VILLEPINTE, France —
Thousands of supporters of an Iranian dissident group rallied here Saturday for
the overthrow of Tehran’s theocratic regime at an event that featured speeches
by several Trump administration allies — including Newt Gingrich and Rudolph W.
Giuliani — as well as the former head of Saudi intelligence.
The boisterous event, held annually in this town just north of
Paris, was organized by the National Council of Resistance of Iran,
a France-based group of Iranian exiles that brings dozens of current and former
U.S., European and Middle Eastern officials together to speak out in support of
regime change in Tehran.
While the Trump administration’s posture on the issue is elusive,
Mr. Giuliani drew loud cheers by asserting that the new U.S. president’s view
is far different from that of his predecessor, who led world powers to ease
sanctions on the Islamic republic with the 2015 Iranian nuclear accord.
Mr. Trump is “laser-focused on the danger of Iran to the freedom of the world,” said
Mr. Giuliani, who was perceived by many at the rally to be an emissary for Mr.
Trump despite holding no formal Cabinet position in the administration.
Unlike the Obama administration, Mr. Trump “is not in a state of
denial” on Iran, the
former New York City mayor said.
“Iran must
be free,” said Mr. Gingrich, a former House speaker who rallied the crowd by
condemning Tehran’s record of human rights abuses.
The two, who were
advisers to Mr. Trump’s election campaign, headed a U.S. delegation that
included several former Democratic lawmakers as well as three active Republican
congressmen — Reps. Ted Poe of Texas, Thomas A. Garrett Jr. of Virginia and
Robert Pittenger of North Carolina.
But it was an appearance by Prince Turki bin Faisal Al Saud, the
former longtime Saudi intelligence chief, that may have been the most
significant part of the rally.
“I salute you,” said the prince, who was in attendance for the
second year in a row. His presence suggested that Saudi Arabia’s Sunni Muslim
monarchy openly supports regime change in Iran — the Middle East’s Shiite
powerhouse and Riyadh’s main rival.
Prince Turki bin Faisal’s appearance prompted speculation that
the Saudis may even have helped finance the rally, although organizers flatly
denied that, asserting instead that funding for the National Council of Resistance of Irancomes
entirely in the form of donations from Iranians who are disgusted with the
government in Tehran…
The rally was a marathon of speeches and musical performances…
In attendance were more than a dozen current and former officials from EU
nations, including former French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner….
The most aggressive speech came from Maryam Rajavi, leader of
the National Council of Resistance of Iran,
who condemned the “religious dictatorship” of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
and asserted that the regime is run by “executioners” who have imprisoned or
killed tens of thousands of opposition figures since coming to power in 1979….
“Overthrow is possible and within reach,” she said. “Iranian
society is simmering with discontent, and the international community is
finally getting closer to the reality that appeasing the ruling theocracy is
misguided.
“The only solution is regime change,” said Mrs. Rajavi, who has
led the National Council of Resistance of Iran since
its founder — her husband, Massoud Rajavi — went into hiding in 2003.
In an email interview with The Washington Times last year, she
said the organization “represent[s] the voice of millions of Iranians who are
being oppressed in their country and who seek regime change and the
establishment of a democratic, pluralist and non-nuclear government based on
the separation of religion and state.”
Supporters of the council say
it is the most influential organization on the Iranian opposition landscape.
No one in the Iranian opposition “stands out the way the NCRI
stands out” in terms of their “day to day engagement with the Iranian public,”
said Ramesh Sepehrrad, a longtime Iranian-American women’s rights activist who
works with George Mason University’s School of Conflict Analysis and
Resolution.
Ms. Sepehrrad told a panel ahead of the rally that it is
difficult to measure the council’s
popularity inside Iran because
the “regime has made the price very, very high for the Iranian people to
express their support” for the movement.
“Thousands of their supporters and their family members have
been executed and imprisoned by the regime,” she said.
Shahin Gobadi, a member of the National Council of Resistance of Iran’s
foreign affairs committee, said the group has become more active inside Iran over the past year. “People are
realizing more and more, especially young people, that regime change is the
only answer,” Mr. Gobadi told The Times.
• This excerpt is from a Washington
Times staff-written news article that first published on July 1, 2017.
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