Sens. Roy
Blunt, R-Mo., John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., met with National
Council of Resistance of Iran President Maryam Rajavi and members of the
People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran. Rajavi thanked the senators for their
firm position toward
Iran, especially the adoption of new sanctions against the ruling regime and
the Revolutionary Guards for their human rights abuses, Iran's ballistic
missile program, and the export of terrorism. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
The Iranian
regime has constantly tried to downplay the role and influence of the
opposition coalition, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, and its main
constituent, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), by portraying them as
marginal and insignificant. Yet, its mainstream media and top officials are
constantly betraying the regime's real feelings and fear of the group.
The latest
episode came after U.S. senators visited the organization's headquarters in Tirana, Albania. Sens. Roy
Blunt, R-Mo., John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., met with NCRI
President Maryam Rajavi and members of the MEK, and discussed the latest
developments in Iran and the Middle East as well as solutions to end the current
crisis in that region.
Rajavi thanked
the senators for their firm position toward Iran, especially the adoption of
new sanctions against the ruling regime and the Revolutionary Guards for their
human rights abuses, Iran's ballistic missile program, and the export of
terrorism.
Less than a day
later, dozens of mainstream media outlets representing all factions and
branches of the Iranian regime expressed concern about the lawmakers' visit,
calling it a provocative move meant to cause instability in Iran.
The visit comes
as the Trump
administration is reviewing its policy toward Iran's nefarious activities, and
cabinet officials have hinted at supporting regime change, a goal that the MEK
and NCRI have been calling for since 1981.
The Iranian
regime and its backers in the West try to portray support for regime change as a path that
will lead to another military invasion in the region, and a possible repeat of
the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. However, the NCRI believes that the Iranian
people and their resistance movement are fully capable of achieving regime change without the need
for a foreign intervention.
In her meeting
with the senators, Rajavi emphasized that contrary to the propaganda by the
Iranian regime's apologists, the ruling theocracy is rotten to the core and
very fragile. Without
foreign support, especially the policy of appeasement pursued in the U.S. and
Europe, it would not have survived so long.
She added that
regime change in Iran is necessary and within reach because a viable and
democratic alternative exists.
The Iranian
regime is increasingly extremely worried about the momentum that is building
around the NCRI's goal. In April, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., made a similar
trip to Albania and met with the MEK and NCRI's leadership. Other U.S.
dignitaries and
politicians attended the group's annual rally in Paris last month, where they
underlined the necessity for regime change in Iran.
The regime is
also having trouble containing MEK's increased activism inside Iran. In the
run-up to the May's presidential elections, despite the numerous threats issued by regime officials and
Iran's security apparatus, the group's supporters carried out widespread
campaigns across Iran, denouncing the undemocratic nature of the elections and
exposing the criminal history of the candidates.
The trip of
U.S. lawmakers to Tirana is one more problem the Iranian regime will have to
deal with as it is faced with an opposition that is growing in influence and
support, and it no longer has the advantage of a U.S. administration geared toward appeasement and
concessions.
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