The Iran
dossier is high-priority issue on the desk of US President Donald Trump and his
entire administration. Both his Secretary of Defense and National Security Advisor have long years of
experience in dealing with Iran’s belligerence, especially seen in the mullahs’
meddling in the Middle East.
Regime change
will be necessary before the U.S. and Iran can have substantially positive
relations, according to Secretary of Defense James Mattis.“Until the Iranian people can get rid of this
theocracy, these guys who think they can tell the people even which candidates
they get a choice of. It’s going to be very, very difficult,” Mattis told the
Mercer Island High School Islander in a rare and special interview with high schooler Teddy Fischer.
The US Congress
also has a full deck of cards consisting of numerous measures, including the
recently adopted Senate resolution targeting Iran’s ballistic missile program,
terrorism and human
rights violations.
In early June
the House introduced a bill condemning a horrific genocide kept mostly cloaked
by the Iranian regime from the West. In the span of a mere few months more than
30,000 political prisoners in prisons across Iran were massacred.
In a rare
bipartisan move, Democrats and Republicans placed their weight behind House
Resolution 188 deploring this genocide that “included thousands of people,
including teenagers and pregnant women, imprisoned merely for participating in
peaceful street
protests and for possessing political reading material, many of whom had
already served or were currently serving prison sentences.”
The 1988
massacre is a highly sensitive matter for the mullahs’ regime in its entirety.
While mainstream media
in the West continue to mistakenly differentiate various elements in Iran as
“moderates” or “reformists”, all factions inside the regime apparatus consider
this issue a red line.
This very
opposition, represented politically by the renowned National Council of Resistance of Iran
(NCRI) and its President Maryam Rajavi, held its annual convention in Paris on
July 1st emphasizing it is high time for the international community to adopt a
policy of regime change vis-à-vis Iran.
For the past
year, however, the
Iranian opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) has
focused its efforts inside Iran through its network of activists on raising
public awareness about this massacre. This has been welcomed on a wide-scale by
Iran’s very young population,
with nearly half the country under the age of 35.
A delegation of
US Senators and Representatives sent video messages and were present at the
scene to support a cause seeking freedom for the Iranian people. Standing by
their side was a long slate of American dignitaries, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
House Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi and Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce,
representing further signs of support from both sides of the aisle in
Washington, sent video messages condemning especially Iran’s human rights
violations and meddling in the affairs of regional neighbors.
Mrs. Rajavi in
her speech cited America’s Declaration of Independence to emphasize the Iranian
people’s right to overthrow this unwanted regime, also reiterated by the North
Carolina representative in his remarks.
“When our forefathers met 241 years ago, this time, they pledged their lives,
their fortune, their sacred honor, for a Declaration of Independence, for a new
America,” Rep. Pittinger said addressing the massive crowd. Referring to the US
celebrating Independence Day on July 4th, he added, “Yes, from that, we found Life, Liberty, and
the Pursuit of Happiness, and that’s what we want for Iran today.”
Developments
inside Iran with dissent on the rise and the Middle East brewing further for
more crises are placing the international community on a fast track to make important decisions on
this very strategic state.
The Trump
administration should ally with the Congress, enjoying support from both sides
of the aisle, and tackle the vital Iran dossier by imposing crippling sanctions on the regime
and its main leverage in all endeavors, being the IRGC.
Nevertheless,
the conclusion is what the Iranian Resistance has emphasized since the outset
and many in the world have reached today: The solution, the only solution, is regime change.
The truth is
that the regime’s overthrow is possible and within reach, because the regime is
besieged by extensive social discontent.
Source:How To TackleThe Iran Dilemma
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