Monday at 12:21 AM2 days While the news has been covering Venezuela Iran is in the middle of a revolution regime change.Reports indicate Khamenei plans exit to Moscow.
Monday at 12:41 AM2 days Wake me up when they actually pull it off. This has happened how many times now? If Khomeini hasn't had plans ready for decades I'd be very surprised.
Monday at 05:20 PM2 days I saw a really nice throw of a Molotov Cocktail. Maybe bring him over on a football or baseball scholarship.
Yesterday at 03:01 PM1 day I think I'll wait to see who follows before getting interested. Egypt, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan... It's not an easy region to reform.The Iranian threat is what made the Abraham accords possible. I wonder if the Middle East can unify without a central bad guy to align against.
Yesterday at 07:39 PM1 day Author 4 hours ago, Lord Ratner said:I think I'll wait to see who follows before getting interested. Egypt, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan... It's not an easy region to reform.The Iranian threat is what made the Abraham accords possible. I wonder if the Middle East can unify without a central bad guy to align against.Appears to be all internal and organic at this point (I am not naive to think CIA and Mossad haven't been helping), but Israeli leadership just approved an attack on the IRGC...would prefer they stay out of it.
18 hours ago18 hr 11 hours ago, Lord Ratner said:I think I'll wait to see who follows before getting interested. Egypt, Libya, Syria, Afghanistan... It's not an easy region to reform.The Iranian threat is what made the Abraham accords possible. I wonder if the Middle East can unify without a central bad guy to align against.Iran is not Afghanistan, when Khomeini came to power, he had overwhelming support of Iranian college educated young women who believed him. Sound familiar? Back in the 70s I had a discussion with my cousin who was a young female at the time who supported Khomeini who just dismissed me. Sound familiar again. Before this under the Shah it was progressive secular society. The Shah's secret police were heavy handed with the Islamists who wanted a theocracy and our own CIA didn't make many friends due to us wanting to keep our listening stations along the shared border with USSR. Maybe this time we can get it right.
17 hours ago17 hr I’d love to see Iran get back to being a more free society where human rights are recognized and respected.I was a kid in early 1971 when my family (father worked for a relief NGO) was evacuated from East Pakistan (Bangladesh); we stayed in Tehran with a USAF SMsgt’s family who hosted us for 2 weeks waiting for my older brothers to get out of West Pakistan (they were in boarding school). My parents have pictures from our time there and it was modern, clean and open. I remember the stark contrast of 3rd world where we lived in Dhaka to a modern and clean Tehran.It’s sad that the people have been so controlled for so long. I wish them the best, but it’s going to be a rough ride for them regardless if they topple the mullahs or not. 45 years plus of essentially no say in their leadership or what form of governance they have. Edited 17 hours ago17 hr by bfargin
16 hours ago16 hr 1 hour ago, Prosuper said:Iran is not Afghanistan, when Khomeini came to power, he had overwhelming support of Iranian college educated young women who believed him. Sound familiar? Back in the 70s I had a discussion with my cousin who was a young female at the time who supported Khomeini who just dismissed me. Sound familiar again. Before this under the Shah it was progressive secular society. The Shah's secret police were heavy handed with the Islamists who wanted a theocracy and our own CIA didn't make many friends due to us wanting to keep our listening stations along the shared border with USSR. Maybe this time we can get it right.Yes, well, just like in the '70s and '80s, the problem is going to be Islamic fundamentalists. I don't think Egypt is that bad of a comparison. Mubarak was definitely better than Khomeini, but regardless it was the Muslim brotherhood that the population supported before Al Sisi came in and shut it down.A much more extreme version of this problem exists in Palestine. The Palestinians in Gaza are no fan of Hamas, but that doesn't mean we are going to like who they end up supporting. Fingers crossed.
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