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HomeIran News NowIran Opposition & ResistanceSenators Ted Cruz and John Boozman Support Iranian People's Struggle for Democracy

Senators Ted Cruz and John Boozman Support Iranian People’s Struggle for Democracy

Capitol Hill, meeting focusing on Iran's rights violations and malign activities in the region-6 Nov. 2019

United States senators Ted Cruz and John Boozman this week showed their solidarity and support for the Iranian people’s struggle to achieve freedom and democracy in Iran.

Both senators addressed a congressional briefing at the U.S. Senate on November 6, 2019, to discuss the rise of domestic suppression and regional aggression by the Iranian regime as anti-regime protests spread in Iran and intensify in Iraq and Lebanon. Other speakers included Ambassador Robert Joseph, Ambassador Lincoln Bloomfield, Jr., Ambassador Marc Ginsberg, Professor Ivan Sascha Sheehan, and Soona Samsami, U.S. Representative of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI). 

Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said: “The government of Iran has been under a shroud of darkness for decades now. Ayatollah Khamenei and the mullahs enforce brutal repression on the people. And I will say to the Iranian people, to the men and women of Iran: America is with you. America is with you and your struggle against cruel, oppressive, torturing, murderous tyrants. Freedom matters. I believe we can one day again have a free Iran, not with the Ayatollah in power.” 

“Two things are happening. One, the regime is afraid of its people and this is the word of encouragement that I want to give the men and women here: Dictatorships can seem very, very strong until suddenly they’re not. The Ayatollah and the mullahs are terrified of the people. They’re terrified of the truth. And as they lose the billions that have been funding their repressive regime, they are more and more vulnerable to the people demanding freedom. But secondly, in the process, we’ve seen them lashing out. We’ve seen them carry out acts of war attacking their neighbors, Saudi Arabia, attacking the oil facilities there and doing major damage to their production capability. Unequivocal act of war carried out by Iran, lashing out as the regime is becoming desperate to hold on to power… the Ayatollah and the mullahs are much, much weaker than many believe at the time.” 

“The Obama Iranian nuclear deal was the most profoundly fool-hearted foreign policy deal of the modern age, giving billions of dollars to an ayatollah who is laughing and proclaiming his intent to wage war with that money. The government of Iran is the world’s number one and leading state sponsor of terrorism. Those dollars under the Obama Iran nuclear deal went straight to murdering Americans, to murdering American servicemen and women, to murdering innocent civilians, and to murdering our friends and allies,” Senator Cruz said in reference to the 2015 international nuclear deal between the Iranian regime and world powers.

Senator John Boozman (R-AR), Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies, recognized the great work of the Iranian community in the state of Arkansas and their effort to raise public awareness on the situation in Iran adding how it is important to make the connection across the United States by sharing the personal stories of Iranian diaspora.  

“I welcome you being here to talk about the importance of how to move forward and continue the pressure on the regime in Iran,” he said. 

Ms. Soona Samsami, the U.S. representative of the NCRI, emphasized how “the mullahs have stepped up repression and executions in Iran, and export of terrorism and warmongering in the region. Unfortunately, decades of silence and inaction vis-à-vis the regime’s aggressions had emboldened the mullahs.” She added the “moment has now arrived for the elected representatives of the American people to declare their unequivocal support for the Iranian people’s demand to overthrow the clerical regime and to hold its officials accountable for their crimes and terrorism.” 

Ambassador Robert Joseph, a former U.S. Special Envoy for Nuclear Nonproliferation and Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, also acknowledged how the people of Iraq and Lebanon “are fed up with the endemic corruption, the repression, and the malfeasance of the Iran-backed political order.”  

He added, the “MEK’s presence at the center of the NCRI – the opposition’s parliament-in-exile, makes the NCRI a viable and formidable alternative to the mullah’s tyranny. The very existence of this alternative, and its platform of a free, democratic, secular, and non-nuclear Iran, represents an existential threat to the clerical dictatorship that controls the people of Iran through fear and brutality.” The People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), otherwise known as the (Mujahedin-e-Khalq MEK), is Iran’s largest and most organized opposition group. 

Ambassador Marc Ginsberg, a former U.S. Ambassador to Morocco, noted that the Iranian people, just like the people of Iraq and Lebanon “want to see this regime gone.”  

He added the mullahs’ regime “has fed its terrorist activities on the backs of the Iranian people and we hope that when next year rolls around this regime will no longer be in a position to engage in the activities that it is engaging.” 

Ambassador Lincoln Bloomfield, a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State, stressed how the Iranian regime has been considered as the most active state sponsor of terrorism by the U.S. State Department since 1984. Detailing the regime’s tactics at home and abroad, he added, in Iran “we have seen the nationwide protests calling for political change since December 2017. And now we see people taking to the streets in Lebanon and Iraq – in both cases, demanding that they have a constitutional government free from Iranian influence.” 

Professor Ivan Sascha Sheehan, director of the graduate programs in Negotiation and Conflict Management and Global Affairs and Human Security in the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Baltimore, noted the “Iranian people will be the architects of the next Iranian Revolution.”  

He added his assessment of the MEK in their new home at Ashraf 3 in Albania as a “cohesive, organized political opposition movement, with a long history of struggle against fundamentalism and dictatorship, guided by gifted female leadership, with a well-defined political platform, and an intricate network of passionate supporters inside Iran and across the world eager to topple the regime from within.” 

The policy briefing was organized by the Iranian American communities of Texas in Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, and El Paso, and Iranian-American Cultural Association of Missouri, both members of the Organization of Iranian-American Communities (OIAC), the largest, most active and enduring grass-root organization of Iranian-Americans in the United States.