Former Iran hostage Kevin Hermening draws on his terrifying 444-day ordeal in campaign for Congress

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One candidate on the ballot this year doesn’t need a briefing book to study Tehran terror: he was held captive by the Islamic Republic for 444 days.

Kevin Hermening, a Wisconsin Republican running for the House, was just a 20-year-old Marine senior sergeant when he became one of the initial 66 Americans taken hostage by Iran in November 1979.

He and other troops used tear gas in a bid to keep Iranians from storming the US embassy in Tehran.

“There were 10 of us who managed to hold out for an additional four hours, and during that time we were destroying classified materials and documents and computer gear, satellite equipment,” said Hermening, now 66.

Wisconsin Republican congressional candidate Kevin Hermening was held captive for 444 days during the Iran hostage crisis. Courtesy of Kevin Hermening

They surrendered after Iranians showed them State Department security official Al Golacinski, who had been handcuffed and blindfolded with a gas mask bag over his head.

“They had his hands cuffed behind his back, and about 25 guys with automatic weapons trained on him, and a noose around his neck,” Hermening recalled.

“And they threatened to throw his body out of the second story window and hang him to death if we didn’t open the door within 10 minutes,” he said.

At that point, he says, CIA station chief Thomas Ahern made the decision to open the vault where they were ensconced.

The financial planner says he is hopeful for Iran’s future as the US and Israel pound military and security targets. Kevin Hermening for Congress/Facebook

Hermening was in solitary confinement for 43 days, held in a 5×10 room, handcuffed and blindfolded at first.

His Iranian captors, who released 14 hostages within the first few weeks, didn’t believe Hermening was a Marine, because he was out of his military uniform when they stormed the building.

“They kept me separated because there was a long period of time where they didn’t believe that I was, ‘only a Marine security guard,’ ” he said.

One friend held captive saw his weight drop from 350 pounds to just 150 pounds during the ordeal. Another captive, Col. Charles Scott, “had three of his teeth busted off with rubber hoses during his interrogations.”

And the station chief, Ahern, spent an astonishing 425 days in solitary.

“It’s nearly impossible to imagine, because for me, after just 43 days in solitary following a failed escape attempt of mine, I was already going stir crazy,” he said.

Hermening was just 20 and serving as the senior Marine sergeant when Iranians stormed the US embassy in Tehran in 1979. IMAGO/piemags via Reuters Connect

Hermening noted that a roommate in captivity, Bill Keough — a civilian who had been superintendent of the American School in Tehran — gave guidance that set him on his current course.

“He always said when we get out: Pursue your education, get involved in your community, build a life of relevance. And I’ve never forgotten those words,” he recalled.

Hermening said he could probably recite “a pretty good listing of all of the individuals or groups of people who have been maimed or killed by the Iranian regime over the years.”

These four photos, made off an NBC-TV television monitor in New York on Dec. 26, 1980, show some of the American hostages as they sent messages to their families and friends from Tehran. Shown, clockwise from upper left, are: Joseph Hall of Elyria, Ohio; Paul Lewis of Homer, Ill.; Phillip Ward, home town not known, and Kevin Hermening of Oak Creek, Wis. (AP Photo/MIL) ASSOCIATED PRESS

He ran through some of them: Robert Levinson, a former Drug Enforcement Agency and FBI employee who disappeared inside Iran in 2007, or the 220 Marines and 13 sailors and three Army soldiers killed in the attack on their barracks in Lebanon in 1983.

Yet he is hopeful for Iran’s future even with the turmoil of a decimated regime facing relentless attacks.

“Just like it was a great day for me when I was ultimately freed along with my colleagues, I think it’ll be a great day some day … that the Iranian people are able to pursue their version of a liberal democracy, or at least moving in that direction.”

His campaign website features President Trump, who on Thursday said he had to be involved in picking Iran’s new leader.

This signed January 1981 White House photo provided by Kevin Hermening shows President Ronald Reagan, left, greeting Hermening and others who were held as hostages in Iran for 444 days. AP

Hermening’s heroism hasn’t caught the president’s attention, however, as Trump has already endorsed Republican Michael Alfonso, 26, in the Aug. 11 primary.

“The president’s endorsement is important but it’s not like he’s the Supreme Leader, right?” said Hermening, who is among five Republicans vying to succeed Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Wis.), who is running for governor.

Alfonso is the son-in-law of Trump Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, who previously held the seat. Trump said he “comes from a truly spectacular family” made up of “fierce advocates for our movement to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

Hermening is less impressed.

“As a Marine, you’re taught to be ready on Day One — not someday. We are living in now even more serious times, and we’re not playing a video game over in Iran. We are dealing with issues of life and death and military preparedness.”

His job outside of politics — Hermening is a financial planner — is also getting shaken by the crisis in Iran. Financial markets have been battered by spikes in oil prices and fears of a wider war engulfing US allies.

Hermening said his clients are in good shape. He’s been shifting portfolios to include more international funds after selling off from Big Tech. “We’re pretty diversified as it is,” he said.

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