IMANI: Europe Ignores Iran’s Bloodbath — and Courts Its Own

In the wake of a recent physical assault in Berlin – a desperate attempt to silence a message that has grown increasingly urgent – Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has embarked on a diplomatic tour of Europe that is less a plea for help and more a stark prophecy. His message to the parliaments of Stockholm and Berlin carries the weight of a man who has seen a civilization hijacked, and who now sees the same shadows lengthening over the West.

To understand the Crown Prince’s current conviction, one must look back to a pivotal moment in 1942. As the Holocaust ravaged Europe, some 1,800 Jewish refugees fled the Soviet Union and found sanctuary in Tehran. Under the reign of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, these refugees – including 1,000 orphaned children who became known as the Tehran Children – were given shelter and safe passage to Mandatory Palestine.

This was not a mere political calculation; it was an expression of a civilizational tradition of tolerance reaching back to the Edict of Cyrus the Great. When Pahlavi speaks of Iran’s historic tolerance toward minorities in response to those who label him an asset, he is not inventing a narrative. He is invoking a heritage that stands in total opposition to the current state of affairs. Seen in this light, the current regime’s antisemitism and repression are not Iran’s destiny; they are a “dark historical parenthesis” – and one that is nearing its end.

Despite this deep historical well of humanity, Pahlavi’s recent press conferences in Stockholm and Berlin revealed a jarring disconnect in the Western conscience. Addressing the European public directly, the Crown Prince recounted a chilling experience: standing before 150 international journalists, he spoke of the 40,000 Iranians slaughtered on the streets of his country on January 8th and 9th. He spoke of 19 political prisoners executed in a fortnight and 20 more currently awaiting the gallows.

“In those two hours,” Pahlavi remarked with visible frustration, “not a single of the 150 journalists asked me a question about the 40,000 Iranians slaughtered. Not a single one asked about the political prisoners.” Instead, he noted, the press seemed preoccupied with critiques of American foreign policy or historical grievances, effectively abdicating their moral and professional responsibility to report on the ongoing carnage. This media blackout, he argues, is a secondary form of censorship that validates the regime’s internet blackouts back home.

“It is clear to me that my 40,000 brave, innocent compatriots who were slaughtered in the fight for liberty are of little interest to these journalists. They seem more interested in asking why the United States and Israel killed a dictator… than criticizing the regime doing the slaughtering.”

One of the most persistent tropes in European diplomatic circles is the questioning of whether Iranians are ready for democracy. Pahlavi confronted this head-on, recounting a conversation with a member of parliament who expressed such doubts. His rebuttal was simple and devastating: Iranians are not just ready for democracy; they are dying for it in numbers that dwarf historical precedents. The 40,000 souls lost in January are the ultimate proof of a nation’s readiness to govern itself.

By framing the struggle as a fight for a democratic future rather than a return to the past, Pahlavi is challenging the West to see Iran not through the lens of 1979, but through the aspirations of 2026. He insists that the geopolitical stability of the region depends on a free Iran – one that ends proxy wars and nuclear blackmail.

The most confrontational aspect of Pahlavi’s tour is his warning to the European people. He suggests that the apathy and failed diplomacy of today are the blueprints for a European tragedy tomorrow.

Author

  • Amil Imani
    Amil Imani is an Iranian-American writer, satirist, novelist, public speaker, political analyst, foreign policy, National & Homeland Security, Intelligence & Counterterrorism expert who has been writing and speaking out about the danger of radical Islam both in America and internationally. He has become a formidable voice in the United States against the danger of global jihad and Islamization of America. Amil maintains a website at www.amilimani.us. Imani is the author of Obama Meets Ahmadinejad and Operation Persian Gulf and is currently working on his third and fourth books. He is a 2010 honoree of EMET, recipient of the "Speaker of the Truth Award" on Capitol Hill.
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