Sunday, 14 June 2015

Confrerence in Paris with speech of Maryam Rajavi the Middle East on fire by relegious extrimism



Maryam Rajavi:Iranian resistance must be protected in Camp Liberty and it must be supported, there 
must be a united front againt fodomentalism in meddle east .
The people of Iran want change in Iran
Maryam Rajavi: we must and we can do the regime change in Iran.

Mohammad Alarabi (ex FM of Egypt): " thanks, this Arabic coalition that is form here in Paris,we need more larger coalition to confront fondameltalist threat

Rabihe Diyab (ex Minister of women in palestine): "women are the ones that are suffering in palestine "
"what is going on in syria is not the solution for the ciris"
"women are the ones that are suffering in palestine"
 "palestinian refugees are in a very bad sitution and this is a big problem , our land is divided and this is not acceptable but we are resisting"

Mr. Ghozali (ex PM of Algeria): "Your activities are speading everywhere and also more arab personalities are joined ,we must react on the problem of fondomentalism and also the situation of Palestine.not only in the middle east but also the extrimism is problem for the islamic fondomentalism are misusing the relegion

Mr. Basam Alamoush (ex minister of Jordan) : ambassador of Syria said if you are against Iran you are against us ,Iranian regime himself is fondomentalist. Sadegh Hosseini said Iran will countinue implication in Yemen,Iranian regime is trying to make trouble in Jordan as they do in many countries.Iranian regime is part of the problem and not the solution. Regmie trying do save Bashar Assad ,we must help Iranian people to get rid of them,we must have plan to stop regime of Iran which is repressing PPL,US using appeasing policy toward Iran.

Valid Fares:What we are see is the crisis that the source of the problem is ,now we are in a new era where communiction and internet to show the voice of the PPL in the region.....

Saturday, 13 June 2015

Grand Gathering - Mr.Stevenson :....

 Part of speech of Mr.Stevenson

Struan Stevenson, Pres. of Europe Iraq freedom Association: ‎Let me ask UN, why you’ve called this camp a temporary ‎camp while it is not? Why you refuse to announce it as a ‎refugee camp? Why didn’t you pursuit the investigations about ‎the massacres of Ashraf and Liberty residents? Why UN ‎admits continuation of the medical blockade on camp liberty? ‎
I insist US and EU to rather protect them than betraying them. ‎



Speech of Maryam Rajavi In grand gathering of the Iranian resistance - Paris – 13 June 2015

Maryam Rajavi: A democratic, non-nuclear Iran with the overthrow of the religious dictatorship
13 June 2015
In the name of God,
In the name of Iran,
In the name of Freedom,
In the name of 120,000 shining stars, the blazing flames of honor and dignity who defied the religious tyranny, and
In the name of all the unsung heroes and heroines who made the ultimate sacrifice so that others could live free; so that in the darkest hour of her history, Iran shines with stars, stands proud and cries out:  “Down with the velayat-e faqih regime!”
Voice and message of Iran’s genuine owners
Elected representatives of nations around the globe,
Honorable dignitaries,
My fellow compatriots, here and all over Iran,
I sincerely extend my gratitude to you all for joining this gathering.
We have come here to convey to the world the voice and message of Iran’s rightful owners, the Iranian people.
Amid an unrelenting uproar over the Iranian regime’s ominous nuclear program and three inhuman wars in the region, we have come to say that those who are speaking on behalf of Iran are in fact the enemies of Iran and all Iranians.
The people of Iran neither want nuclear weapons, nor meddling in Iraq, Syria or Yemen, nor despotism, torture and shackles.
The people of Iran are the tens of millions of enraged teachers, students, nurses and workers who demand freedom, democracy, jobs and livelihood.
They say:
First, the velayat-e faqih regime has reached the end of the line.
Second, the only way to end the violations of human rights in Iran, the nuclear impasse, the crises in the region, and the confrontation with ISIS and terrorism, is to topple the Caliph of regression and terrorism in Iran.

Iranian society is ready for change


Maryam Rajavi: 
Iranians don’t want the nuclear bomb, meddling in Iraq Syria or Yemen, nor tyranny, torture ...
Iranians want freedom, democracy, jobs and livelihood, not the nuclear bomb
The solution to humanrights violations nuclear & regional crisis & ISIS is the overthrow of the Iranian regime
Any accord that leaves open the path to the nuclear bomb for the mullahs is unacceptable to us
The solution to end Islamic extremism, nukes  humanrights abuses in Iran is regime change
Khamenei has failed to integrate its regime. Giving in to Rouhani's presidency demonstrates this failure
The Iranian regime is entrapped in 3 wars in Iraq Syria & Yemen and has no recourse to any of them
Iranian society is ready for change!
The solution to end Islamic extremism, nukes & humanrights abuses in Iran is regime change ......

Maryam Rajavi: Iran regime “cannot and should not be trusted”


In an interview with Fox News the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran said the current regime in Iran ‘cannot and should not be trusted’ and is calling on the U.S. and world powers to recognize Tehran’s intentions in advance of a deadline on the interim nuclear framework agreement.

"Nuclear negotiations should compel the Mullahs' regime to abandon its nuclear weapons program. This is the desire of the Iranian people who oppose this program. The Mullahs need the bomb for their own survival," warns Maryam Rajavi.

"No concession should be made to this brutal regime."

"Do not make more concessions to this regime. Adopt a firm policy and make it clear to the Mullahs ruling Iran that they have to abandon their nuclear weapons program," she told Fox News in an exclusive interview, in which she issued a stark prediction as the talks continue.

Mrs. Rajavi warns that "making more concessions to the regime lays the ground for more instability, and more conflicts and war. U.S. policy has embolden the Mullahs' regime. I warn them that their illusion of changing the behavior of the Mullahs' regime by making concessions to it has already cost the Iranian people dearly, continuing on that path would have serious consequences for the region and the world."

Mrs. Rajavi told Fox News that the West trying to find a "moderate" in the government is an "illusion," and she branded Tehran "the epicenter of extremism and Islamic fundamentalism" that covets a nuclear ability.

Maryam Rajavi made the remarks to FoxNews a day before the largest gathering of Iranian opposition which will be held in Villepinte, north of Paris.

Fox News report said: “A litany of top former government officials from the United States and other western nations are set to address the gathering in France, including former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.”

Friday, 12 June 2015

The Washington Times - Maryam Rajavi



By Guy Taylor - The Washington Times - Thursday, June 11, 2015
Days before a major Iranian dissident rally in France, the head of the host organization says the “circumstances are ripe for regime change” in Tehran, but Washington and other Western governments are standing in the way by legitimizing the regime of Supreme Leader Sayyid Ali Khamenei through the pursuit of a nuclear deal.

“Through their policy of appeasement and giving concessions to the regime, Western governments have served as an obstacle to the regime’s overthrow,” said Maryam Rajavi, the leader of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. “In the absence of Western assistance, this regime would have fallen by now.”

Mrs. Rajavi made the remarks in an exclusive interview with The Washington Times ahead of an annual gathering that the council — an umbrella organization that members say includes more than 300 Iranian opposition groups peppered across 24 nations — is holding Saturday on the outskirts of Paris.


Making the case for a different path for Iran citizens

Maryam Rajavi is not alone,over100,000 participants and dignitaries from over 60 countries will join Iranian resistance.....

By Ken Blackwell

Over 622,000 Syrian refugees languish in squalid conditions just across the border from the homeland in Jordan.
 They have almost nothing, they lack the most basic of possessions, they have no opportunity to work, and their futures have been robbed of them.  What they do have is time – time to think about what drove their country into madness.

While Syrian refugees are stuck, Iranian troops are on the move, 15,000 more to Syria to join the fighting against IS.  After IS’s well-publicized destruction of artifacts, torture, and mass executions, some might even be rooting for Iran and its proxy, the Assad regime.  But how can we root for a regime that tortured and killed indiscriminately and whose policies directly fueled the rise of IS?

In Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, and beyond, the fingerprints of Iranian extremism have left only destruction and fueled the other side of the coin when it comes to global terror.  This same regime, whose practices on its own soil and through its proxies mirrors IS, is driving ever closer toward the world’s most dangerous weapon, the nuclear bomb.

On June 30, another crucial deadline regarding negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program looms.  Yet the discussion on this topic, which constitutes one of the greatest challenges in modern human history, has too often been silenced.  Supporters of the status quo when it comes to dealing with Iran have sidelined opponents with claims of a “frozen nuclear stockpile” and have been quick to label opponents as warmongers and extremists.

Over the past several weeks, the highest-ranking political and military officials in Iran have been steadily releasing statements saying that Iran will under no circumstances allow inspectors to access Iran’s military sites.

The regime’s leader, Ali Khamenei himself, said much the same thing in May, noting that Tehran would see to it not only that inspections be constrained, but also that no foreigners be allowed to meet with and interview Iran’s nuclear scientists.

To allow Iran to restrict inspections in this way would be the latest in a long list of concessions that includes allowing Tehran to take its ballistic missile program off the negotiating table altogether.  The Washington Examiner noted this week that Iran already has ballistic missiles capable of reaching Europe, and possibly also North America, thanks in part to collaboration between the Iranian regime and North Korea.

What’s more, this collaboration is ongoing, as reported recently by the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), the same organization that revealed the existence of Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment site and Arak heavy water facility in 2002.

On June 13, those who are deeply worried by the status quo will have a chance to make a case for a different path.  The conference, based in Paris and put on in support of the NCRI, builds on the success of a 100,000-person conference last year.

Maryam Rajavi, the president-elect of NCRI, will continue to make the case that she made while testifying before Congress in April.  And she is not alone.

Over 100,000 participants and dignitaries from over 60 countries will join Iranian resistance, led by  Maryam Rajavi, to address the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism and the Iranian nuclear program.

Among those participating: a bipartisan delegation from the U.S. Congress, General Hugh Shelton (former U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff), Howard Dean (former chair of the Democratic National Committee), Alan Dershowitz (renowned jurist and human rights activist), Michelle Alliot Marie (former defense and foreign minister of France), Sid Ahmed Ghozali (former prime minister of Algeria), Gunter Verhugen (former vice president of the European Commission), and many others.

These voices from around the globe gathering in Paris and echoing the recent statement by over 220 European MPs, which called for unrestricted inspections of Iran’s nuclear program, must be heard.

The voices of these leaders and world-renowned experts will also be joined by thousands of Iranians whose brothers and sisters in Iran are brutally repressed.  Their voices not only tell of the threat Iran poses, but also testify to the popularly supported democratic alternative to the Iranian regime.  It may not happen tomorrow, or even the next day, but Iran’s actions at home and across the region exposes the leadership's hardline, irrational beliefs and the importance of the alternative these Iranians represent.

So instead of sitting passively while a few government figures decide our future and the fate of billions, tune in to the conference and hear what they have to say.  On June 13, leaders on the issue will address the prospects and conditions for a nuclear agreement and what an effective policy in combating Islamic fundamentalism and the Iranian regime should look like.  It’s a chance for nuanced discussion, meaningful debate, and positive change.

It’s a chance to act before it’s too late.

Ken Blackwell was formally a U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2015/06/conference_on_iran_making_the_case_for_a_different_path_for_iran_citizens.html#ixzz3cqzh7uY9 
Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

Making the case for a different path for Iran citizens

this is the article shows the reality of Iran. human rights in Iran is horrible, we can see many execution and brutal tortures in prison. Mullah's want to put pressure on Iranian and also continue their atomic project to save themselves from overthrow... but they can't. we can and we must win in this battle

Over 622,000 Syrian refugees languish in squalid conditions just across the border from the homeland in Jordan.  They have almost nothing, they lack the most basic of possessions, they have no opportunity to work, and their futures have been robbed of them.  What they do have is time – time to think about what drove their country into madness.
While Syrian refugees are stuck, Iranian troops are on the move, 15,000 more to Syria to join the fighting against IS.  After IS’s well-publicized destruction of artifacts, torture, and mass executions, some might even be rooting for Iran and its proxy, the Assad regime.  But how can we root for a regime that tortured and killed indiscriminately and whose policies directly fueled the rise of IS?
In Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, and beyond, the fingerprints of Iranian extremism have left only destruction and fueled the other side of the coin when it comes to global terror.  This same regime, whose practices on its own soil and through its proxies mirrors IS, is driving ever closer toward the world’s most dangerous weapon, the nuclear bomb. On June 30, another crucial deadline regarding negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program looms ....


Wednesday, 10 June 2015

UK lawmaker support Iranian resistance




many Iranian are happy to read the articles about free Iran and the opposition of the regime. one of the examples I want you to read is David Jones in the website The Diplomat

Sunday, 7 June 2015

Flying for Peace and Freedom

 Is it possible to kill the sun?

When it becomes clear that even with my departure, the assailant cannot be God. 
Do not forget to move straight


                                           Masoud Rajavi

On June 7th 1986, The Iranian Resistance's leadership moved from France to Iraq

Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Iran: 19 executions in just one day, including collective execution of 12 prisoners in Karaj

The antihuman regime of Iran hanged 19 prisoners on June 1 in the cities of Karaj and Urumia
Twelve prisoners were collectively hanged in Ghezel Hessar Prison of Karaj. They had been transferred to solitary confinement on May 30 in preparation for their death sentences. One of the prisoners lost his life in the solitary confinement before the hanging due to a heart attack. Families of those hanged gathered in front of the prison to receive the corpses of their loved ones. A day earlier, the anti-riot prison guards in Ghezel Hessar attacked and battered the prisoners who are condemned to death who had refused to eat in protest to the collective executions. 
In another atrocity, four Kurdish prisoners in Darya Prison of Orumiyeh were collectively hanged. Three of them were cousins.
The religious fascism ruling Iran that is incapable of confronting the escalating domestic and international crises and the expansion of popular protests stops at no atrocity to intensify the atmosphere of terror. On May 30, three prisoners were paraded in the streets of Pakdasht (Tehran Province) under the pretense of “thugs and hoodlums”. Colonel A’dinevand, commander of the security forces in Pakdasht County, said: “People need to be sure that security is not something that anyone may disrupt.”
The sole way to remedy the growing economic and social problems in the dark era of mullahs’ rule is to uproot the thugs and hoodlums ruling Iran that have brought nothing but corruption, prostitution, addiction and unemployment to Iran.
June 1, 2015




Monday, 1 June 2015

A call to rise against human rights violations in Iran





Horrible record of killing inside Iran, find the solution. 
Share this clip, help us stop killing in Iran. 

Sunday, 31 May 2015

Iran continue its nuclear ambitions

Tehran has shown no interest in giving up its drive to nuclear weapons. The weaponization program is continuing and they have not slowed down the process
In June, the National Council of Resistance of Iran ( NCRI ), the main Iranian opposition, whose widespread network inside the country enabled it to uncover many of the regime’s nuclear sites, beginning with Natanz and Arak facilities in 2002, triggering IAEA inspections, released a new report. Entitled How Iran Regime Cheated the World: Tehran’s Systematic Efforts to Cover Up its Nuclear Weapons Program, the report outlines three decades of Iran’s systematic deceptive practices, specifically the weaponization dimension of the nuclear program, and the formation since 2011 of an organization operated by the Defense Ministry, known as SPND, whose mandate of SPND is to develop Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
Now there is a question:

Is a robust Iran nuclear deal possible as serious questions remain unanswered on “possible military dimensions” of Tehran’s program?


Friday, 29 May 2015

Non-nuclear Iran

The Iranian regime's nuclear weapons program remained secret until 2002 when the National Council of Resistance of Iran held a press conference revealing a uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and a Heavy Water plant at Arak.

Those revelations, based on information provided by the social network of the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), triggered an investigation by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that eventually brought the regime's nuclear file before the UN Security Council for punitive sanctions.

The earliest NCRI revelations of the regime's nuclear projects date back to 1991, but these fell on deaf ears in the West. Since 2002, the NCRI has held dozens of press conferences in Western capitals revealing various top secret nuclear sites and information about key personnel involved in the regime's nuclear projects.

In 2003, the NCRI exposed an enrichment project going on at the Lashgar-Abad site near Karaj. After a 2004 inspection by the IAEA, it was discovered that work was being done at the site on a laser enrichment project.

In 2004, the NCRI disclosed the existence of a nuclear facility at Lavizan (Lavizan II) and enrichment-related activity at the Parchin site. In 2008, the NCRI exposed a command and development center for nuclear weapons at the Mojdeh site, along with its various components, which included laser enrichment. In 2010, the NCRIexposed details of a nuclear enrichment site at Abyek.

In 2012, the NCRI exposed secret details of the role of the Revolutionary Guards in the regime's nuclear weapons projects.

The NCRI's own political platform rejects nuclear weapons or technology being pursued in Iran, and Mrs. Rajavi's 10-point plan for a future Iran specifically states: "We want the free Iran of tomorrow to be devoid of nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction."


Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Who is Massoud Rajavi?

Massoud Rajavi was born in the town of Tabas in 1947. He attended Tehran University where he earned his degree in political science. Rajavi became influenced by PMOI’s modern interpretation of Islam early in life. Joining the PMOIin 1967, he was involved in discussions on religion, history, and revolutionary theory. Rajavi later became a member of the Central Committee.
In 1971, all the founders and the Central Committee of the PMOI, including Rajavi, were arrested and sentenced to death by SAVAK, the secret police, domestic security and intelligence service established by Iran's Mohammad Reza Shah. From 1975 up until his release in 1979, Massoud Rajavi led the Mojahedin’s resistance against all three fronts while incarcerated in different prisons. He stressed the need to continue in the fight against Shah’s dictatorship and warned against the emergence and growth of religious backwardness and despotism symbolized by Khomeini.

After his release, Rajavi was dedicated to rebuilding the PMOI. He gave weekly lectures at Sharif University that attracted large audiences. An article in Le Monde described the occasion:
"One of the most important events not to be missed in Tehran are the courses on comparative philosophy, taught every Friday afternoon by Mr Massoud Rajavi. Some 10,000 people presented their admission cards to listen for three hours to the lectures by the leader of the People’s Mojahedin on Sharif University’s lawn."
In 1980, Massoud Rajavi was nominated for the Iranian presidential election. In his book, The Iranian Mojahedin, Ervand Abrahamian writes:

"Rajavi’s candidacy was not only endorsed by the Mojahedin-affiliated organizations...; but also by an impressive array of independent organizations including the Feda’iyan, the National Democratic Front, the Kurdish Democratic Party, the Kurdish Toilers Revolutionary Party (Komula), the Society of Iranian Socialists, the Society for the Cultural and Political Rights of the Turkomans, the Society of Young Assyrians, and the Joint Group of Armenian, Zoroastrian and Jewish Minorities. Rajavi also received the support of a large number of prominent figures: Taleqani’s widow; Shaykh Ezeddin Hosayni, the spiritual leader of the Sunni Kurds in Mahabad; Hojjat al-Islam Jalal Ganjehi...; fifty well-known members of the Iranian Writers’ Association, including the economist Naser Pakdaman, the essayist Manuchehr  of the early Mojahedin martyrs, notably the Hanif-nezhads, Rezais, Mohsens, BadizadeganHezarkhani and the secular historians Feraydun Adamiyyat and Homa Nateq; and, of course, many of the familiess, Asgarizadehs, Sadeqs, Meshkinfams, and Mihandusts. The Mojahedin had become the vanguards of the secular opposition to the Islamic Republic."
Khomeini denied and vetoed Rajavi’s candidacy for the Iranian presidential election. Khomeini’s reasoning was that Rajavi had opposed the national referendum on Iran's new constitution, which established a theocratic government. Rajavi ran for a seat in Iran’s new Majlis (parliament), but lost the race after a discrepancy in the vote tally and election process.

On July 29, 1981, Massoud Rajavi announced the formation of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. He invited all democratic forces opposed to religious despotism to join the democratic alternative to the religious, terrorist dictatorship.
When the mass arrests, imprisonments and executions of PMOI members began to accelerate by the mullah’s dictatorship, he was forced to leave Iran. Mr Rajavi travelled to Paris on board of an Iranian aircraft from a military base in Tehran. The extraordinary flight was organized by PMOI supporters within the Iranian Armed Forces.
During a critical time for regime’s internal situation in 1984, Senators Gary Hart and Edward Kennedy - in addition to thousands of statements of support from other countries - wrote to Massoud Rajavi, to declare their support for the Iranian people’s just resistance. These statements of support alarmed the mullahs, who subsequently made any normalization of relations with Western countries, including the United States, contingent upon curbing the activities of the Mojahedin and National Council of Resistance.

During the time that the Iranian people were being devastated by the Iran-Iraq war which had destroyed the country and had taken the lives of over a million on the Iranian side alone, Massoud Rajavi made the tough decision to initiate a peace campaign to end the war. A decision which was wholeheartedly supported by the Iranian people who had suffered so much during the war.
Rajavi had to leave France in 1986, when the French government, which was involved in negotiations with the Iranian regime over the fate of French hostages in Lebanon, pressured him to do so, and as a result he traveled to Iraq in June 1986. The Iraqi government at the time had recognized the PMOI’s political, financial and military independence.
Since the formation of the NCRI, Massoud Rajavi has concentrated his efforts to the Council. His management of the NCRI’s affairs earned him the trust of the NCRI’s members. In August of 1993, The NCRI elected Maryam Rajavi, wife of Massoud Rajavi, as the future President of Iran.


Sunday, 24 May 2015

Why do I support the Iranian Resistance and Maryam Rajavi ?




When I was a student in Iran, I didn't think a better future could happen for us. We were condemned to death because our beliefs.
Many of my friends have been in prison because they wanted their freedom. They wanted to live free as youths in European coun
tries.
But even freedom considers a crime in Iran, under the dictatorship.
When I came here and noticed that there is a resistance fighting for the freedom of my country and people, I found a new world, where everything is possible.
We can and we must free our homeland, where we belong. There is just one solution for the country’s future. Maryam Rajavi, the President-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), is the answer. She is one who we need for our country.
I will be with her in the gathering of supporters of the Iranian resistance and declare my support Maryam Rajavi’s ten-point platform for regime change as the only solution for the country’s future:
1. In our view, the ballot box is the only criterion for legitimacy. Accordingly, we seek a republic based on universal suffrage.
2. We want a pluralist system, freedom of parties and assembly. We respect all individual freedoms. We underscore complete freedom of expression and of the media and unconditional access by all to the internet.
3. We support and are committed to the abolition of death penalty.
4. We are committed to the separation of Religion and State. Any form of discrimination against the followers of any religion and denomination will be prohibited.
5. We believe in complete gender equality in political, social and economic arenas. We are also committed to equal participation of women in political leadership. Any form of discrimination against women will be abolished. They will enjoy the right to freely choose their clothing. They are free in marriage, divorce, education and employment.
6. We believe in the rule of law and justice. We want to set up a modern judicial system based on the principles of presumption of innocence, the right to defense, effective judicial protection and the right to be tried in a public court. We also seek the total independence of judges. The mullahs’ Sharia law will be abolished.
7. We are committed to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and international covenant and conventions, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture, and the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women.
We are committed to the equality of all nationalities. We underscore the plan for the autonomy of Iranian Kurdistan, adopted by the National Council of Resistance of Iran. The language and culture of our compatriots from whatever nationality, are among our nation’s human resources and must spread and be promulgated in tomorrow’s Iran.
8. We recognize private property, private investment and the market economy. All Iranian people must enjoy equal opportunity in employment and in business ventures. We will protect and revitalize the environment.
9. Our foreign policy will be based on peaceful coexistence, international and regional peace and cooperation, as well as respect for the United Nations Charter.
10. We want a non-nuclear Iran, free of weapons of mass destruction.


Saturday, 23 May 2015




Obama on deal with Iran: 'Nobody has a bigger personal stake in making sure that it delivers on its promise'President Obama on Friday promised he would not make a bad deal with Iran in part because he wouldn’t want to bear the shame.
“This deal will have my name on it,” Obama said, “so nobody has a bigger personal stake in making sure that it delivers on its promise.
“I want a good deal,” he said, adding he will only agree to terms that would block all of Iran’s paths to nuclear weapons capability and secure it with rigorous inspections revealing any violations of the agreement.
Despite his optimism over the prospects for talks, Obama said that he isn’t guaranteeing a deal will be reached and that he keeps “all options” open for deterring Iran from building a nuclear weapon – a veiled reference to the possibility of airstrikes.
Republican critics voice skepticism about the outcome of the talks. As lawmakers passed a measure giving Congress the right to review and reject any deal with Iran, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said the goal was to stop a bad agreement, especially if it could “strengthen and legitimize the government of Iran.”
In his remarks Friday, Obama insisted that any success in the nuclear talks will not erase U.S. concerns about other Iranian activity, especially its support for terrorism, moves to de-stabilize the region and threats against Israel.
President supports a two-state solution, for two people living side-by-side in peace and security, “precisely because I care so much about the state of Israel,” he said.


CALL FOR A GATHERING; JUNE 13, 2015; VILLEPINTE-PARIS
The Middle East is in state of peril and chaos that is unprecedented in recent history. There are wars raging in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen, and these are increasingly taking on the appearance of one overarching sectarian conflict.
Islamic fundamentalism is growing on both sides of this divide, becoming more than an isolated geopolitical concern and leaving the West struggling to understand how to prevent it from threatening the very heart of modern, democratic societies.
And at the center of all of this stands the Iranian regime, tying together the forces of Shiite extremism, driving recruitment for their Sunni opponents, and using a perversion of the Muslim faith to justify domestic abuses and dangerous regional policies. Almost two years into the tenure of Hassan Rouhani as the regime’s president, the human rights situation in Iran has been on a slippery slope and reform and moderation are as elusive as ever. Notwithstanding the issue of Iran’s nuclear program, Tehran faces a moribund economy, rampant and pervasive state corruption, a restive and disillusioned population, intensifying factional feuding, and further regional isolation.
On June 13, Iranian communities the world over will gather in Paris in their biggest gathering ever, to stand up to Tehran, to highlight its egregious polices as the epicenter of Islamic extremism, and to call for a new Western policies that address the changing dynamics of the most volatile and strategically important region of the world while supporting democratic and anti-fundamentalist local movements and populations.
In addition to Iranians, some 1,000 political figures, activists, and religious leaders will participate in this rally, representing over 100 countries, five continents, and a range of socio-political backgrounds.
Each of these figures will join in condemning the policies of the Islamic Republic and express support for the Iranian resistance and its call for regime change and a free, democratic, non-nuclear Iran.
The June 13 Paris event is the highlight of a wide-ranging, global campaign by Iranians and their supporters from all walks of life. The problems and issues addressed by that campaign are not localized to Iran but address the entire crisis in the region, and the Western policies that may address it.
We urge all persons who are concerned about those issues to join us in Paris on June 13.
Organizing Committee:
Comité organisateur du Grand Rassemblement du 13 juin 2015
Sponsors:
• Belgian Committee of Parliamentarians for a Democratic Iran
• International Parliamentary Campaign in Defense of Ashraf
• French Committee for a Democratic Iran
• Friends of a Free Iran in the European Parliament
• The British Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom
• German Solidarity Committee for a Free Iran
• Italian Committee of Parliamentarians and Citizens for a Free Iran
• Committee of Friends of a Free Iran in the Danish Parliament
• The Dutch Group of Friends of a Free Iran
• Friends of a Free Iran in Sweden
• Friends of a Free Iran in Norway
• Swiss Committee in Defense of Ashraf