Previously, the Islamic Republic suppressed the truth by imposing internet blackouts; now, JD Vance utilizes mainstream media interviews to propagate a false narrative. During his appearance with Megyn Kelly, Vance put forward several major falsehoods.
• First, we never requested that the United States fight on our behalf. On the contrary, Trump explicitly stated, “Continue your protests, help is on the way.”
•Yet, President Trump ultimately interfered by urging the Iranian nation to stay silent. Trump and General Cooper repeatedly called upon the Iranian people to remain at home—a military order the Iranian people complied with. You wanted to silence us simply to move forward with a delusional agenda and secure a deal with Iran’s killers.
• Furthermore, we did not request that the United States install Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi in Iran. Rather, we asked you to step aside and allow Israel to help the protesting Iranian people (supporters of the Crown Prince) who were being butchered. Instead, you obstructed Israel, preventing them from dismantling checkpoints or neutralizing the corrupt, criminal military and judicial leadership of the Islamic Republic.
Shame on you
🇮🇷 Iranian football fans and supporters of the Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi loudly booed the anthem of the Islamic regime in Iran during the FIFA World Cup match in Los Angeles against New Zealand.
Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has said:
“Any deal with this regime will fail and is morally wrong”
“The regime has the blood of thousands on its hands…
Why come so close to leave it in place?”
He’s right in my opinion.
JUST NOW: Iranian Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi urged the world to support Iranians fight for freedom and center them in all negotiations.
He expressed deep anguish that protesters Javad and Abolfazl were executed by the regime on the same day the US signed a “peace” MOU with Iran.
Absolutely spot on. President Trump is correct not to push the Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi as a new leader.
The U.S. should stop trying to install puppets.
It’s up to the people in Iran to decide their future. And they will.
This is the final battle, Pahlavi will return home.
Iran's exiled prince Reza Pahlavi said on Tuesday that Iran's execution of two protesters arrested during the January uprising was the "consequence of making a deal with this criminal regime," criticizing the US-Iran memorandum of understanding as "morally wrong and strategically misguided."
"This is the consequence of making a deal with this criminal regime. To do a deal with a regime that murdered more than 40,000 protestors in two days in January is morally wrong and strategically misguided," Pahlavi said on X.
Pahlavi said the international community should support the Iranian people's "fight for freedom" and place them at the center of negotiations and Iran policy.
"But let me be clear - with or without international support - this regime will fall. The people of Iran will liberate themselves from tyranny," he added.
Today is Majidreza Rahnavard’s birthday; a courageous Iranian man would’ve been turning twenty-seven.
Four years ago, his unyielding ability to stand up for what he believed in despite the risks, got him murdered by the Islamic Republic in Iran. All his future laughs, travels, and loves, would be brutally seized from him by the entity supposed to protect him: the government.
And Majidreza Rahnavard isn’t the only young person whose fiery spirit the regime in Iran just couldn’t handle. 40,000+ Iranians were massacred by regime forces from January 8th-9th of this year. That number can fill an entire stadium, much like the amount seated at the World Cup games.
Even if the Islamic Republic’s leadership has shifted to a different set of individuals, the fact remains: The Islamic Republic is a theocratic dictatorship. It’s certainly not logical to deal with theocratic dictatorships on the grounds of a “peace deal.”
The individuals in power of the regime are still affiliated with those who massacred hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians, including children and teenagers. They are enablers, murderers, and will not suddenly put on their best behavior for a nation they’ve hailed death to multiple times in the past. Dictatorships cannot be trusted, and most definitely can’t be dealt with.
If the United States wants to preserve their national security, confidently prevent a nuclear weapon from being built and help the Iranian people, they can start by meeting with the Iranian people’s transitional leader, exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi.
Stand with the people of Iran.
A nation united in support of Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. A nation that raised its voice on January 8 and 9, only to face bullets, arrests, torture, and prison for demanding freedom. Today, many political prisoners live under the shadow of execution.
No government should ignore the will of a nation for its own interests.
The message of the Iranian people is clear: freedom, democracy, peace, and engagement with the world.
Hear the voice of the Iranian people. Be their voice.
#KingRezaPahlaviForIran
#Jan8_9
It is obvious this had nothing to do with the United States “installing” someone like Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, whose name millions of Iranians chanted in the streets while being massacred by the Islamic Republic.
But Trump had no right to promise support to the Iranian people, no right to urge them to continue protesting, and no right to tell them to stay home and wait for the “right moment.”
Using the lives, blood and suffering of Iranians as leverage while ultimately pushing everything toward a “deal” is a betrayal and a moral disgrace. It turns a nation’s tragedy into a bargaining tool for political agreement.
@RepLuna You are literally hiding the MoU (note: NOT a “peace deal”) from the American public at the request of Islamic dictatorships. And you call yourself America first?
CNN: "Do you support abolishing ICE?"
Brown: "I don't -- I'm not close enough to make those decisions."
Sherrod Brown spent 32 years in Washington, and suddenly he’s not close enough to have an opinion?
Sherrod wants Ohioans to forget his open border failures. We won't.