The relatives of a former FBI agent who disappeared in Iran almost nine years ago on Monday said that they are happy for the families of prisoners released from Iranian custody over the weekend, but that they wished government officials had warned them that he would not be among them.
“We had to learn it from the TV ourselves, and that’s very disappointing and heartbreaking,” said Robert Levinson’s wife, Christine.
Robert Levinson disappeared from an Iranian resort on March 9, 2007, while in the country on an unauthorized mission for the CIA.
It is unclear where he is; Iranian officials have said they do not know, but Levinson’s family does not believe them.
His son, Dan Levinson, said that it felt like “once again, he’s been left behind” and that the US must not give up on bringing his father back.
Iran released four US prisoners over the weekend in exchange for the US pardoning or dropping charges against seven Iranians.
A fifth American was also released separately.
In discussing the release, US President Barack Obama said the US would continue working to find Levinson.
However, when asked by reporters whether Levinson was still alive, US Secretary of State John Kerry said: “We have no idea.”
Levinson’s family insists he is still alive, even with health issues including diabetes, gout and high blood pressure.
They last got some visual record of him in video and photographs that were sent about five years ago.
“The people who are working on the case directly, they have told us there is no evidence to suggest my dad is not alive,” Dan Levinson said.
“We’re not going to give up because obviously we’re doing everything we can,” he said. “We need to make sure his country is doing the same.”
The family plans to mark Levinson’s upcoming birthday, which falls on March 10 — the day after the anniversary of his disappearance. It is part of the way they have tried to cope with his absence.
“We talk about him all the time,” Christine Levinson said.
They have also tried to make his presence real for the three grandchildren he has never met, teaching them a song Levinson came up with when his children were small.
“If you talk to the grandchildren, they all know how to sing the baby song,” she said.
Levinson’s family worries about what Levinson’s ordeal has done to a man who loved making friends and meeting people.
“I hope that he hasn’t lost hope,” Christine Levinson said.
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