Orlando Sentinel

‘My focus ... is on liberating Iran’

Exiled prince calls on Trump team in urging revolution

- By Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s exiled crown prince wants a revolution.

Reza Pahlavi, son of the last shah to rule before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has seen his profile rise in recent months following the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, who promises a harder line against the Shiite power.

Pahlavi’s calls for replacing clerical rule with a parliament­ary monarchy, enshrining human rights and modernizin­g its staterun economy could prove palatable to the West and Iran’s Sunni Gulf neighbors, who remain suspicious of Iran’s intentions amid its involvemen­t in the wars in Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

But the Mideast is replete with cautionary tales about Western government­s putting their faith in exiles long estranged from their homelands. Whether Pahlavi can galvanize nostalgia for the age of the Peacock Throne remains unseen.

“This regime is simply irreformab­le because the nature of it, its DNA, is such that it cannot,” Pahlavi said. “People have given up with the idea of reform and they think there has to be fundamenta­l change. Now, how this change can occur is the big question.”

Pahlavi left Iran at age 17 for military flight school in the U.S., just before his cancer-stricken father Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi abandoned the throne for exile. The revolution followed, with the creation of the Islamic Republic, the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and the sweeping away of the last vestiges of the Americanba­cked monarchy.

Yet the Pahlavis and the age of the monarchy have retained their mystique in Iran, even as the majority of its 80 million people weren’t alive to experience it. Television period pieces have focused on their rule, including the recent state TV series “The Enigma of the Shah,” the most expensive series ever produced to air in the country. While incorporat­ing romances or mobsters into the tales, all uniformly criticize the royal court.

But Pahlavi, 56, insists young Iranians increasing­ly look toward Iran’s past. He pointed to recent demonstrat­ions at the tomb of the pre-Islamic King Cyrus the Great, which have been claimed by a variety of anti-government forces as a sign of unrest. Under his father’s secular and proWestern rule, Iran experience­d a rapid modernizat­ion program financed by oil revenues.

“If you look at the legacy that was left behind by both my father and my grandfathe­r it contrasts with this archaic, sort of backward, religiousl­y rooted radical system that has been extremely repressive,” he said.

Since the U.S. election, Pahlavi has given a growing number of media interviews, including with Breitbart, the far-right website once run by Trump’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon.

Pahlavi also has sent letters to the Trump administra­tion.

Gauging national sentiment toward restoring the monarchy in Iran is impossible, especially after the crackdown that followed the country’s disputed 2009 election. Iranian state media routinely refer to the Pahlavi monarchy as “despotic,” but there has been some reassessin­g of history in other quarters.

A book published last year, “The Fall of Heaven: The Pahlavis and the Last Days of Imperial Iran,” offered a revisionis­t view of the shah. While acknowledg­ing the abuses of his feared SAVAK intelligen­ce service and the corruption surroundin­g his rule, the book portrays him as a fatalist in an era of disappeari­ng Mideast monarchies.

“The regime has repressed discussion of the Pahlavis for so long that it has had the opposite effect of making young Iranians inside the country curious about what they don’t know,” said historian Andrew Scott Cooper, the book’s author. “There’s an interestin­g generation­al divide going on here to where young Iranians are saying to their parents and grandparen­ts, the same people who marched against the shah and Pahlavis, ‘Why did you get rid of that system and put this one in place?’ ”

He added: “The family name still retains a lot of magic, more than ever today among Iranians. How that translates practicall­y into support for Reza as a credible alternativ­e leader, I just don’t know.”

Asked how his envisioned peaceful revolution could play out in Iran, Pahlavi said it would need to begin with labor unions starting a nationwide strike.

He said members of the Revolution­ary Guard, a paramilita­ry organizati­on establishe­d to protect the clerical system, would be assured they wouldn’t be “all hung and shot.”

Most importantl­y, he said Western government­s need to keep their distance and not threaten military action.

That’s an exceedingl­y optimistic vision, especially considerin­g the amount of power the Guard and other hard-liners wield in Iran’s economy.

It also largely ignores the concerns many in Iran have about Western meddling.

Pahlavi’s father, Mohammad Reza, came to power in 1941 after his own father was forced to abdicate by the British.

His rule was later protected when Britain and the U.S. engineered a 1953 coup that ousted reformist Prime Minister Mohammed Mosaddegh.

Pahlavi, who still resides in the U.S., said he hasn’t had any “side occupation” since 1979, and has received financial support from his family and “many Iranians who have supported the cause.”

“My focus right now is on liberating Iran, and I will find any means that I can, without compromisi­ng the national interests and independen­ce, with anyone who is willing to give us a hand, whether it is the U.S. or the Saudis or the Israelis or whomever it is,” he said.

Pahlavi said he had yet to meet with the Trump administra­tion despite his letters.

Another Iranian exile group, the Mujahedeen-eKhalq, previously paid a member of Trump’s Cabinet $50,000 for giving a speech.

However, the MEK’s siding with Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s and its killing of Americans before the revolution, which the group now denies, makes it an unsuitable partner, Pahlavi said.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has yet to meet with President Donald Trump’s team despite his letters to the team.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has yet to meet with President Donald Trump’s team despite his letters to the team.

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