Akbar Ganji to Prince Reza Pahlavi: An Israeli who considers himself Iranian

In response to Prince Pahlavi's remarks regarding the situation in Iran, Akbar Ganji called him an Israeli who considers himself Iranian.
Prince Reza Pahlavi had an interview with the Independent Persian network on Sunday, November 5, about the situation in Iran over the past year and its assessment. In the interview, he said: "The issue that becomes the secret to the success of any movement at the end is that we move from the stage of hope to the stage of belief. We all know that we are dealing with a regime that is very brutal and very repressive and that works to create fear and terror. We are witnessing how they treat political prisoners and society in general. The only way to save Iran from this situation is to get rid of this government."
In response to a question about concerns about the Islamic Republic's biased and incorrect policies regarding the war between Hamas and Israel and Iran's involvement in these wars, he added: "The people of Iran have been the first occupied country in the past 40 years under an anti-Iranian and anti-national government, and the most common slogans they have raised in recent times are "No Gaza, no Lebanon, I will sacrifice my life for Iran," meaning that the Islamic Republic is fighting with warmongers, even with the money of the Iranian people, not for Iran, but for its own survival and the export of a religious ideology to the world, and it has nothing to do with Iran and its people. It is completely clear to the people that this regime has so far acted for its own interests, not Iran and the Iranian people."
The whole world should know that instead of putting maximum pressure on the regime, they should implement sanctions policies so that the regime's hands are tied and it cannot spend its so-called oil revenues on repression in Iran and regional adventures in the Middle East, and on the contrary, they should increase maximum support for the Iranian people.
Now, some countries have just realized that the best way to eliminate the entire mess that the Islamic Republic has created since its founding, including the nuclear issue, support for terrorists, influence in the Middle East, and so on, is a change in the regime, which means the departure of the Islamic Republic government.”
Reacting to Prince Pahlavi's conversation with the Persian Independent, Akbar Ganji wrote on his X network, while calling Prince Pahlavi's identity Israeli: "The Israeli who considers himself Iranian is the same comrade Netanyahu who intends to establish an absolute monarchy in Iran through Israel. To achieve his goal, he not only follows exactly the goals of the Israelis against Iran, but the words he uses to achieve this goal are exactly the expressions of the Israeli prime ministers. He, who had previously called for the Syrianization of Iran by the West, is now asking Israel and the Western governments to bomb and destroy Iran instead of bombing and destroying Gaza, because the octopus is there and you should cut off its head."
Akbar Ganji himself is now an Iranian political activist who was a street activist during the 1979 revolution. In 2011, Saffar Harandi claimed that Akbar Ganji was looking for girls who had a few strands of hair sticking out, and he would throw acid on them and stick pins on the foreheads of young girls who were wearing different clothes, which is why he became known as Akbar the Pin. He joined the Revolutionary Guards when they were formed and was a commander of the Revolutionary Guards for a while. After leaving the Guards, he worked in the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance. He then met a group of activists and journalists led by Mohammad Khatami who formed the Kian Circle and published the monthly Kayhan Farhangi.
He made revelations about serial murders during his actions and was imprisoned after participating in the Berlin Conference. After his release from prison, he went to Europe and then to America, and from then on he began his activity in Western media and newspapers.




