As President Trump continues his America First foreign policy agenda in his second term, foreign policy experts are floating a bold idea that could reshape the Middle East: supporting the return of Iran's exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi to power.
Speaking on "The Alex Marlow Show," Foreign Desk founder Lisa Daftari made waves by suggesting that backing Pahlavi isn't just possible—it's practical. "I don't think it's far-fetched," Daftari explained. "It's somebody who understands American policy. It's somebody who would be a friendly ally to the United States."
This isn't some pie-in-the-sky fantasy, Patriots. With Iran's radical Islamic regime crumbling under the weight of sanctions, internal protests, and regional isolation, the timing couldn't be better for a dramatic shift in U.S. policy toward the rogue nation.
Trump's Iran Strategy Takes Shape
Remember, this is the same Trump administration that took out terrorist mastermind Qasem Soleimani and withdrew from Obama's disastrous Iran nuclear deal. Now, with key allies like Secretary of State Marco Rubio and National Security Advisor Mike Waltz in place, Trump has the team to execute bold moves that put America's interests first.
"The Iranian people deserve better than the murderous mullahs who have terrorized them for decades," said one administration source familiar with Middle East policy discussions.
Unlike the Biden regime's weakness that emboldened Iran's proxy wars across the region, Trump's maximum pressure campaign has left the ayatollahs desperate and vulnerable. Iranian citizens have repeatedly risen up against their oppressive government, only to be brutally suppressed while the world watched.
Crown Prince Pahlavi, son of the last Shah of Iran, has spent decades advocating for democracy and human rights from exile. Unlike the current regime that chants "Death to America," Pahlavi represents a pro-Western alternative that could transform Iran from America's enemy into a strategic ally.
With Trump's proven track record of thinking outside the box—from the Abraham Accords to moving our embassy to Jerusalem—supporting regime change in Iran through democratic opposition forces isn't just possible, it's exactly the kind of bold leadership America needs.
The question isn't whether Trump has the courage to back such a move. The question is: are we finally ready to finish what the Iranian people started and free them from radical Islamic tyranny?
