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Iran Mullahs - A Glance of Unavoidable crises
June 08, 2019 | hassan.mahmoud

Posted on 06/08/2019 12:57:11 AM PDT by hassan.mahmoud

The Iranian regime's recent actions in sabotaging oil tankers off the shores of the UAE, the attack on Saudi oil facilities, and rocket launches aimed at the US embassy in Iraq are the desperate acts of a regime on its final legs. Stuck in a quagmire of internal crises coupled with international isolation, the regime is resorting to frantic actions that will only accelerate its downfall. The regime in Iran is spiraling downward in an all-out "collapse crisis", which is due to the three following elements:

1. Iranians are on the verge of an uprising Forty years of corruption and plunder have destroyed Iran's economic infrastructure and led to poverty, inflation, and environmental disaster. Iran’s first vice president, Eshaq Jahangiri was quoted as saying on Nov 29, 2018: “Iranian society is like a gas chamber waiting for a spark to erupt.” The repressive measures imposed on the public, in particular, the younger generation, and the systematic discrimination against women and various ethnic and religious minorities exacerbated the situation, leading to rising unrest and protests throughout society. “The dissatisfaction of the people at the present time is the greatest threat to the system and is far more important and dangerous than a foreign threat” the chairman of the Tehran’s City Council, Mohsen Hashemi was quoted as saying on May 20, 2018. On May 21, 2019, Kavakebyan, MP, in an official session of the country’s Majlis said: "Corruption, Corruption, Corruption. It is so rampant that people say these sanctions do not have much impact on the economy, but the money laundering, corruption, and accumulation of wealth have more negative effects than sanctions.”

2. A viable and strong opposition exists The coalition of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI / MEK) as its backbone, is a democratic and powerful alternative that plays and has the greatest impact and role on the ongoing domestic and international developments. Following the successful transfer of its members from Iraq, where they were under constant rocket and terrorist attacks by the Iranian regime’s proxies, the PMOI has focused and redoubled efforts to effect change in Iran. The PMOI is famous for its steadfast opposition to the ruling regime. Due to its popularity among the people of Iran over the past 40 years and despite the execution of 100,000 of its members and sympathizers, and also being the targets of terrorist attacks and all sorts of political ploys, the PMOI has managed to uphold its effectiveness and influence in society. On January 9, 2018, the clerics’ supreme leader, Khamenei, described the PMOI as the third side of a triangle, the United States and Saudi Arabia are the other two sides, which creates all the unrest in the country. In a rare and non-diplomatic act on January 2, 2018, in a phone call to the French president, Rouhani said that the PMOI was the prime cause of the unrest in Iran and urged the French president in vain to restrict them in his country. The Intelligence Minister, Mahmoud Alavi, on 19 April 2019 claimed his ministry alone had arrested at least 116 teams affiliated to the PMOI last year and the Director General of East Azarbijan Information was quoted as saying “Mojahedin had been growing and expanding far more than before, and 60 of them have been arrested in this province alone.” The terrorist and defeated plots of the clerics against the PMOI in France, Albania, and the United States, which had demoralizing political consequences for the regime, were other desperate acts of the regime on its final leg. The clerics were hoping to counter the organization's efforts to overthrow them. The massive campaign staged to demonize the PMOI, confirms the very fear the clerics feel from their main opposition, the People’s Mojahedin of Iran. As the recent event marking June 4th, the 30th anniversary of the death of Iranian brutal regime's founder Ruhollah Khomeini, resistance units in various parts of the country set fire to the images of Khomeini and current regime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Short videos of these activities are available and sent from inside the country.

In Chaharmahal & Bakhtiari Province, southern Iran, a sign was set on fire reading, “May God and Iran’s nation damn you, Khomeini.” In the cities of Mashhad and Karaj, northeast and northern Iran respectively, Resistance Units' members set fire to Khomeini images and threw other such images in public trash cans, all in expressions of their utter hatred towards the mullahs’ regime.

In Shiraz, south-central Iran Resistance Units members drew large X-signs on a variety of Khomeini images and threw them in trash canisters across the city. In Qazvin, northwest Iran, a poster affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) Basij containing Khomeini/Khamenei images were set on fire.

A PMOI/MEK supporter ridiculed current regime officials, saying they are all remnants of the ruthless Khomeini and the Iranian people will not be deceived by their plots. A group of PMOI/MEK supporters in Khuzestan Province (southwest) and Tehran held signs reading, “Hail to Rajavi,” referring to opposition President Maryam Rajavi, head of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI). Other sign reads “Death to the Dictator.”

3. Blow to the policy of appeasement Over four decades, western governments have provided a great service to the mullah’s regime. Former US administrations have unwittingly helped save this regime, in its most critical turning points, so that the real winner of the wars in Kuwait, Afghanistan, and Iraq in 1991, 2001 and 2003 were no other than the mullahs ruling Iran. The two former US administrations opened the doors of Iraq to the mullahs’ regime, during one of the most destructive policies that paved the way to give total control over Iraq and Syria to the Iranian regime without the latter paying any price. They closed their eyes on the regime’s ambitious incursions and hesitated in the face of the latter’s nuclear projects. They listed the PMOI in 1997 as a foreign terrorist entity, in 2003, on demand by the mullahs and in violation of all international covenants, they bombed the PMOI in Iraq and subsequently disarmed the organization. In 2009 in spite of written commitments, they abandoned PMOI members to the mercy of Iraqi Prime Minister Noori-al-Maleki’s mercenaries, leading to seven blood baths and 177 lives lost. So the most important element that has saved the mullahs’ regime from overthrow has been this policy of appeasement. The current US administration’s policy which wants an end to the mullahs’ nuclear program as well as to their export of terrorism, regional warmongering and missile programs is clearly suffocating the regime. Were it not for the past appeasement policy, the medieval regime would not be in a position to fend off Iranian people’s protests and uprisings, and it would have never been in a position to strengthen its grasp on Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen or to intervene in the regions’ countries. In fact, it would have been overthrown by the Iranian people long before. Everybody remembers 2009 when millions of Iranians wanted regime change but the US president was seeking a handshake with Khamenei and Ahmadinejad. Khamenei reminded all last week that during that period he was receiving one kind letter after another from the US president. The three above points form the regime’s deadly crisis. There are two possible scenarios to this crisis, with each more dangerous than the other. • One way out would be to strategically abandon policies of warmongering and terrorism, completely quit Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon and put an end to its nuclear and missile programs. This course would mean nothing less than the total surrender of the Velayat-al-Faghih (the basis of this regime) and would lead to popular uprisings dismantling the regime in its totality. The religious dictatorship is not capable of reform, and any real and serious reform would lead to its downfall. Khamenei has repeated time and again that change of behavior has no other meaning than regime change. • Another scenario is further hardening and hostility towards the international community, continuing its current destructive policies and preparing for clashes and war, painting a very dark perspective for the regime. Either way, the mullahs’ regime does not see anything other than its own oncoming doom and so it has pursued a policy of buying time since long ago. It hopes to keep low and let the current wave pass, without responding to any US conditions, until US elections in 2020. But it seems this policy has run out of road as the regime is no longer able to bear the consequences of sanctions for 18 more months and it has no guaranty whatsoever that at the end of this period there would be a change in the US administration. More importantly, it does not have the power to contain the explosive social situation in Iran and the further advance of the opposition. Changes in the command hierarchy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) and placing three of the most notorious members (Salami, Fadavi, and Naghdi) in leading positions, as well as the designation of mullah Raissi, who in the past undertook the mass execution of 30 thousand political prisoners, as Chief Justice is measured in preparation for facing the regime’s final phase. This is the other side of the coin of blowing up ships in Fujairah and Saudi oil installations as well as launching rockets at the US embassy in Baghdad. Everything shows that the struggle between the Iranian people led by their resistance movement with the mullahs’ regime has entered its final phase. The world community especially the US and the EU should, by choosing a firm policy, deny this regime the time to further murder the Iranian people and undertake terrorism and warmongering abroad. 

Desperate acts of Iran’s clerical regime The Iranian regime's recent actions in sabotaging oil tankers off the shores of the UAE, the attack on Saudi oil facilities, and rocket launches aimed at the US embassy in Iraq are the desperate acts of a regime on its final legs. Stuck in a quagmire of internal crises coupled with international isolation, the regime is resorting to frantic actions that will only accelerate its downfall. The regime in Iran is spiraling downward in an all-out "collapse crisis", which is due to the three following elements: 1. Iranians are on the verge of an uprising Forty years of corruption and plunder have destroyed Iran's economic infrastructure and led to poverty, inflation, and environmental disaster. Iran’s first vice president, Eshaq Jahangiri was quoted as saying on Nov 29, 2018: “Iranian society is like a gas chamber waiting for a spark to erupt.” The repressive measures imposed on the public, in particular, the younger generation, and the systematic discrimination against women and various ethnic and religious minorities exacerbated the situation, leading to rising unrest and protests throughout society. “The dissatisfaction of the people at the present time is the greatest threat to the system and is far more important and dangerous than a foreign threat” the chairman of the Tehran’s City Council, Mohsen Hashemi was quoted as saying on May 20, 2018. On May 21, 2019, Kavakebyan, MP, in an official session of the country’s Majlis, said: "Corruption, Corruption, Corruption. It is so rampant that people say these sanctions do not have much impact on the economy, but the money laundering, corruption, and accumulation of wealth have more negative effects than sanctions.”

2. A viable and strong opposition exists The coalition of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI / MEK) as its backbone, is a democratic and powerful alternative that plays and has the greatest impact and role on the ongoing domestic and international developments. Following the successful transfer of its members from Iraq where they were under constant rocket and terrorist attacks by the Iranian regime’s proxies, the PMOI has focused and redoubled efforts to effect change in Iran. The PMOI is famous for its steadfast opposition to the ruling regime. Due to its popularity among the people of Iran over the past 40 years and despite the execution of 100,000 of its members and sympathizers, and also being the targets of terrorist attacks and all sorts of political ploys, the PMOI has managed to uphold its effectiveness and influence in the society. On January 9, 2018, the clerics’ supreme leader, Khamenei, described the PMOI as the third side of a triangle, the United States and Saudi Arabia is the other two sides, which creates all the unrest in the country. In a rare and non-diplomatic act on January 2, 2018, in a phone call to the French president, Rouhani said that the PMOI was the prime cause of the unrest in Iran and urged the French president in vain to restrict them in his country. The Intelligence Minister, Mahmoud Alavi, on 19 April 2019 claimed his ministry alone had arrested at least 116 teams affiliated to the PMOI last year and the Director General of East Azarbijan Information was quoted as saying “Mojahedin had been growing and expanding far more than before, and 60 of them have been arrested in this province alone.” The terrorist and defeated plots of the clerics against the PMOI in France, Albania, and the United States, which had demoralizing political consequences for the regime, were other desperate acts of the regime on its final leg. The clerics were hoping to counter the organization's efforts to overthrow them. The massive campaign staged to demonize the PMOI, confirms the very fear the clerics feel from their main opposition, the People’s Mojahedin of Iran. As the recent event marking June 4th, the 30th anniversary of the death of Iranian brutal regime's founder Ruhollah Khomeini, resistance units in various parts of the country set fire to the images of Khomeini and current regime Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Short videos of these activities are available and sent from inside the country.


TOPICS: History; Miscellaneous; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: iran; mujaheddin; resistanceunits

1 posted on 06/08/2019 12:57:11 AM PDT by hassan.mahmoud
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To: hassan.mahmoud
Paragraph Breaks are like farts, they relieve the stress.


2 posted on 06/08/2019 1:04:57 AM PDT by nathanbedford (attack, repeat, attack! Bull Halsey)
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To: hassan.mahmoud

I talked to an Iranian who’d just got up and walked out of Iran around two years ago....finding his way into Europe. He pointed out an interesting trend over the past five years.

Basically....any successful businessman is attempting take his monthly or quarterly profits, and get the money traded in for Euro, dollars, or Dubai Dirham...then he finds this source to take the money out of Iran...usually into Dubai, and puts it either into a condo investment scheme, or a bank. The sense is, the Iranian economy is failing (probably has been this way for decade now), and just wait for the eventual collapse. It’s now impossible (as my associate laid out the story) to find foreign currency, because no wants to hold onto Iranian Rial.

All of this triggers banking issues because you can’t get loans for mortgages or business expansion. The general attitude is to wait till the collapse now...even if it takes another entire decade. He even sat there and suggested that most of the money Obama airlifted in (the Euro and dollars)....were handed out for VIP currency transactions, which then week by week....left the country for more investment into Dubai, or purchase of gold, dollars or Euro.


3 posted on 06/08/2019 1:24:39 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: pepsionice

I estimate that Iran’s internal security is many times more powerful and more violent than Venezuela.

If Venezuela can’t knock out a dictator who has impoverished the entire country, I don’t see how average Iranian citizens can knock out the Revolutionary Guard.


4 posted on 06/08/2019 2:38:34 AM PDT by zeestephen
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To: hassan.mahmoud

Love your articles, Hassan, but your formatting sucks. Paragraph breaks, please.


5 posted on 06/08/2019 7:32:59 AM PDT by Windflier (Torches and pitchforks ripen on the vine. Left too long, they become black rifles.)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...
Thanks hassan.mahmoud.

6 posted on 06/09/2019 12:00:14 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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