While analysts are at loggerheads over how to deal with the
Iranian regime's mounting threat in the Middle East region and across the
globe, a massive rally held by the Iranian opposition in Paris offered a
solution that would neither involve an extension of the failed appeasement
policy nor another violent conflict in an already war-torn region.
The Free Iran gathering,
attended by tens of thousands of Iranians and hundreds of politicians,
parliamentarians, religious leaders and activists from across the world,
suggested the prospects of democratic regime change are becoming more and more
viable.
"The
winds of change have started blowing in our homeland," said Maryam Rajavi,
president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), during
her keynote at the rally. "The ruling regime is in disarray and paralyzed
as never before. Iranian society is simmering with discontent and the
international community is finally getting closer to the reality that appeasing
the ruling theocracy is misguided."
Backing her
comments is Iran's recent presidential elections, which manifested the regime's weakening hold on power and its
inner feuds spinning out of control.
The run-up
to the elections was marked by widespread activism that
backed Mrs. Rajavi's movement and called for regime change, a reflection of the
rising discontent in the Iranian society.
"The
fact is the Tehran regime is the central problem in the Middle East," said
former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton, who spoke at the
event. "As the campaign to destroy the [Islamic State] caliphate nears its
ultimately successful conclusion, we must avoid allowing the regime in Tehran
to achieve its long-sought objective of an arc of control from Iran through the
Baghdad government in Iraq, the Assad regime in Syria and the Hezbollah
terrorists."
"The
largest supporter of state terrorism in the world is the Iranian
dictatorship," said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who also delivered
a speech at the rally. "Even the Obama administration kept saying that,
despite everything they did to kid themselves."
But while
the Obama administration futilely attempted to tackle the Iranian regime's
hostile behavior through rapprochement,
the Trump administration has taken a different route.
"I can say that we have a president of the United States who is completely
and totally opposed to the regime in Tehran," Bolton said in his speech,
to which Gingrich added, "I think it's fair to say that the Trump
administration has much fewer illusions about the nature of the Iranian
dictatorship."
As the Trump
administration reviews the U.S. policy toward Iran, the idea of supporting regime
change is gaining traction among members of his cabinet, members of Congress, and
politicians and experts close to the administration.
"The
behavior and the objectives of the regime are not going to change and therefore
the only solution is to change the regime itself," Bolton said, a
sentiment that was also echoed by Gingrich and other speakers at the gathering.
Who will
bring about change? Rajavi answered that question during her speech.
"Despite the regime's deafening propaganda, the greatest threat to the
regime is not a foreign enemy, but the very revolts in society, waiting to
erupt," she said.
What makes
Iran different from other countries in the region where revolutions have
spiraled into chaos is that there is a solid and reliable alternative. "In
this case there is something different. We have an alternative," former
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said at the event, referring to the NCRI, the
opposition coalition led by Mrs. Rajavi.
The NCRI,
founded in 1981, strives for the establishment of a secular and democratic
government in Iran. The NCRI played a pivotal role in exposing Iran's illicit nuclear
program since 2002.
What force
is this alternative relying on? "It is relying on an organized and united
movement with thousands of trailblazing and selfless members," Mrs. Rajavi"It relies on the genuine support of Iranians at home and abroad and the
tireless efforts of its dedicated supporters."
In the weeks
that led to the gathering, activists and political prisoners inside
Iran took on the perils to express their support for the event.
"The
next time there's popular dissent, it will be across the whole country, it will
be organized," Gingrich said. "The Trump administration needs to be
prepared and leaning forward and ready to do everything it can to help freedom
win and dictatorship lose in the great struggle that is underway in Iran."
Source: change in Iran is within reach
Comments
Post a Comment