IAC-WI

Main Menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact

IAC-WI

  • Home
  • News
    • EU designates Iran's Revolutionary Guard a terror group

      February 1, 2026
      0
    • A Nation Past the Point of Return: Iran’s January 2026 Uprising and ...

      January 21, 2026
      0
    • IRGC Commander Admits to the Mass Killing of Civilians

      January 19, 2026
      0
    •  Wisconsin Iranian American sees avenue for hope,despite ongoing deadly Iranian protests

      January 17, 2026
      0
    • Iranian community reacts to reports of mass killings amid Iran protests

      January 16, 2026
      0
    • More than 400 influential women urge Iran to halt execution of female ...

      December 26, 2025
      0
    • Iran: UN Fact-Finding Mission alarmed by surge in repression and extraordinary spike ...

      November 2, 2025
      0
    • When History Spews the Past

      October 13, 2025
      0
    • UN experts appalled by unprecedented execution   spree in Iran with over 1000 ...

      October 2, 2025
      0
  • Blog
    • The women-led resistance the Iranian regime fears most

      February 27, 2026
      0
    • Don’t impose another Persian dictatoron a multinational Iran

      February 17, 2026
      0
    • The Iranian regime’s first victims are its own people

      February 5, 2026
      0
    • Neither Shah Nor Supreme Leader: Can Iran's Theocracy Survive a Nation in ...

      January 24, 2026
      0
    • The Untarnished Truth: Regime’s Forty-Year Battle to Discredit the MEK

      October 12, 2025
      0
    • Reza Pahlavi’s “Transition Plan”:  A Blueprint for Authoritarian Rule in Iran

      August 23, 2025
      0
    • The Regime’s Pen: How Iran’s Clerical Dictatorship Uses Friendly Journalists as Propaganda ...

      March 28, 2025
      0
    • Risking revival of unrest, Iran rulers tighten curbs on dissent

      July 21, 2023
      0
    • Time for Western Democracies to Stand with Iranian People

      June 14, 2023
      0
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact
News
Home›News›Heidarian: Iran policy may positively impact human rights

Heidarian: Iran policy may positively impact human rights

By IAC-WI
February 13, 2017
1888
0
Share:

We welcome the Trump administration’s messaging, as well as the follow-through that the administration has shown in imposing new sanctions

Amir H. Heidarian
Feb. 12, 2017

A handout picture provided by the office of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani shows him

As an Iranian American I am grateful that the Obama administration helped relocate 3,000 of my friends and colleagues, members of the principal Iranian opposition movement, the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), out of Camp Liberty, Iraq. But I am very critical of its utter weakness in dealing with the Islamic Republic

Having formerly occupied the mini modern town called Ashraf in eastern Iraq, MEK members were under constant threat of attack from Shiite militant groups loyal to Iran. Dozens had been killed over the years but now, the survivors are safe in Albania and elsewhere, and are free to carry on their work for the ouster of the repressive theocratic system in place in Tehran.

Although the previous administration is owed credit for its action on this issue, even where Camp Liberty is concerned, the Obama White House carried on its work with little fanfare. It never acted as a public advocate for the MEK, and it never confronted Iran over its role in the repeated targeting of the camp with missiles that could often be traced back to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Since Iranian President Hassan Rouhani was elected in 2013, things have gotten worse in many respects. The so-called moderate executive has overseen a dramatic increase in executions, in a country that already had a reputation for maintaining the highest rate of executions per capita. At the same time, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps has undertaken a major crackdown on activists, journalists, minority groups and dual nationals. The Rouhani administration did nothing to challenge this crackdown, and neither did the Obama administration.

This fact was repeatedly underscored by international human rights organizations, which publicly criticized the Obama administration and its allies for sidelining human rights issues in the interest of keeping a narrow focus on the nuclear deal, which effectively left 80 million Iranians at the mercy of the IRGC.

This past week, President Donald Trump’s National Security Adviser Michael Flynn formally put Iran “on notice” over its recent ballistic missile test and its ongoing provocative moves in the region. Then Trump himself took the regime to task for “playing with fire” and failing to appreciate the conciliatory treatment it had received from his predecessor. That soft approach is now at an end, according to the president and his foreign policy team, who insist that all options are on the table as potential responses to any more malign behavior by Tehran or the IRGC.

We welcome this messaging, as well as the follow-through that the administration has shown in imposing new sanctions on 13 individuals and 12 companies connected to the Iranian ballistic missile program. We are hopeful that further such sanctions will be used to isolate the IRGC and shrink its influence both at home and abroad. Presently, the hardline paramilitary controls the majority of Iran’s GDP, is acquiring larger shares of the national budget and is benefiting from President Barack Obama’s misguided nuclear agreement.

Counteracting the enrichment of the IRGC is the first step toward addressing Iran’s abysmal human rights record. And whether or not this is specifically part of Trump’s aim, he is on the right path with his imposition of non-nuclear sanctions and his declared willingness to take more of the same measures.

Amir H. Heidarian, a resident of Mequon, is president of the Iranian American Community of Wisconsin, a member of the Organization of Iranian American Communities (OIAC-US).

 http://www.jsonline.com/story/opinion/contributors/2017/02/12/heidarian-iran-policy-may-positively-impact-human-rights/97826770/

Previous Article

US seeking info on Iranian-American reportedly executed ...

Next Article

NOWRUZ 1396 (2017)

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • 1988 MassacreNews

    Man accused over Iran prison executions goes on trial in Sweden

    August 13, 2021
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Former Archbishop Rowan Williams: Religious minorities must be at heart of any Iran deal

    July 13, 2017
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    They’re still the largest state sponsor of terrorism in the world

    February 9, 2017
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    On International Women’s Day

    March 8, 2022
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    UN rights council votes to maintain Iran scrutiny

    April 5, 2024
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Future of nuclear talks with Iran remains uncertain

    September 23, 2021
    By IAC-WI

You may interested

  • News

    RSF asks UN to investigate Iranian journalist Baktash Abtin’s death

  • Uncategorized

  • News

    Iran Test Fires Advanced Torpedo

Latest Tweets

Tweets by @OrgIAC
  • LATEST REVIEWS

  • TOP REVIEWS

Timeline

  • February 27, 2026

    The women-led resistance the Iranian regime fears most

  • February 17, 2026

    Don’t impose another Persian dictatoron a multinational Iran

  • February 5, 2026

    The Iranian regime’s first victims are its own people

  • February 1, 2026

    EU designates Iran’s Revolutionary Guard a terror group

  • January 24, 2026

    Neither Shah Nor Supreme Leader: Can Iran’s Theocracy Survive a Nation in Revolt?

Latest Comments

Find us on Facebook

About us

logo

Iranian American Community of Wisconsin (IAC-WI) is an all-volunteer, non-profit, serving the Iranian Americans in Wisconsin. We are inspired by Iranian people's desire for a democratic, secular, non-nuclear republic Iran that embraces a peaceful and prosperous Middle East.

Speaker Paul Ryan “Nowruz”

REP. GROTHMAN (R-WI)

Follow us

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Home