Fardin

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Fardin

@SAVTLib

Polphil reader. Liberal by creed. Democratic by design. Engineer by formation. Legacy runs deep: subsurface alchamy echoes.

The Land of Noble Valor Entrou em Ekim 2020
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@AndrewDesiderio Yo, @JDVance, what’s the deal? You clown actually planning to waive that 4-yr ban and pull the IRGC off the terror list for a cheap deal? Trying to play nice with these murderous regime thugs is a joke. Real rational leadership, right Donald? Absolute circus. @realDonaldTrump
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Fardin@SAVTLib·
@WhiteHouse @StateDept A masterclass in failure. Signing this MOU doesn’t just ignore reality. It endangers your national interest. This is a surrender. It betrays humanity.
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
🚨 President Donald J. Trump has SIGNED the Iran Memorandum of Understanding at Versailles in France. 🇺🇸
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@SamiraGharaei @Ehsanism «کارهای متفاوت» در کم و کیف چپاول اموال ملی—تازه نوبت به نوه‌نبیره‌های پلشت عفونی‌ رسیده. چین‌وماچین به‌تنهایی جوابگو نیست. می‌خواهند شریک فساد جرد و استیو شوند. رذالت اسلامی علیه معترضین به‌حکومت مافیایی اوباش دین نیز با ابتکارات تازه‌ همراه‌است—در حجم شقاوت و هم در عمق سبوعیت.
Fardin@SAVTLib

@Eyalo365 @SteveWitkoff seems to have mastered the art of fleecing the Arabs and the IRGC terror-machine. He's clearly in a league of his own when it comes to milking the Persian Gulf states and IRGC goons. @jaredkushner is still just cutting his teeth. 1/2 @SEPeaceMissions

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Samira Gharaei
Samira Gharaei@SamiraGharaei·
یک مقام ارشد آمریکایی می‌گوید شرایطی ایجاد شده که بین آمریکا و ایران روابط تازه‌ای را در سطوح گوناگون رقم زده. تماس‌هایی بوده از سپاه پاسداران، از چهره‌های مذهبی، از سران نظام که کانال‌های تازه‌ای برای ارتباط باز کرده‌اند و می‌گویند که می‌خواهند کاری متفاوت از گذشته انجام دهند.
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Fardin@SAVTLib·
@LindseyGrahamSC @SEPeaceMissions @SteveWitkoff Senator, 'after this discussion,' it’s clear you’re remarkably hollow. This MOU serves neither the U.S. nor will it curb those apocalyptic, mafia-backed thieves. The Strait of Hormuz was open 4 mos ago. Don't insult our intelligence with this.
Fardin@SAVTLib

@Eyalo365 @SteveWitkoff seems to have mastered the art of fleecing the Arabs and the IRGC terror-machine. He's clearly in a league of his own when it comes to milking the Persian Gulf states and IRGC goons. @jaredkushner is still just cutting his teeth. 1/2 @SEPeaceMissions

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Lindsey Graham
Lindsey Graham@LindseyGrahamSC·
I just had a very lengthy and productive discussion with @SEPeaceMissions @SteveWitkoff about the state of play regarding Iran.   After this discussion, it is my opinion that signing the MOU will be beneficial to the United States, in as much as the Strait of Hormuz will begin to open, and the hostilities with Iran will stop.   Whether or not the United States can reach an acceptable, verifiable deal with Iran regarding its nuclear program and other issues is yet to be determined, but I see little downside to trying.   The economic stability that comes from opening up the Strait and the cessation of hostilities could create a pathway to peace well beyond the Iranian conflict.   The expansion of the Abraham Accords and normalizing relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel is President Trump’s and my ultimate goal. I think that is best achieved by creating economic stability for the United States, the region and the world, as well as the cessation of hostilities.  The signing of the MOU is an essential step to make that happen and thus it is worthwhile.
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Fardin@SAVTLib·
@Constan63413921 “January was not only a verdict on the regime. It was also a lesson for the opposition about the kind of state it is confronting and the kind of preparation required to defeat it.”
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Constance
Constance@Constan63413921·
I agree with part of your analysis. The regime absolutely uses co-optation, fragmentation, imprisonment, exile, censorship, infiltration, and mass violence to prevent the emergence of independent centers of power. No serious observer should deny that. Where I disagree is with the conclusion that organization is therefore not part of the story. The question is not whether the regime manufactures atomization. It clearly does. The question is why so many Iranians underestimated the importance of building durable institutions capable of surviving exactly those tactics. For years, many opposition activists genuinely believed that sufficiently large-scale civil resistance and mass mobilization could force change. Many believed the regime could be reformed. Others believed internal splits, international pressure, or foreign actors would ultimately resolve the problem. Those beliefs shaped behavior and priorities. January 2026 did not simply reveal the regime’s brutality. It also revealed the limits of assumptions that had guided much of the opposition for years. Millions of people in the streets demonstrated legitimacy, courage, and national solidarity. But legitimacy and mobilization are not the same thing as organizational capacity. You are right that the regime fears consolidation. My point is that building lasting consolidation requires more than popular anger. It requires institutions, leadership development, communications networks, financing, coordination mechanisms, and a political culture that values long-term organization rather than recurring searches for saviors. The regime bears responsibility for the repression. Iranians still bear responsibility for learning from it. In that sense, January was not only a verdict on the regime. It was also a lesson for the opposition about the kind of state it is confronting and the kind of preparation required to defeat it.
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Constance
Constance@Constan63413921·
Constance@Constan63413921

Vice President Vance is right. President Trump should not be installing Ghalibaf or any other regime insider. The United States has repeatedly searched for a “manageable Iranian” rather than trying to understand Iranian society itself. In 1979, many Western policymakers convinced themselves that Khomeini could be a stabilizing figure who would prevent chaos and protect Western interests. Today, some analysts make a similar argument about regime insiders who they believe can preserve order while normalizing relations with the West. History suggests that assumption is often wrong. Declassified records show Washington repeatedly sought channels to whichever faction appeared capable of maintaining stability, even when it misunderstood the forces actually driving Iranian politics. But the harder question is what is wrong with us internally? I would argue three things. First, Iran has suffered from a chronic shortage of independent institutions. When institutions are weak, politics becomes a search for saviors, strongmen, clerics, generals, or foreign patrons. The same cycle repeats because power is concentrated in personalities rather than durable national institutions. Historians of the revolution often point to the long-standing gap between state and society as a recurring problem in modern Iranian history. Second, Iranians have repeatedly outsourced hope. One generation hoped the clergy would save Iran. Another hoped reformists would save Iran. Others hoped foreign powers would save Iran. The result is that political energy often gets invested in factions and personalities. We need to focus on personal responsibility. Third, Iran’s opposition movement is still in its infancy. Only recently has it coalesced around a nationally recognized leader in Reza Pahlavi, whose support became visible as millions of Iranians took to the streets chanting his name. Building a serious political movement takes time. Institutions, fundraising networks, communications infrastructure, leadership cadres, and organizational capacity do not emerge overnight—especially under a system that has spent decades imprisoning, exiling, and killing its opponents. From Washington’s perspective, this creates a recurring temptation: deal with the people who already control the guns, bureaucracy, intelligence services, and money. Whether that calculation is morally right or strategically wise is another question. The tragedy is that Iran’s modern history is full of moments where foreign governments misread Iran, but it is also full of moments where Iranian elites misread Iran. In 1979, many “secular” intellectuals believed they could ride Khomeini’s movement and control it afterward. They were wrong. Today, anyone who believes this security oligarchy will simply transform itself into a democratic order that respects the rule of law, abides by international norms, and becomes a responsible member of the international community is seriously mistaken. America often gets Iran wrong because it prioritizes stability over understanding. One of Iran’s enduring challenges has been the failure to build independent institutions capable of preventing power from being monopolized by a deeply entrenched, centuries-old Shi’a clerical power structure. The Shah recognized this problem and attempted to build modern state institutions that could serve as a counterweight to traditional clerical authority, but he was only partially successful and simply did not have enough time. The clerical establishment retained deep social, financial, and organizational roots that ultimately enabled it to reassert itself and capture the state after 1979. When these two structural realities collide—-foreign powers repeatedly misreading Iran while Iranians are denied the opportunity, often through brutal repression and mass violence, to build institutions capable of constraining a deeply entrenched clerical power structure, it is the Iranian people who ultimately pay the price.

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Corey Walker 🇺🇸
Corey Walker 🇺🇸@CoreyWriting·
This actually ended up being correct.
Corey Walker 🇺🇸 tweet media
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@AmirTaheri4 امیدوارم این غبارها/آشفته‌گویی‌ها صرفا از ناحیه کبر سن باشد. میدان جنگ ما، ۱۸-۱۹ دی بود؛ بدن‌های بی‌دفاع ما، هدف گلوله‌های سپاه/بسیج. صحنه نبرد ما آن شبی بود که از کشته‌های ما پشته ساختند و جوی‌های تهران و رشت و ایلام و اصفهان و فارس از خون جوانان ما لبریز شد. ۲/۵
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@AmirTaheri4 به ندای کاروان رنج گوش سپارید. اگر غرض و مرضی در کار نیست—که قاعدتا نباید باشد—این تریبون‌های مسموم را رها و خود را بازنشسته کنید. جای جلادان و جاویدنامان وطن در تاریخ پررنج‌ ایران عوض‌شدنی نیست. خون بر زمین‌ریخته هم‌وطنان من و شما، پاسخی به تمامی این توجیهات است. ۴/۵
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@AmirTaheri4 سردارانی که دیروز در فاضلاب‌ تهران و ویلای شمال‌شرق پنهان بودند و امروز در شرف امضای معامله فساد و دوام با همان متجاوز خارجی‌، با ما «جوان‌مردانه» نجنگیدند که بابت ترور رختخوابی‌شان، یانکی‌اسرائیلی را شماتت کنیم! مغالطات به‌وفور شنیده‌ام. این مغلطه اما مضحک‌تر از همه‌ بود. ۳/۵
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Traci Thompson
Traci Thompson@TraciThompson70·
I’m watching Rubio as he stands behind Trump at the G7. Resign @SecRubio. We’ll support you.
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@Minooli2162 Even if he stays on through midterm—to give Republicans the win—the day the results are called, he owes the country a clean break: say plainly that the deal with the terror regime is a catastrophe, and resign over it. Then go into 2028 not as a candidate, but as the candidate.
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Ali D F
Ali D F@Minooli2162·
مارکو روبیو مردی به مراتب شجاع‌تر و بزرگ‌تر از ترامپ یا ونس است. او منطقی‌ترین و شریف‌ترین رهبر در این دولت و در کل واشنگتن به شمار می‌رود و هرگز آمریکایی‌ها، اسرائیلی‌ها و ایرانی‌ها را ناامید نخواهد کرد. ما شما را بسیار تحسین می‌کنیم، آقای روبیو. شما شایسته ریاست‌جمهوری هستید. @marcorubio روبیو ۲۰۲۸! #جاویدشاه #KingRezaPahlavi‌ForIran #FinishTheJob
Nicholas Lissack@NicholasLissack

Marco Rubio is more of a man than Trump or Vance will ever be. He is the most sensible and honourable leader in this administration and in Washington, and he will never let down Americans, Israelis, or Iranians. We love you, Marco. You should be President. Rubio 2028!

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Fardin@SAVTLib·
@Constan63413921 So the constraint is no longer whether Iranians can organize. January proved they can CONSOLIDATE, and that the state will pay any price in blood to stop them. The lever is the coercive apparatus itself—its guns, its CASH. Not a negotiated exit with its “pragmatists.”
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Fardin
Fardin@SAVTLib·
@Constan63413921 Which is why “personal responsibility” may be the wrong diagnosis. The vacuum is manufactured. By prison, by exile, and now by mass graves. The cure for an engineered absence of organization is ORGANIZATION. Atomization is the regime’s strategy, not a national flaw. 6/7
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