The Iranian people's Resistance (NCR) and MEK against mullahs.
EXCLUSIVE: Nearly two dozen former top U.S. government officials have
urged President-elect Donald Trump to work with Iran's opposition once in
office, according to a letter obtained by Fox News.
A letter signed by 23 former
officeholders calls on Trump to consult with the Paris-based National Council
of Resistance of Iran (NCRI). The group has called for free elections and
freedom of religion in Iran, as well as an end to what it calls Tehran's "religious
dictatorship."
While the Iranian government calls the
group terrorists, the NCRI’s network of supporters in Iran helped the U.S. with
intelligence during the Iraq invasion. The group also helped expose Iran's
nascent nuclear weapons program.
"Iran's rulers have directly
targeted US strategic interests, policies and principles, and those of our
allies and friends in the Middle East," the letter reads, in part.
"To restore American influence and credibility in the world, the United
States needs a revised policy."
The letter's signatories include former
New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani; former Sen. Joe Lieberman; and retired
Army Gen. Hugh Shelton, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under
President Bill Clinton.
Last month, Fox obtained a letter to
Trump from a group of Iranian dissidents that urged the president-elect to
follow through on his campaign promise to revisit the nuclear deal between Iran
and six global powers, including the U.S.
"I think what's being offered here
is to say, 'Look, there is an opposition in Iran,'" former U.S. ambassador
to the U.N. John Bolton told Fox News. "It's a lot of different pieces,
like all opposition movements [and] a lot of the groups don't get on well together,
but let's be clear: There is an alternative to the ayatollahs."
The Trump transition team has not given
any official response to the letter, and it's unclear whether Trump has any
plans to take a meeting with Iran dissidents and groups.
Earlier Sunday, Iran's deputy foreign
minister told reporters that "the new U.S. administration cannot abandon
the deal." Abbas Araghchi added that the agreement "will not be
renegotiated" and repeated an earlier warning by Iran's Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who publicly stated, "If they tear it up, we will
burn it," without elaborating.
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