” Iranians need help, not war or sanctions, to oust their regime,” says
Reza Pahlavi in Al Arabiya News today @
http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/05/18/214828.html
There is no doubt about the
Persian influence in Middle East and Central Asian regions. It flows from
history. Nothing that the West has in mind will change that.
Reza Pahlavi’s views comes
across as sensible, sane and insightful, over the noises orchestrated in the
media for a while now. He calls upon Israel to help the Iranian people in
toppling the current regime instead of launching military attacks against the
country to stop its nuclear program. And he’s spot on in his assessment of any
misadventure on part of Israel and US : a war on Iran now will cause a tension
with Jewish people worse than it already is. In fact, it would regress by
milleniums, back to how it was during the reign of Cyrus the Great.
Besides, a war against Iran
will not achieve the end… because the nuclear program will not really stop. It
will only be delayed for a while, Reza says. The only real solution lies in
overthrowing the present “Ayatollah” regime. I believe no one in the world
would disagree with that.
The programme to waylay the
current establishment does not pass through economic sanctions, but is best
routed through standing by the Iranian people. People uprisings in recent past
has reflected the public apathy for their government… but they are unarmed and
know that violence would only bring out the regime’s superiority, its arms and
massive cadres schooled and paid to serve their masters with dedication. Civil
disobedience is the more viable option. When diplomacy fails and war is an
unfavorable option, only the Iranian people weigh upon the regime from inside,
Reza suggests. Taking the regime’s “Supreme Leader” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to
the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity would also
be in order, for best effect… a proposal that would require the Security
Council’s recommendation since Iran was not a signatory to the Rome Statute, as
was done to bring the former president of Ivory Coast on trial. The Ayatollah
aides could then be indicted by the reformed justice system within Iran.
Admitting to plaints of the
Shah regime’s several drawbacks, Reza stresses that it was not as bad for the
people of Iran as the present one. He slams the Iranian establishment for
discriminating against minorities and wished making the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights the foundation for Iran’s new constitution. The diversity
prevailing in Iran could be protected through decentralisation, he feels, by
granting a measure of autonomy to each of the provinces, which would then be
able to safeguard the rights of minorities and guarantee equality among all
citizens. The ethnic groups could have the right to keep their language and
further their respective culture.
The response of people on the
Al Arabiya web page have been encouraging. A reader lists the three groups of
people who would oppose Reza Pahlavi’s suggestions : the Mojahedin, the
Fadayain and the Republic’s Ayatollah regime. ” Apart from this minority, over
80% of the Iranian people support Reza Pahlavi or are neutral !” He remains a
key political figure popular among the people of Iran.
A Parsi representative of
pre-Islamic people of Iran points out that there was no other country he knew
of with as extreme a chasm between the people and their government. The Iranian
people were cultured, fairly well educated, tolerant, hospitable, hard working
and enterprising. In contrast, he lambasts, “these scum bags” have taken the
people of Iran to Arbestan of 1400 years ago and have left a legacy of
widespread poverty, high unemployment, total lack of respect for women and
human rights, oppressive judiciary as practiced in the seventh century,
prostitution through poverty, six million drug addicts and corruption galore.
The Iranian people have nothing against anyone except the mullahs and their
ways.
Another reader lauds the Shah
leadership while castigating the brutality of the ruling clerics. He says, the
Shah brought modernity into Iran. He encouraged liberal education both at home
and abroad, had social programs and policies to help women… while the Islamists
were committing acts of violence across the country and blaming the Shah for
cracking down on their brutality. These subhumans are doing the same…now.
A reader in the West compares
Reza Pahlavi with Nelson Mandela, which seems a stretch. But, more fair on the
balance, he adds, ” Though I cannot agree with everything Mr. Pahlavi says, the
important point is that the people of Iran know his love for the country. He is
seeking a better life for all Iranians, much like his father did. We had a very
good life back during the Shah’s reign. I was young then and I don’t remember
much but would want Shahzadah Reza Pahlavi back in Iran and back in power….”
Of course, at the head of a
democratic government, the reader adds.
Originally published @ http://bit.ly/Jtovu5
More of this author's works @ http://www.amazon.fr/-/e/B0072R0I56