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The U.S. Killed 300 Iranian Citizens. Iranians Remember—But Americans Don't

"I will never apologize for the United States," then-Vice President George H.W. Bush told a campaign rally less than a month after the U.S. Navy killed 290 civilians on Iran Air Flight 655.
An Iranian woman holds a picture of her father who was killed in the downing of Iran Air flight 655 by the U.S. Navy, on the 24th anniversary of the disaster, at the port of Bandar Abbas on July 2, 2012. Guided missile cruiser USS Vincennes shot down the aircraft July 3, 1988, claiming to have mistaken it for an attacking Iranian F-14 and killing 290 civilian passengers and crew members.
us iran history shoot down plane

The downing of a U.S. spy drone, the near-launch of military action against Iran and recent unclaimed attacks against nearby oil tankers in the last month have not only set off tensions in the Persian Gulf, but invoked memories of an even deadlier time in the two rivals' troubled history three decades ago when the U.S. killed nearly 300 Iranian civilians.

The U.S. and Iran have never officially fought a war but the two sides have engaged in bouts of violence since the CIA-backed coup that reinstalled Iran's monarchy in 1953 and the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ousted that leadership for the current cleric-led government. The following decade would prove complex for Washington and Tehran amid the regional volatility of the Iran-Iraq War, during which the U.S. sought to protect Kuwaiti vessels in the Persian Gulf.

The war often spilled over into these narrow, strategic waters, where the guided-missile frigate USS Stark was bombed by a modified Iraqi warplane, killing 37 sailors in May 1987, and fellow warship USS Samuel B. Roberts struck a mine in April 1988.

The U.S. blamed Iran for the latter incident and conducted one of the largest naval operations since World War II, destroying a number of Iranian ships and killing dozens

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