Clare M. Lopez
Prince Turkibin Faisal Al-Saud Drops Bombshell at Iranian Opposition Rally
Articles | July 13, 2016 | CounterJihad Campaign, Iran Nuclear Deal, Middle East, Politics & Policy
At the annual gathering of Iranians outside of Paris,
France on 9 July 2016, where some 100,000 showed up to express support for
regime change in Tehran, one of the guest speakers dropped a bombshell
announcement. Even before he took the podium, Prince Turki bin Faisal Al-Saud,
appearing in the distinctive gold-edged dark cloak and white keffiyeh
headdress of the Saudi royal family, of which he is a senior member, drew
commentary and lots of second looks. The Prince is the founder of the King
Faisal Foundation, and chairman of the King Faisal Center for Research and
Islamic Studies, and served from 1977-2001 as director general of Al-Mukhabarat
Al-A’amah, Saudi Arabia’s intelligence agency, resigning the position on 1
September 2001, some ten days before the attacks of 9/11.
He took the podium late in the afternoon program on 9 July
and, after a discourse on the shared Islamic history of the Middle East,
launched into an attack on Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, whose 1979 revolution
changed the course of history not just in Iran, but throughout the world. His
next statement sent a shock wave through the assembly: Bin Faisal pledged
support to the Iranian NCRI opposition and to its President-elect
Maryam Rajavi personally. Given bin Faisal’s senior position in the
Saudi royal family and his long career in positions of key responsibility in
the Kingdom, it can only be understood that he spoke for the Riyadh government.
The hall erupted in cheers and thunderous applause.
Iranians and others who packed the convention center in
Bourget, Paris came for a day-long program attended by representatives from
around the world. Organized by the National Council of Resistance of Iran
(NCRI), the event featured a day filled with speeches and musical performances.
A senior-level U.S. delegation included Linda Chavez, Chairwoman of the U.S.
Center for Equal Opportunity; former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich; former
Governor of Pennsylvania and Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge; Judge
Michael Mukasey; former Governor of Vermont and Presidential candidate Howard
Dean; and former national security advisor to President George W. Bush, Fran
Townsend.
The NCRI and its key affiliate, the Mujahedeen-e Kahlq
(MEK), were on the U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTO) list until 2012,
having been placed there at the express request of Iranian president Khatami.
Iranian university students formed the MEK in the 1960s to oppose the Shah’s
rule. The MEK participated in the Khomeini Revolution but then was forced into
exile when Khomeini turned on his own allies and obliterated any hopes for
democratic reform. Granted protection by the U.S. under the 4th Geneva
Convention in 2004, remnants of the MEK opposition have been stranded in Iraq,
first at Camp Ashraf and now in Camp Liberty near Baghdad since U.S. forces
left Iraq. Completely disarmed and defenseless, the 2,000 or so remaining
residents of Camp Liberty, who are desperately seeking resettlement, come under
periodic deadly attack by Iraqi forces under Iranian Qods Force direction. The
most recent rocket attack on July 4th, 2016 set much of the camp ablaze and
devastated the Iranians’ unprotected mobile homes. The MEK/NCRI fought their
terrorist designations in the courts in both Europe and the U.S., finally
winning removal in 2012. The NCRI’s national headquarters are now located in
downtown Washington, DC, from where they work intensively with Congress, the
media, and U.S. society to urge regime change and a genuinely liberal democratic
platform for Iran.
Given the Obama administration’s close alignment with the
Tehran regime, it is perhaps not surprising that the NCRI and Riyadh (both
feeling marginalized by the U.S.) should find common cause to oppose the
mullahs’ unceasing quest for deliverable nuclear weapons, aggressively
expansionist regional agenda, and destabilizing involvement in multiple area
conflicts, especially its extensive support for the murderous rule of Bashar
al-Assad. Nevertheless, the implications of official Riyadh government support
for the largest, most dedicated, and best-organized Iranian opposition movement
will reverberate through the Middle East.
Although not openly stated by bin Faisal, the new
NCRI-Riyadh alliance may be expected to involve funding, intelligence sharing,
and possible collaboration in operations aimed at the shared goal of
overthrowing the current Tehran regime. The alignment doubtless will change the
course of events in the Middle East, and while Saudi Arabia can hardly be
counted among the liberal democracies of the world, the woman-led NCRI movement
declares a 10-point plan for Iran that does embrace the
ideals of Western Civilization. The impact of the Saudi initiative will not be
limited to Iran or the surrounding region but at least as importantly, surely
will be felt internally as well, among a young and restless Saudi population
that looks hopefully to the rule of King Salman and his 30-something son, Deputy
Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman al-Saud.
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Clare M. Lopez is the Vice President for Research and
Analysis at the Center for Security Policy
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