to nawawimohamad, by your name and yout comments you are obviously an Arab kronie who want nothing more thanto see Iran down...i can assure you that i agree with the comments that Iranians would welcome back our Shah with open arms, 2500 years of Imperial rule can not be ignored! and the Pahlavis were and are one of our greatest dynastys, one think the Pahlavis and other nationalists like Mossadegh had in commen is they ALL love Iran and its people, unlike the money hungrey, arab islamic government at the moment...who have more support in the arab countries than in their own, their time is numbered, and when we expell them there will be no place for this form of government in our history ever again, it is the 2nd time the arabs have infiltrated us, i promise you there wont be a third time! JAVID SHAH!
NOT In Our Name
Don't confuse Iran or its citizens with the unpopular clerical government.
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Since the hostage crisis of 1979, a state of undeclared war between Iran and the United States—begun by the mullahs—has become ever more bitter and intense. Militant anti-Americanism has become the central core of Tehran's foreign policy, as its rulers have opposed the interests of Washington and its allies everywhere—most notably in the Muslim world.
The result of almost three decades of hostility, exacerbated by Iran's nuclear ambitions and its agitation in places like Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and Afghanistan is that conflict in the region seems possible once more.
Should war break out, those likely to suffer most will be the people of Iran, who have long borne the brunt of their government's policies, which have isolated, brutalized and impoverished them.
Although the regime boasts of having held numerous elections, not one has been fair or free, with people's candidates able to avoid endless obstructions. Ahmadinejad's own election was such a sham that even some of his handpicked opponents, including a former president and a Speaker of Iran's Parliament, accused him and his supporters of cheating.
It is essential, therefore, not to confuse Iran with the clerical dictatorship. The cult of death and superstition that personifies the Islamic Republic has not conquered the spirit of our nation, especially its women and youth, who make up some 70 percent of the population.
Having squandered popular support, the regime today faces the most serious international crisis in its history and a number of sharp internal challenges, due primarily to the faltering, corruption-ridden economy. The mullahs' only hope for survival is to use the nuclear threat to black-mail the outside world into inaction while brutalizing their people at home.
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