Iran is now in its fifteenth day of nationwide revolt. From Tehran to Tabriz, from Mashhad to the oil towns of Khuzestan and the Kurdish cities of the west, a furious, fearless population has taken to the streets. Hundreds have already been killed. Thousands more have been dragged into prisons and torture chambers. Internet access has been throttled. The regime is shooting into crowds. Yet still the protests grow.
This is not a factional quarrel or a palace coup. It is a revolutionary moment. And yet, as Iranians bleed, Western media and think-tank circles have become transfixed by a grotesque sideshow, the idea that Reza Pahlavi, son of the deposed Shah, might somehow ride back into Tehran as Iran’s savior. This fantasy would be comic if it were not so dangerous.
Pahlavi has done nothing for 47 years except wait. He has no political organization in Iran. No underground network. No resistance units. No trade unions. No youth movement. No women’s movement. No workers’ committees. No student organizations. No strike committees. No revolutionary infrastructure of any kind.
He is not leading anything. He is commentating from California. Yet he is treated by Western journalists as if he were a government-in-waiting, despite the absurdity of his own statements. He has openly said that if he were “restored” to power, he would not even move his family back to Iran. He has boasted that he would retain the IRGC, the very killing machine now gunning down protesters, to maintain “order” after the fall of the regime. That is the political equivalent of Churchill promising to keep the Gestapo to run Germany after Hitler. It exposes what Pahlavi really represents, not a rupture with tyranny, but a rearrangement of it.
TIME Magazine’s recent profile of Pahlavi by Bobby Ghosh, a former TIME foreign correspondent and International Editor, unwittingly reveals how hollow he is. He issues statements. He gives interviews. He announces initiatives. He claims vast secret networks of regime defectors. None of it is verifiable. All of it echoes the tragic case of Ahmed Chalabi, the Iraqi exile who was sold to Washington as the man who would lead Iraq after Saddam. Chalabi had far more than Pahlavi ever will. He had CIA funding, armed units on the ground, powerful allies in Washington, and a US invasion force ready to install him. And yet when Iraqis were finally allowed to vote, they gave him nothing. He became a political corpse because people inside Iraq knew he was not one of them.
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Pahlavi is Chalabi without the troops, the money or the organization. Worse still, he is burdened by a dynasty that Iranians remember all too well, the SAVAK torture chambers, the censorship, the corruption, the grotesque inequality, the CIA-engineered coup that destroyed Iran’s democracy in 1953. Millions of Iranians over the age of 50 lived through it. Their children grew up hearing about it. When today’s protesters chant “Down with the dictator,” they are not demanding the return of another one wearing a crown. The Islamic Republic could not have designed a better propaganda gift than Reza Pahlavi. Every time Western media presents him as the face of the opposition, Tehran gleefully tells its people: “See? This is a royalist plot. A foreign conspiracy. A Zionist project”.
Pahlavi’s photo-ops with Benjamin Netanyahu in 2023 did incalculable damage to the uprising. His calls for foreign intervention hand the regime exactly the narrative it needs to justify repression. Even Iran’s bravest dissidents know this. Instead of uniting Iranians, his supporters attack, smear and threaten anyone who refuses to bow to a dead monarchy. This is not leadership. It is sabotage. If Western journalists want to understand what genuine opposition looks like, they should stop interviewing Pahlavi and start looking at the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and its leader Maryam Rajavi. Unlike Pahlavi, the NCRI has an organized presence inside Iran. It has Resistance Units operating in dozens of cities. It has networks inside universities, factories and neighborhoods. It has paid in blood, more than 120,000 of its members have been executed by the regime over four decades.
Most importantly, it has a coherent democratic program. Rajavi’s Ten-Point Plan calls for free elections, separation of religion and state, abolition of the death penalty, gender equality, minority rights, a non-nuclear Iran, and peaceful coexistence with the world. It is not a throne waiting to be filled. It is a blueprint for a republic. That is why Tehran fears the NCRI and the MEK far more than it fears Pahlavi. That is why its prisons are full of their supporters. That is why its intelligence services run endless disinformation campaigns against them. Dictators do not waste time attacking irrelevancies.
The regime is weaker than it has ever been. Inflation is above 50 percent. The currency is collapsing. Water shortages, power cuts and unpaid wages have radicalized millions. Its regional proxies are battered. Khamenei is old and ill. But it still commands guns, prisons and hangmen.
This uprising will succeed only if the people inside Iran are able to organize, coordinate and fracture the regime’s security forces. That requires structure, discipline and political clarity, not a YouTube monarch issuing proclamations from exile. Iran does not need a Shah without a kingdom. It needs a republic with a future.
The West must stop indulging fantasies about restoring a discredited dynasty and start supporting the only force that has both a democratic vision and an organized presence inside Iran. History will not be kind to those who mistook a crown for a cause. And the people of Iran, who are dying in the streets for freedom, deserve infinitely better than a naked emperor waiting for a throne that no longer exists.
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