Tuesday, January 31, 2017

west must change its policy towards Iran regime

west must change its policy towards Iran regime

Mr Alejo Vidal-Quadras, President of International Committee in Search of Justice (ISJ) and former vice president of European Parliament has published an article by name: RIGHT TIME FOR WEST TO CORRECT POLICY ON IRAN .
He believes that west must change its policy towards Iran regime . I found am very agree with his idea.  He has pointed to speeches of former US Assistant Secretary of State Lincoln Bloomfield and a number of French Members of Parliament in addressing a conference at the French National Assembly’s Victor Hugo Hall which it's  purpose of the event was to discuss the direction in the near future for French and broader European policies toward the Middle East, and particularly toward the Islamic Republic of Iran.
He said that:   Tuesday’s conference was part of a larger effort to see that that changes.

He pointed to  the main focus of the speech delivered at the conference by Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, which has opposed the theocracy since its inception but has been marginalized by mainstream Western politics. Mrs Rajavi’s speech described Iranian contributions to rampant human rights abuses in Syria, as well as pointing out that the Iranian regime remains the greatest obstacle to a political resolution for that conflict.  
Conference "Middle East Developments, French and European Approaches

It is long past time for Western governments to change their Middle East policy. It is long past time for them to cease pursuing the illusion of Iran’s internal moderation, and to start investing their political capital in the existing alternative to the clerical regime.  Earlier this month, former Iranian President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani died after spending nearly four decades playing his role as the focal point of conciliatory Western policies. In his absence, Western governments now have a clear choice. On one hand, to continue to invest in a regime that is likely to go even more hardline now that the leading “pragmatist” is gone. Or, on the other hand, they can break with a decades-long tradition of ignoring human rights abuses and marginalizing Iran’s democratic opposition to finally begin to pursue a better future both for true Western interests and for the Iranian people.

Please Read this article here 

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