Saturday, June 27, 2026

Can the True Potential of Iran-Pakistan Relations be Realized?

Crescent International

There is vast potential for Iran-Pakistan trade and economic relations. Their realization will depend on whether officials in Pakistan are able to rise to the occasion beyond symbolic gestures (Image ChatGPT).
During Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s one-day visit to Islamabad on June 23, there was much talk about “shared values” and an opportunity for the two sides to review the full spectrum of bilateral relations.

Officials of both countries vowed to explore avenues for “enhanced cooperation in trade, energy, border security, people-to-people exchanges and regional connectivity.”

Increasing trade to $30 billion annually from the current measly $3 billion was also mentioned.

It is a tall order.

The Iranian president and his delegation were warmly welcomed at the Nur Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi.

The two countries not only share a 900-km long border but also have deep cultural, historical and religious links.

How these are utilized by the two countries will determine the future trajectory of their relations.

For its part, Iran has always wanted close economic and trade ties with Pakistan.

President Pezeshkian also called for Muslim unity to confront their enemies and strong defence ties among Muslim countries.

This has been Iran’s policy with all its neighbours but regrettably, the Arabian potentates on the western shores of the Persian Gulf have failed to reciprocate Iran’s goodwill gestures.

Instead, they have aligned themselves with the zionist entity against the larger interests of the Ummah.

That and their reliance on the US has been shaken by Iran’s convincing defeat of the US and zionist Israel during the illegal war unleashed by the two criminal regimes in Washington and Tel Aviv.

Regarding Iran-Pakistan relations, a good starting point would be the revival of the gas pipeline project.

The two countries signed a deal in 2012 when Asif Ali Zardari was president.

This street urchin is again the president.

Pity the people of Pakistan!

Iran built its section of the pipeline up to the Pakistan border.

It even offered to provide a $2 billion loan to complete the Pakistani side.

What did the latter do?

Shahid Khaqan Abbasi was the Petroleum Minister at the time.

He went to Qatar to sign a deal for LNG at 30% higher than what Iran was offering.

There is speculation that he took a hefty bribe from the Qataris.

Whatever the truth about the bribe, the excuse Pakistan made at the time was that the US would impose sanctions on the country if it went ahead with the Iran gas pipeline project.

Did the Pakistanis not know this at the time they signed the deal?

It seems more likely that the deal with Iran was signed to get the Qataris to pay the bribe.

There is hope in Pakistan that with the lifting of US sanctions, including secondary sanctions, as outlined in the MoU, it would open up opprtunities for trade.

There is huge potential for it.

Pakistan would get access to Central Asian markets that it had previously hoped to get through Afghanistan.

The military’s ill-conceived hostile policy toward Afghanistan scuttled this hope.

That route is effectively closed unless the military changes its anti-Taliban attitude.

Unlike Afghanistan, Iran is a vast country with a poweful military and immense natural resources.

It recently demonstrated its military prowess by defeating two satanic powers simultaneously.

Further, Iran now effectively controls the Strait of Hormuz.

Will Pakistan’s rulers—civilian and military—demonstrate the requisite skills in dealing with Iran?

Pakistani officials lack the intellectual depth of the Iranians.

Almost every Iranian official holds a PhD.

Most Pakistanis barely have grade 12 education.

Regrettably, the Pakistanis are also prone to short-term transactional dealings.

Everyone merely looks for what’s in it for him personally.

During President Pezeshkian’s visit, the Pakistani hosts made several missteps.

When the visiting dignatory disembarked from the plane, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, dressed in suit and tie, was holding an umbrella.

To everyone’s horror, he only protected himself from the bristling sun, not his guest.

Instead of wearing the comfortable and elegant Pakistani dress—Shalwar Kameez—the Pakistanis, in typical pukka sahib style, wore suits and ties.

Are they unaware that Iranian officials never wear a tie?

It is seen as a symbol of slavery to the west.

With such lack of attention to detail, it is safe to say that Pakistanis will continue to make blunders and fail to take relations to the level that they deserve.

The fault will lie entirely with them even though the Iranians are keen to cultivate close economic and strategic ties with Pakistan.

When dealing with clowns and opportunists, it is difficult to establish stable relations.

IslamabadIslamic Republic of IranMasoud PezeshkianPakistanShehbaz SharifIran-Pakistan tradeAfghanistanStrait of HormuzCentral Asia

Friday, June 26, 2026

ASHURA AND THE PROMISE OF IMAM MAHDI (AF): A TIMELESS WARNING TO THE OPPRESSORS OF EVERY AGE

By Professor Abdullahi Danladi
The tragedy of Karbala occupies a unique place in human history. While many historical events are confined to the era in which they occurred, Karbala transcends time and geography. More than thirteen centuries have passed since Imam Husayn ibn Ali (A.S.), the beloved grandson of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.A.), was martyred on the plains of Karbala, yet the event continues to inspire reflection, resistance, and moral awakening across generations. The enduring relevance of Ashura lies not merely in the details of a battle fought in 61 AH, but in the universal truths it revealed about power, justice, oppression, and the moral responsibilities of human beings. Every generation returns to Karbala because every generation encounters its own forms of tyranny and injustice. Ashura therefore remains not only a historical memory but a living criterion by which societies and individuals measure their commitment to truth.
One of the greatest misconceptions regarding Karbala is the belief that it was a military confrontation whose significance ended with the martyrdom of Imam Husayn and his companions. Such an understanding reduces a profound moral revolution to a mere political conflict. In reality, Karbala exposed a recurring pattern in human civilization: the tendency of power to transform itself into an instrument of oppression whenever it becomes detached from morality and accountability. Yazid ibn Mu'awiyah did not become a symbol of condemnation merely because of his personal identity. Rather, he became the embodiment of a political mentality that places authority above justice, expediency above principle, and power above truth. This mentality has survived throughout history, appearing in different forms, under different banners, and within different political systems.
For this reason, Ashura continues to challenge every age with a simple but uncomfortable question: where do we stand when truth confronts power? The question is as relevant today as it was on the tenth of Muharram in the year 61 AH. Whenever governments suppress legitimate dissent, whenever wealth is accumulated through exploitation while the vulnerable are neglected, whenever innocent lives are sacrificed to preserve political interests, and whenever propaganda is employed to disguise injustice as necessity, the spirit of Yazid re-emerges. The names may differ, the languages may change, and the instruments of oppression may become more sophisticated, but the underlying reality remains remarkably familiar.
The significance of Ashura becomes even more profound when viewed through the lens of the Islamic belief in the reappearance of Imam al-Mahdi (A.S.). Within Islamic eschatology, Imam Mahdi is not simply an awaited leader whose arrival will transform political circumstances. Rather, he represents the culmination of humanity's long struggle against injustice and the ultimate manifestation of divine justice in history. His mission is described as filling the earth with justice after it has been filled with oppression and tyranny. This description is not merely a prediction about the future; it is a powerful critique of the present. It invites humanity to reflect on the conditions that necessitate such a mission and to recognize the persistence of structures that perpetuate oppression across societies and generations.
The relationship between Ashura and Imam Mahdi is therefore deeply interconnected. The movement of Imam Husayn represents the sacrifice required to preserve truth, while the movement of Imam Mahdi represents the eventual triumph of that truth. Karbala demonstrated that truth may be isolated, deprived of worldly support, and subjected to immense suffering, yet it remains truth nonetheless. The promised mission of Imam Mahdi demonstrates that truth ultimately possesses a future. The blood of Karbala and the hope of the Mahdi are inseparable dimensions of the same historical and spiritual reality.
It is precisely this connection that has always unsettled tyrants and oppressors. Oppressive systems derive their strength not only from military power or economic resources but also from the belief that their dominance is permanent. The doctrine of Imam Mahdi challenges this assumption at its foundation. It proclaims that no injustice, regardless of its apparent strength, possesses permanence. No empire is eternal. No ruler is immune from accountability. No system built upon exploitation can escape the judgment of history or the judgment of God. The belief in Imam Mahdi therefore serves as a perpetual reminder that oppression is ultimately temporary, while justice possesses an enduring future.
History itself repeatedly confirms this reality. The rulers who ordered the massacre at Karbala possessed armies, wealth, administrative authority, and extensive political influence. Imam Husayn possessed none of these advantages. Yet the verdict of history has been unequivocal. The names of those who commanded the armies survive primarily as symbols of disgrace, while the name of Husayn continues to inspire reverence among millions. The palaces that once projected invincibility have crumbled into dust. The institutions that appeared permanent have vanished. The political calculations that justified oppression have been forgotten. Yet the moral legacy of Karbala remains remarkably alive.
This historical lesson carries profound implications for contemporary oppressors. Those who rely upon force to silence truth often assume that power guarantees legitimacy. Those who employ prisons, censorship, intimidation, or violence frequently imagine that they can shape reality according to their desires. Yet history consistently demonstrates the fragility of such assumptions. Material power may influence events for a time, but it cannot permanently suppress truth. Fear may produce compliance, but it cannot generate genuine legitimacy. Propaganda may obscure reality temporarily, but it cannot erase it indefinitely. The fate of every oppressive order throughout history serves as a reminder that political dominance and moral authority are not synonymous.
At the same time, Ashura offers a message of hope and resilience to the oppressed. It teaches that apparent defeat does not necessarily constitute failure. From a purely material perspective, Imam Husayn lost everything at Karbala. Yet from a moral and historical perspective, his stand achieved a victory that continues to shape human consciousness centuries later. Karbala therefore compels us to reconsider conventional definitions of success and failure. Victory is not always measured by survival, just as defeat is not always measured by death. There are moments in history when the preservation of principle becomes more significant than the preservation of life itself.
This understanding is particularly important in an age characterized by widespread injustice, growing inequalities, political repression, and moral confusion. The lessons of Ashura remind humanity that silence in the face of oppression carries consequences. Neutrality between truth and falsehood is often an illusion. Every society, whether consciously or unconsciously, chooses its position when confronted by injustice. The enduring power of Karbala lies in its ability to force individuals and communities to examine their own responsibilities rather than merely condemn the actions of historical figures.
The anticipation of Imam Mahdi should therefore not be understood as passive expectation. Genuine preparation for the promised era of justice requires active commitment to the values embodied by Imam Husayn. It requires defending human dignity, resisting oppression, promoting justice, and refusing to normalize falsehood. The path toward the future envisioned in Islamic teachings cannot be separated from the ethical principles established at Karbala. One cannot sincerely await the triumph of justice while remaining indifferent to injustice.
As another Ashura passes, the plains of Karbala continue to speak across the centuries. Their message remains as urgent today as it was on the day when the blood of Husayn soaked the desert sands. It is a message directed to rulers and subjects, to the powerful and the powerless, to nations and individuals alike. It warns oppressors that power without justice is ultimately self-destructive. It reminds the oppressed that truth possesses a strength that transcends material limitations. And it assures humanity that history is not an endless cycle of tyranny, but a moral journey whose final destination belongs to justice.
For this reason, Ashura remains more than a remembrance of the past. It is a warning to every oppressor who imagines that power grants immunity from accountability. It is a source of hope for every victim of injustice who wonders whether truth can prevail. Above all, it is a reminder that while oppression may wound the body of truth, it can never extinguish its spirit. The promise of Imam Mahdi stands as the ultimate affirmation of this reality: that the struggle begun in Karbala is not forgotten, that the cries of the oppressed are not unheard, and that the final chapter of history belongs not to tyranny, but to justice.

*Karbala: The Day the Ummah Was Tested*

*The Muslim*
Every year, Muslims remember Karbala. Many mourn. Many commemorate. Many recount the names of the martyrs. Yet if our remembrance ends with grief, we have misunderstood the very reason Imam Husayn (a.s.) stood and died.
*Karbala was not merely a tragedy. It was a test.*
Not a test of Imam Husayn—his resolve has echoed across fourteen centuries. It was a test of the Ummah.
Only fifty years after the passing of Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w.), the Muslim community faced a question of extraordinary simplicity: when the beloved grandson of the Prophet stood against tyranny, who would stand with him?
*History records the painful answer.*
The grandson of the Messenger of Allah was not confronting a foreign empire or an invading army. He faced an army that called itself Muslim, led by men who professed the same faith, prayed the same prayers, and recited the same Qur'an. Some among them were even the sons of men who had sat in the company of the Prophet himself.
Meanwhile, Husayn stood with a small band of family and loyal companions. Among them was at least one Companion of the Prophet, together with righteous men from the generation that had grown up under the guidance of Ali ibn Abi Talib. They were few in number but immense in conviction.
*The numerical imbalance is not the most shocking aspect of Karbala.*
The real shock is that the Ummah had become so divided, so hesitant, so compromised by politics, tribal loyalties, fear and worldly calculation that even the grandson of the Prophet could not unite it against manifest injustice.
If Husayn could not rally the Ummah, who can?
This is the enduring question of Karbala.
For too long, Muslims have debated Karbala through sectarian lenses, asking whether it proves one school or another. Such debates often miss the larger lesson.
Karbala asks every generation the same question: when truth demands sacrifice, do we recognise it before history does?
The Qur'an repeatedly commands believers to stand firmly for justice, even against themselves, their families or their own interests. Imam Husayn embodied that command. He refused to legitimise tyranny simply because tyranny possessed power.
His stand was not for personal ambition. It was for preserving the moral legacy of the Prophet.
One cannot help but ask whether we, the Ummah of today, have learnt the lesson.
The Muslim world remains fragmented into rival nation-states, each guarding its own interests while the wider Ummah suffers repeated humiliation. Dynasties, military rulers, authoritarian governments and competing political elites dominate much of the Muslim world. Muslims frequently identify more with flags, ethnicities and borders than with the universal brotherhood proclaimed by Islam.
The ideal of a morally accountable leadership serving the entire Ummah has long since disappeared. Instead, power has become localised, hereditary or coercive, while the language of Islam is too often employed to sanctify political authority rather than to hold it accountable.
This is not to suggest that every contemporary ruler is equivalent to Yazid. History is rarely so simple, and moral judgment belongs to Allah. Yet the underlying temptation that Karbala exposed remains with us: the willingness to accommodate injustice for the sake of stability, comfort or political expediency.
That temptation did not die in 61 AH.
It lives wherever Muslims excuse oppression because resistance appears costly.
It lives wherever truth is sacrificed for political convenience.
It lives wherever loyalty to personalities replaces loyalty to principles.
Karbala therefore is not an annual ritual of mourning. It is an annual audit of our moral compass.
The question is not whether we cry for Husayn.
The question is whether, had we lived in his time, we would have recognised him before Ashura rather than after it.
History is full of people who honour prophets after opposing them, and celebrate reformers after abandoning them. Karbala warns us not to become one more generation that venerates righteousness only after it has been crucified by its own silence.
To remember Husayn is not merely to remember how he died.
It is to remember why he refused to surrender.
It is to remember that legitimacy does not come from armies, palaces or dynasties, but from fidelity to truth.
It is to remember that the strength of the Ummah is not measured by its numbers but by its willingness to stand with justice when justice is costly.
If our remembrance of Karbala does not realign our direction with the path of Imam Husayn, then we have reduced one of the greatest moral events in Islamic history to an annual ceremony.
The legacy of Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w.w.) did not end at Karbala.
It survived because Husayn refused to let it be buried beneath political power.
The question that remains for us is whether we are content merely to mourn his sacrifice—or whether we will allow his stand to reshape the future of the Ummah.

The Crime That Shaped the Modern Middle East: How America and Britain Destroyed Iran’s Democracy

The Great Game | Part 3 of 10
The Crime That Shaped the Modern Middle East: How America and Britain Destroyed Iran’s Democracy
By Lim Tean
Supporters of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh rally in Tehran, 1953 - weeks before the CIA and MI6 ended Iran’s democratic experiment.
On August 19, 1953, the United States and Britain did something they have never been held accountable for: they overthrew Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister — not with armies, but with cash, propaganda, and hired mobs.
His name was Mohammad Mosaddegh. His crime? He tried to give Iran’s oil back to Iranians.
Everything that followed — the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, the decades of sanctions and hatred — flows directly from that single imperial act.
The West buried it. Classified it for decades. When the documents finally emerged, they hoped no one was paying attention.
In Part 3 of The Great Game’s Iran series, I tell you the full story — the CIA operation, the hired mob, the Shah’s complicity, and what it means for everything happening between the West and Iran today.
Read it. Share it. Because this is the history they never taught you.
I want you to remember a date: August 19, 1953.
On that day, the United States and Britain committed one of the most consequential acts of political violence in modern history — not with bombs or tanks, but with money, propaganda, and hired mobs. They overthrew the democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran, Mohammad Mosaddegh, a man who had committed the unforgivable sin of trying to reclaim his country’s oil for his own people.
Everything that has happened between the West and Iran since — the Islamic Revolution, the hostage crisis, the sanctions, the nuclear standoff, the hatred — has its roots in that single act of imperial criminality.
The West never told you this. They buried it. Classified it for decades. And when the documents finally emerged, they hoped no one was paying attention.
I am paying attention. And after reading Parts 1 and 2 of this series, so are you.
THE MAN THEY HAD TO DESTROY
Mohammad Mosaddegh was not a revolutionary. He was not an Islamist, a communist, or an extremist. He was a Swiss-educated lawyer, a constitutional monarchist, a democrat in the most literal sense of the word — a man who believed, with quiet ferocity, that Iran belonged to Iranians.
He came from aristocracy. He could have lived a comfortable life as a collaborator with British interests, as so many of his class did. Instead, he chose something far more dangerous: principle.
When he became Prime Minister in April 1951, Iran was effectively a vassal state. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company — which would later become BP — was extracting Iran’s oil and paying the Iranian government a royalty of roughly 16%. Sixteen percent. Of Iran’s own oil. The rest went to London.
Mosaddegh looked at this arrangement and said: no more.
On May 1, 1951 — May Day, with magnificent symbolism — the Iranian Parliament voted unanimously to nationalise the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The oil beneath Iranian soil would belong to Iran. The workers who extracted it would work for Iran. The profits would flow to Iran.
It was a perfectly legal act. It was a democratic act. It was, in the fullest sense of the word, a legitimate act.
And it was, from that moment, a death sentence.
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK
Britain’s response was immediate and vicious. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company pulled out its technicians — most of them British — making it impossible for Iran to operate the refineries. Britain imposed a blockade. British warships sat in the Persian Gulf. London threatened any country that dared buy Iranian oil with legal action.
Iran was being strangled. And Britain went to Washington.
The British case to the Americans was straightforward: Mosaddegh is soft on communism. Iran is in danger of falling to the Soviets. We must act.
It was a lie. Mosaddegh was a liberal nationalist, deeply suspicious of the Soviet Union. The Iranian communist party, the Tudeh, was a minor player that he kept at arm’s length. But this was the early 1950s. McCarthyism was at its peak. The word ‘communist’ was a magic key that unlocked American paranoia — and American money.
The CIA and MI6 got to work. The operation had two names: the Americans called it AJAX. The British called it BOOT. The objective was identical: remove Mosaddegh by any means necessary.
What followed was a masterclass in imperial subversion.
CIA operative Kermit Roosevelt Jr. — grandson of Theodore Roosevelt — arrived in Tehran with a suitcase full of cash. Bribes flowed to military officers. Newspaper editors were paid to run anti-Mosaddegh propaganda. Religious figures were recruited. Thugs were hired to create chaos in the streets — to stage riots, to make it appear that Mosaddegh had lost control, that Iran was ungovernable.
The Shah — weak, frightened, morally hollow — was pressured to sign the decree dismissing Mosaddegh, even though he had no constitutional authority to do so. When the first attempt failed and the Shah fled to Rome in panic, the CIA simply doubled down. More money. More chaos. More hired violence.
On August 19, 1953, the coup succeeded. Mosaddegh was arrested. He would spend the rest of his life under house arrest. The man who tried to give Iran its oil back died a prisoner in his own home.
THE DOCUMENTS THEY TRIED TO HIDE
For decades, Washington and London denied any involvement. It was a spontaneous uprising, they said. Popular discontent. The Iranian people turning against a failed leader.
They lied.
In 2013, the CIA finally declassified documents confirming what historians had known for years: the agency had planned, funded, and executed the coup. The internal CIA history described it plainly as ‘an act of United States foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government.’
The highest levels. That means Eisenhower. That means Dulles. That means the elected government of the United States of America, in peacetime, using taxpayer money to overthrow the elected government of a sovereign nation because that nation dared to nationalise its own oil.
This is not conspiracy. This is documented history. And it should be taught in every classroom in America and Britain. It is not.
WHAT THEY INSTALLED INSTEAD
After the coup, the Shah was returned to his throne — now fully dependent on American support and therefore fully pliant to American wishes.
The oil arrangements were restructured. Iran now received 50% of revenues — an improvement, yes, but the principle of Iranian sovereign control over Iranian resources had been broken. American and British oil companies took their share. The markets were satisfied.
And to keep the Shah in power, America armed, trained, and funded SAVAK — the Iranian secret police. SAVAK became one of the most feared intelligence services in the world. Torture. Disappearances. Political prisoners. Execution of dissidents.
All of it, funded and supported by Washington in the name of ‘stability’ and the ‘free world.’
For 26 years, the Shah held power through fear. The moderate nationalists who had followed Mosaddegh were imprisoned or exiled. The secular left was crushed. The only space for opposition that SAVAK could not fully penetrate was the mosque.
And so, when the revolution finally came in 1979, it came from the mosque.
The West created the conditions for the Islamic Revolution. Britain and America destroyed the moderate, democratic, secular alternative — and then expressed shock and horror when the Iranian people turned to the only opposition that had survived.
THE WOUND THAT NEVER HEALED
When Iranian students stormed the American embassy in Tehran in November 1979 and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, the Western world was outraged. Barbaric. Uncivilised. Fanatical.
But inside the embassy, the students found something the Americans had not managed to destroy: shredded CIA documents, painstakingly reconstructed by hand. Documents detailing American interference in Iranian affairs. Names. Networks. Operations.
The students called the embassy ‘the Den of Spies.’ Given what the documents revealed, can you really argue they were wrong?
Iranians have not forgotten 1953. They cannot forget it. It is not ancient history to them — it is the foundational trauma of the modern Iranian state. Every time an American president speaks of Iranian aggression, every time a Western politician calls Iran a ‘rogue state,’ Iranians hear the echo of August 19, 1953.
We are the ones who ended your democracy. We are the ones who installed your torturer. We are the ones who armed the man who oppressed you for 26 years. And now we want to lecture you about civilised behaviour.
The audacity is breathtaking.
WHAT THIS TELLS US ABOUT THE ‘RULES-BASED ORDER’
In Parts 1 and 2 of this series, I showed you that Iran is not a theocratic chaos but a sophisticated state with a coherent constitutional architecture and deep intellectual traditions. In this part, I want you to understand something equally important: the West’s campaign against Iran is not about democracy, human rights, or nuclear weapons.
It never was.
In 1953, Iran had a democracy. A real one. A parliament. A free press. An independent judiciary. A Prime Minister who commanded genuine popular support. The West destroyed it — not because Iran was undemocratic, but because Iran’s democratic government had made a decision that threatened British oil profits.
The lesson of 1953 is this: the so-called rules-based international order has never been about rules. It has been about power. About who gets to write the rules, who gets to break them, and who gets to be punished for daring to claim their own sovereignty.
This is what I mean when I speak of a legitimacy-based world order as the necessary replacement. Not an order built on the diktat of the powerful, dressed in the language of universal values. But an order built on the genuine sovereignty of nations, the genuine self-determination of peoples, the genuine right of every country to control its own resources and chart its own destiny.
Mosaddegh stood for that principle. They destroyed him for it.
The question for our time is: will they succeed again?
THE VERDICT OF HISTORY
Mohammad Mosaddegh died on March 5, 1967, in his village of Ahmadabad, having spent the last 14 years of his life under house arrest. He was 84 years old.
He had asked to be buried alongside the victims of the 1953 coup — the men who had died defending Iranian democracy against the CIA’s hired mob. The Shah denied even this final wish. He was buried in his house, alone, separated even in death from the cause he had given his life to.
Time, however, has rendered its own verdict.
Today, Mosaddegh is revered across Iran — not just by the secular left or the nationalists, but by millions of ordinary Iranians who understand that he was the last leader who tried to build a truly independent Iran within a constitutional framework. His image appears on murals. His name is spoken with reverence.
And the Americans who destroyed him? Their embassy is now a museum of imperialism. The CIA documents that proved their guilt are public record. The historical judgement is in — and it is damning.
In Part 4, we will examine how Iran rebuilt after 1979 — and why the Islamic Republic, for all its contradictions, represents something the West has never wanted to acknowledge: a genuine expression of Iranian sovereign will, forged in the fire of betrayal.
The story is not over. It is just beginning to be understood.