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Reza Pahlavi says a free Iran will be a force for peace
Summary
Reza Pahlavi outlined a vision in which a future democratic Iran would end its nuclear military program and cease support for militant groups, while seeking normalized relations with the United States and recognition of Israel.
Content
Reza Pahlavi presented a public vision for a post-Islamic Republic Iran that lays out policy goals across security, diplomacy, energy, governance, and the economy. He described the image of Iran under the current regime and contrasted it with what he called a peaceful, flourishing Iran. The piece lists concrete commitments he says a democratic government would undertake after the fall of the Islamic Republic. It highlights regional engagement, economic opening, and institutional transparency.
Key points:
- The article says a future government would end Iran's nuclear military program and cease support for terrorist or militant groups.
- It calls for normalized relations with the United States and immediate recognition of the State of Israel, proposing an expansion of the Abraham Accords into "Cyrus accords."
- It proposes working with regional and global partners to confront terrorism, organized crime, drug trafficking, and extremist Islamism.
- It frames Iran as a potential reliable energy supplier, citing large oil and gas reserves and commitments to transparent policy-making and predictable prices.
- It calls for adopting international standards on transparency, confronting money laundering, dismantling organized corruption, and opening the economy to trade, investment, and innovation.
Summary:
Pahlavi described these changes as intended to make Iran a stabilizing partner in the region, a responsible actor in global security, and an open market participant. He framed the fall of the Islamic Republic as the turning point for these policies. Undetermined at this time.
