forefingers in two interlocking D shapes. "Here's the bad 
guys," he said, showing that they couldn't be separated, "and here's 
us." With a sudden sleight of hand, he pulled them apart.

It was parlor magic - but somehow extraordinarily comforting. The six 
felt they had a competent leader. "It's going to be that easy," Mendez 
said, sensing the group's growing confidence. "We'll be able to fool 
them all."

Studio Six was busy back home as well. Bob Sidell and his wife, Andi, 
were manning the production office. They had three phone lines. One 
was an unpublished number known only to the CIA. If it ever rang, it 
meant that Mendez and the rest of the Argo crew were either in deep 
trouble or home free. Andi answered the other two lines, which were 
ringing constantly.

When the ads appeared, Hollywood Reporter and Variety writers called, 
generating small news articles in each magazine. "Two noted Hollywood 
makeup artists - one an Oscar winner - have turned producers," read an 
article in the January 25, 1980, Holly wood Reporter. "Their first 
motion picture being Argo, a science fantasy fiction, from a story by 
Teresa Harris ... Shooting will begin in the south of France, and then 
move to the Mideast ... depending on the political climate." About the 
cast, Bob Sidell was quoted as saying, "We will use substantial names. 
At the moment we are sworn to secrecy." The coverage in turn generated 
further interest in this new Hollywood player soon to start filming in 
the Middle East.

Sidell, who had been working in Hollywood for nearly 25 years, always 
said the whole town ran on BS, but even he was surprised by how easily 
the fictional universe of Studio Six took on the force of apparent 
reality. It was not long before this small CIA outpost found itself 
deep in the movie business.

They were always anxious that their secret third line would ring, but 
every call was film-related. Friends saw Sidell's name in the ads and 
started asking for work. "Do you have a crew yet?" they wanted to 
know. "When's preproduction?" Within a few weeks, Studio Six was 
overflowing with head shots, scripts, and pitches from producers.

"We're not shooting for a couple of months yet," he'd say. "Let's talk 
again in a few weeks." Several people solicited Studio Six with 
decent-sounding projects, so Sidell took meetings with them. One 
writer wanted to adapt a little-known Arthur Conan Doyle horror story 
about a reanimated mummy; Sidell even pursued releases from the Doyle 
estate - all the while knowing that, one day soon, Studio Six would 
disappear without a trace.

Everyone was in costume before dawn on January 28, 1980. Cora Lijek 
had used sponge curlers to give herself a Shirley Temple look. She 
thumbed through the script as they waited. Kathy Stafford donned 
heavy, bohemian-looking glasses, pinned up her hair, and carried a 
sketch pad and folder with Kirby's concept drawings. Mark Lijek's 
dirty-blond beard had been darkened with mascara. Anders thought of 
their escape as an adventure and flung himself into his role as Argo's 
flamboyant director: He appeared in a shirt two sizes too small, 
buttoned only halfway up his hairy chest to reveal an improvised 
silver medallion. He wore sunglasses, combed his hair over his ears, 
and acted slightly effeminate. Schatz played with his lens. During the 
previous two days, they'd done several dress rehearsals, with a 
Farsi-speaking staffer from the Canadian embassy dressing up in 
fatigues for mock interrogations, probing for cracks in their cover. 
They'd learned the movie's story line and their characters' 
backgrounds and motivations and were now waiting, essentially, for 
call time. By 4 am, they'd packed, thanked their hosts, and were on 
their way to Mehrabad Airport.

In the van, Cora checked her pockets again to make sure they contained 
nothing showing her real name. She and the others started playacting 
their new roles. The only exception was Joe Stafford, who was 
ambivalent about leaving behind colleagues at the embassy. He was 
unenthusiastic about the plan and had refused to change his 
appearance. Worse, he looked nervous.

Mendez had gone ahead. His office had been testing out Mehrabad, 
sending agents to enter and exit the country, checking the security. 
But he preferred to see things for himself. Like a bank robber sizing 
up a heist, Mendez could tell instantly if things felt right. He'd 
assess the customs and immigration desks - how diligent, for example, 
was the staff? More worrisome than the professionals were the komiteh 
and Revolutionary Guards standing behind them. Armed and 
unpredictable, they made the airport truly dangerous.

But that morning seemed calm. There were komitehs at customs, but 
their attention was focused on locals trying to smuggle out rugs or 
gold. Mendez had picked the early morning because by 10 am, Mehrabad 
would become a typically anarchic developing-world transit hub, with 
disordered lines of people, commotion, yelling, and shoving. That's 
when the Revolutionary Guard would show up to have their run of the 
place.

When Mendez saw that the military presence was light, he signaled 
all-clear to his film crew. The Americans entered the airport with 
trepidation. They hadn't been in public, after all, in nearly 80 days. 
Most of the escapees had worked in the consulate, and they all knew 
what it was like to scrutinize official paperwork, looking for flaws. 
Worse yet, three of them had worked in the visa line. They'd been seen 
by thousands of Iranians, many of whom might harbor grudges for being 
turned down.

Everyone breathed easier when check-in at the Swissair counter and 
customs went smoothly. The group made small talk as Schatz approached 
immigration, presented his passport, and got his stamp. The Americans 
were momentarily terrified when the officer disappeared with the rest 
of the crew's passports. But then he absent-mindedly wandered back to 
the counter with some tea and waved the group on to the departure 
lounge without bothering to match the yellow and white forms.

The wait was agonizing. Everyone kept their heads down. Joe Stafford 
picked up a local paper at one point and then remembered that Canadian 
film crews don't read Farsi. He also kept using people's real names, 
giving the others serious jitters. It was getting later and brighter. 
The airport was filling with people. They knew there was no backup 
plan. Mendez wasn't even carrying a gun, and the Revolutionary Guards 
were arriving, wandering around in fatigues and harassing passengers. 
Look them in the eye, Mendez had coached the six in case anyone was 
questioned. Be confident but seem innocent. But he knew from the 
agency's reconnaissance that the guards could be tough, even 
subjecting people to sudden body cavity searches. A mechanical problem 
caused a delay, and the Revolutionary Guards were starting to turn 
their attention to foreign passengers.

Mendez disappeared. He had a contact at the airport and went to check 
on the flight status. No sooner had he learned that the delay would be 
short than they heard the announcement: "Swissair flight 363, ready 
for immediate departure." As they boarded the plane from the windy 
tarmac, Anders noticed the word AARGAU was printed across the 
fuselage - the name of the Swiss region where the plane originated was 
strangely similar to that of their cover story. He punched Mendez's 
arm and said, "You guys arrange everything, don't you?"

Mendez smiled. After the plane's wheels went up, Mendez knew he had 
just pulled off one of the most successful deception operations of his 
career. The bar opened once they left Iranian airspace, and everyone 
ordered Bloody Marys. Mendez leaned into the aisle, looked back at the 
group, and raised a toast: "We're home free."

A few hours later, Studio Six Productions got its first and last call 
on the secret third line. Startled, Andi picked up the phone. "It's 
over," an unidentified voice said. "They made it out."







**********************************************************************

xponent

Lord Of Light Maru

rob


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