Why the Iranian regime must come to an end چرا رژیم ایران باید پایان یابد؟
October
28, 2018
A recent New European article
suggested the sudden downfall of the Iranian regime could create more problems
than it solves. Former MEP Struan Stevenson disagrees.
It is incredible that some
commentators on Iran still believe that “quiet, calculated diplomatic pressure
on the current regime to change some of its practices…” may somehow end the
brutal repression, corruption and human rights abuse that the Iranian people
have suffered for 40 years. This was the view of Paul Knott, in his recent New
European article, arguing that the downfall of the regime in Tehran might not
be in the world’s best interests.
He correctly lists the
shortcomings of one of the planet’s most repugnant dictatorships, but then,
having diagnosed the disease, makes the classic Western appeaser’s error of
prescribing the wrong medicine. Falling into the trap of identifying the internal
struggle as being between ‘hardliners’ and ‘moderates’, Knott suggests
president Hassan Rouhani leads a “relatively moderate and reformist
government”.
Nothing could be further from
the truth. Since Rouhani came to power in August 2013, more than 3,500 people
have been executed in Iran, which now holds the record as the world’s leading
executioner per capita.
It is not surprising that the
uprisings, which have raged across Iran since last December, have targeted the
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and president Hassan Rouhani. The angry protesters
are not demanding that hard-liners should be replaced with moderates, a myth
that still beguiles many western governments, who think there is room for
gradual change. The chants of “Hardliners, reformers, the game is over,”
“Neither Gaza nor Lebanon, I give my life for Iran” and “Leave Syria, think
about us instead”, have clearly demonstrated the people’s opposition to the
clerical government’s belligerent regional meddling and their demand for regime
change.
The so-called ‘moderate’
Rouhani has presided over a brutal offensive on the protesters, sending in the
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), who have gunned down dozens in the
streets and arrested more than 10,000 protesters, many of whom have been
tortured to death in prison.
Rouhani’s government claims to
represent God’s will on earth, yet regards women as second-class citizens,
hangs people in public, condones torture, arbitrary imprisonment, eye-gouging,
stoning, whipping and amputation. Amnesty International last August published a
94-page report entitled Caught in a web of repression: Iran’s human rights
defenders under attack. It detailed 45 specific instances of what the
organization described as a “vicious crackdown”.
Nor will this repressive
regime tolerate opposition abroad. In July, German police arrested Assadollah
Assadi, a diplomat from the Iranian Embassy in Vienna, and charged him with
terrorist offences. The day before, the Belgian police had arrested an Iranian
couple from Antwerp after high explosives and a detonator were found in their
car. Investigators believe Assadi gave them the bomb and instructed them to
detonate it at the Iranian democratic opposition rally being held in
Villepinte, near Paris.
Emmanuel Macron has declared
his outrage at this attempted terrorist atrocity on French soil and his
government has imposed sanctions on Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence.
Iran’s descent into economic
chaos can be traced directly to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and Rouhani.
Their policy of aggressive military expansionism across the Middle East has
seen them consistently pour men and resources into Syria’s civil war, the
genocidal campaign against the Sunni population of neighbouring Iraq, their
support for the Houthi rebels in Yemen and their vast funding for the Hezbollah
terrorists in Lebanon.
Combined with the mullahs’ own
predilection for corruptly lining their own pockets, it is little surprise that
the country with the world’s second largest gas reserves and fourth largest
crude oil reserves is now facing economic meltdown. Iran, despite its rich,
civilised and open culture, has now become an international pariah, its
religious fascist regime condemned for human rights abuse and the export of
terror, while its 80 million beleaguered citizens, over half of whom are under
30, struggle to feed their families against a background of record
temperatures, power outages, water shortages and food prices that have risen by
more than 50%.
Those advocating “quiet,
calculated diplomatic pressure” in our dealings with Iran, should remember the
appeasement policy of Neville Chamberlain.
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