Iran’s People Are Ready For Real Change
Author: Behrooz Bahbudi and Walid Phares
Source: The Washington Post
Date: January 2, 2007
There has been much debate as to whether the United States should allow Iran to 
develop a nuclear bomb, or whether we should empower its citizens to overthrow 
the apparently mad Mahmoud Ahmedinijad and his mullah backers. FSM Contributing 
Editor Dr. Walid Phares and Behrooz Bahbudi believe the time has come for 
Iranian citizens to do it themselves. Read this fascinating piece about the many 
exciting changes occurring in Iran, and what that bodes for the world.
The Washington Post
December 31, 2006
Behrooz Bahbudi and Walid Phares
In this fifth letter to the American People, we wish to share with the readers 
across the world what we believe is the readiness of the Iranian People for a 
real change affecting the future of their country, the region and the 
international community. It is a fact that genuine improvement in the conditions 
of Iranians have not yet taken place since the imposition of a Jihadi-rooted 
regime in 1979, at the hands of Ayatollah Ruhallah Khomeini’s elite. To the 
contrary, the country is marching backward on all levels of public and 
individual lives. Between 1979 and 2007, freedom, democracy, social order, 
economy, environment and hopes have been collapsing irreversibly in Iran.
The middle class has collapsed; workers have lost their benefits, women stripped 
of minimal rights, education gone into decline, medical standards lowered, 
students suppressed, artists jailed, intellectuals arrested, and minorities 
crushed. Iran’s dividends from its national and natural resources were wasted by 
the ruling elite for decades on their own pleasures, on their expansionist 
Jihadi agenda and on increasing the oppressive machine inside the country. Only 
a handful of regime supporters profited immensely from the oil and other 
revenue. Instead of a thriving and progressive democracy by 2007, competing with 
Japan and Germany, Iran is ranking among the failed states of the world, whose 
people are depressed and unhappy, as are the peoples of Cuba and North Korea and 
as was Afghanistan’s civil society under the Taliban. 
Despite the many promises of enhancement made by the rulers for decades, only 
embitterment ensued after every so-called change from above. Iranians thought 
the death of Khomeini would begin the slow march towards recovery from bloodshed 
and wars during the 1980s. Instead a similarly backward leadership rose to 
extend the Khomeinist regime, headed by Ayatollah Khamenei. Full of relentless 
hopes, Iranians then thought the Presidency in Iran may play the role of a 
Gorbachev in the USSR. But President Rafsanjani was no better than the radical 
Mullahs as he acted on their behalf to perpetuate the middle ages regime. People 
hoped that a so-called “reformist” President, Mohammed Khatemi, would save them. 
Iran’s majority voted him in. But nothing changed in Tehran’s 
state-dictatorship. Then the public was told that a so-called “modest man” 
Mahmoud Ahmedinijad would shake off the elite. Instead, the mad-man of the 
militias ascended to ultimate power, further crushing liberties, threatening 
world peace with his nuclear bomb, and the region’s stability with his terror 
associates of HizbAllah. 
In a sum, change from above has not yet come to Iran and the country has fallen 
into dangerous hands. But the signs coming out of its cities and countryside are 
clear: people are ready for change, a real change. Students have courageously 
stood up against Ahmedinijad and told him: “enough”. Their photos cannot be 
ignored anymore. Workers have been screaming to the rulers of Tehran: “enough 
wars and bombs, we want jobs.” Iranians, including seculars and moderate clerics 
are ready to confront the Jihadi Mullahs on Iran’s sad realities. 
Iranians are ready to pressure their regime to suspend all support to Terrorism: 
eliminating financial and military sustenance to HizbAllah in Lebanon and to 
Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Syria and Palestine.
Instead, Tehran should direct this oil revenue generated foreign aid to help the 
poor in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Egypt , and more urgently in Darfur. Iranians are 
ready to empower their women with job opportunities and Chador free policies. 
Females in the country are ready to leap into positions of responsibility.
Iranians are ready to empower students and youth and spend oil revenues on their 
schools, training, overseas exchange programs, Internet connections, and above 
all their professional future. Iranians are ready to empower workers with higher 
wages, better work environment, efficient social security, health coverage and 
increasing rights. 
Iranians are ready to empower talents in arts, cinema, television, theater, and 
all creative sectors of society, instead of the bleak and dark ideology of 
Jihadism.
Iranians are ready to welcome their brothers and sisters from exile and 
investments from the Diaspora instead of dispatching killers for sinister 
misdeeds against opposition around the world.
Iranians are ready for a radically new attitude on behalf of the United Nations 
to help the country free itself from the yoke of fascism, not for a UN cover up 
for the regime.
Iranians are ready for a new US Policy that would stand by the People and not 
sell out its future to the Khomeinist dictatorship. America must be ready for 
Iran’s people’s readiness to change towards better, not towards worse.
We therefore call on Americans and democracies around the world to extend their 
support to the Iranian People in their quest for change, real change, so that 
they can join the world community of free societies and enjoy living in freedom 
and progress. 
*******
FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Dr. Walid Phares is a Senior 
Fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and Behrooz Behbudi is 
the President of Global Unity Partnership. 
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Note -- The opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and do not 
necessarily reflect the opinions, views, and/or philosophy of The Family 
Security Foundation, Inc.