Arash Azizi: “Last Saturday, in Grapevine, Texas, [former Crown Prince Reza] Pahlavi spoke to throngs of his supporters at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Iranians made up a large proportion of CPAC attendees this year, and they greeted Pahlavi with passionate cheers.
“In his speech, Pahlavi pledged to lead a transition to a ‘free and democratic Iran.’ He called on President Trump to continue the American-Israeli military operation against Iran, in the hope of displacing a regime he decried for placing a ‘sea of blood’ between itself and its people. ‘President Trump is making America great again,’ he concluded. ‘I intend to make Iran great again.’
“Pahlavi’s star turn in Texas showcased both the appeal and the limitations of his project.
“He rallied an impressive number of supporters, who shouted his name at CPAC just as their counterparts did in street demonstrations in Iran. But his unbridled support for the war and his chumminess with the American right have made him a polarizing figure among Iranians. Worse, the American president he praised and beseeched has shown little trust in Pahlavi and seems much more interested in dealing with the current leadership in Tehran.
“The day of Pahlavi’s CPAC speech, I was in London, where about 400 Iranians who opposed the regime but were skeptical of Pahlavi had gathered for the launch of something called the Iran Freedom Congress. The groups represented in London had spent years in bitter arguments with one another. The task of the congress was to explore the possibility of building a shared political vehicle.
“In the two decades I have spent observing and participating in Iranian opposition politics, I had never seen a meeting so broadly representative as the one in London. Perhaps that was in part because the event’s main organizer was not himself a member of any one diaspora activist group; rather, he was a tech entrepreneur and former World Bank analyst named Majid Zamani, who had spent more than five months in prison for supporting street protests in 2009.
“Some of those who came to London were seasoned exiles, but others, including Zamani himself, were more recent arrivals from Iran and had robust links to political figures inside the country. Among the participants were socialists, ex-royalists, liberals, feminists, and nationalists. (I’d been invited as an academic and paid my own way, though the organizers had offered a full ride to all). Many of us had faced one another in online or televised debates in the past. In London, we listened to one another’s speeches and sipped coffee together during breaks. The notion that we might one day be part of the same coalition did not seem so far-fetched”
The more that I learn about Reza Pahlavi. The less that I am impressed with him. When Conservative Hawks like Lindsay Graham and Rudy Giulani think that he is a fraud, it is a good indicator that he is not much of a viable option.
Ex-Pats and current residents of a country can be quite different. We saw this episode play out in Iraq. Folks like Ahmed Chalabi and Kenan Makiya told us that we would be greeted as liberators. That certainly did not happen. The INC government, led by expats, nearly collapsed and lost half of the country to ISIS.
Ultimately, I would be able to take Reza Pahlavi and his hardcore supporters more seriously. If they assembled something like the Cuban Diaspora did with the Brigade 2506.
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Arash Azizi: “Last Saturday, in Grapevine, Texas, [former Crown Prince Reza] Pahlavi spoke to throngs of his supporters at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Iranians made up a large proportion of CPAC attendees this year, and they greeted Pahlavi with passionate cheers.
“In his speech, Pahlavi pledged to lead a transition to a ‘free and democratic Iran.’ He called on President Trump to continue the American-Israeli military operation against Iran, in the hope of displacing a regime he decried for placing a ‘sea of blood’ between itself and its people. ‘President Trump is making America great again,’ he concluded. ‘I intend to make Iran great again.’
“Pahlavi’s star turn in Texas showcased both the appeal and the limitations of his project.
“He rallied an impressive number of supporters, who shouted his name at CPAC just as their counterparts did in street demonstrations in Iran. But his unbridled support for the war and his chumminess with the American right have made him a polarizing figure among Iranians. Worse, the American president he praised and beseeched has shown little trust in Pahlavi and seems much more interested in dealing with the current leadership in Tehran.
“The day of Pahlavi’s CPAC speech, I was in London, where about 400 Iranians who opposed the regime but were skeptical of Pahlavi had gathered for the launch of something called the Iran Freedom Congress. The groups represented in London had spent years in bitter arguments with one another. The task of the congress was to explore the possibility of building a shared political vehicle.
“In the two decades I have spent observing and participating in Iranian opposition politics, I had never seen a meeting so broadly representative as the one in London. Perhaps that was in part because the event’s main organizer was not himself a member of any one diaspora activist group; rather, he was a tech entrepreneur and former World Bank analyst named Majid Zamani, who had spent more than five months in prison for supporting street protests in 2009.
“Some of those who came to London were seasoned exiles, but others, including Zamani himself, were more recent arrivals from Iran and had robust links to political figures inside the country. Among the participants were socialists, ex-royalists, liberals, feminists, and nationalists. (I’d been invited as an academic and paid my own way, though the organizers had offered a full ride to all). Many of us had faced one another in online or televised debates in the past. In London, we listened to one another’s speeches and sipped coffee together during breaks. The notion that we might one day be part of the same coalition did not seem so far-fetched”
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The more that I learn about Reza Pahlavi. The less that I am impressed with him. When Conservative Hawks like Lindsay Graham and Rudy Giulani think that he is a fraud, it is a good indicator that he is not much of a viable option.
Ex-Pats and current residents of a country can be quite different. We saw this episode play out in Iraq. Folks like Ahmed Chalabi and Kenan Makiya told us that we would be greeted as liberators. That certainly did not happen. The INC government, led by expats, nearly collapsed and lost half of the country to ISIS.
Ultimately, I would be able to take Reza Pahlavi and his hardcore supporters more seriously. If they assembled something like the Cuban Diaspora did with the Brigade 2506.