NCRI

Iran Regime’s Political Expert: Let’s Not Allow the Threats Become a Tsunami

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NCRI Staff

NCRI – An Iranian regime’s political expert on the recent anti-government protests in Iran wrote: “If instead of managing crisis solutions we manage the crisis evading, today’s threats will turn into a tomorrow’s tsunami and all of us will be uprooted.”

According to the expert, “the two mainstream so called reformists and hardliners in the country, whether in their full authority or in an alliance called the moderation, not only did not have a desirable record, but are going to be totally failed.”

Sadegh Maleki, while saying that the protests were a wakeup call and a warning, wrote: “The protests subsided and the filtering of Telegram removed. But trying to minimize the protests by attributing them to foreign and/or factional intrusion and provocation is, if not projection, is burying your head in the sand not to see or understand what happens.

“We have days and years of difficulty ahead of us and we must not escape the problems, but we must find solutions to the problems. There is no room for comfort and satisfaction,” he wrote and continued…

“The story is not over, and the protests are signs of a serious illness that, if the analysis of its causes is oversimplified, it will not be an illness that is hard to cure, but rather an incurable illness.”

“We must learn to change. If we do not learn, they will change us. It was possible not to arrive at the JCPOA (nuclear deal) and to have chalice of poison by taking wise measures, but we arrived and huge investments went down the drain. These two were the product of extrinsic pressures.”

“But we should be worried that, if the pressure comes from inside what will happen to us then? Do not let the house be devastated by our own hands and make our enemies happy.”

“There are many dirty hands, but those who have been in control of the country for many years and have taken the fate of the people in their hands are undoubtedly the most culprit and guilty in today’s situation of the country.”

“We must learn to apologize and admit that we are also guilty. It is not too late, but a delay in understanding, finding the cause, and treating can be a factor in the lateness.”

“The cry of pain is a sign of illness. The eyes are blocked and ignored the illness, but this is the worst way to deal with the illness, because it leads to its grow and also makes the treatment costly and more expensive.”

“If attributing the protests to outside the Iranian border is not naivety, it is for the purpose of writing a prescription that aims not to cure but to ignore the disease. “

“The protests in Iran, although limited, were broad-based. If these protests are evaluated only with the illusory view of being a conspiracy, neither its dimensions are perceived nor can it be used for structural surgery of the system (regime).”

“The epicenter of the crisis is economic failure and the grave state of the country that results from inefficient management for many years.”

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