Pahlavi’s vision for ‘free Iran’: Israel recognition, no nukes

Courtesy of JNS. Photo credit: Getty Images
Iranian Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi holds a press conference in Paris on June 23, 2025

(JNS) — Exiled crown prince and prominent opposition leader Reza Pahlavi has outlined his vision for a post-Islamist Iran, as nationwide anti-government protests stretch into their third week.

Speaking in English with Farsi subtitles in a four-minute video message published to social media early Jan. 15 Tehran time, the eldest son of the last shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who advocates a secular, democratic post-Islamic Republic system, said that a “free Iran” will abandon its nuclear program and support for terrorism, while normalizing relations with the United States and “immediately” recognizing Israel.

“To all of our friends around the world,” the 65-year-old dissident, who lives in Virginia, began, describing the Islamic Republic as an oppressive regime that has turned Iran into a global symbol of terrorism, extremism and poverty. He contrasted it with what he called the country’s “real” identity as the beautiful, peace-loving and prosperous nation that existed before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, one that will rise again once the clerical regime falls.

Pahlavi then pivoted to outline how a “free Iran” would engage with the world, saying that after the fall of the mullahs, “Iran’s nuclear military program will end” and “support for terrorist groups will cease immediately,” and the country would “work with regional and global partners to confront terrorism, organized crime, drug trafficking and extremist Islamism.”

He said a democratic Iran would “act as a friend and a stabilizing force in the region” and “a responsible partner in global security,” with normalized relations with the United States and immediate recognition of Israel. Tehran would seek to broaden the Abraham Accords into “the ‘Cyrus Accords,’ bringing together a free Iran, Israel and the Arab world,” he added.

Cyrus the Great was the 6th-century BCE founder of the Achaemenid Empire, renowned for his vast conquests, relatively tolerant rule and role in allowing exiled Jews to return to Jerusalem.

Pahlavi also pledged that a post-regime Iran, endowed with major oil and gas reserves, would be “a reliable energy supplier to the free world” with transparent policymaking and predictable prices. It would adopt international standards to combat money laundering and corruption, and would open one of “the world’s last great untapped markets” to trade, investment and innovation so that “opportunity will replace isolation,” he added. Such changes would “benefit the region and the world” and make a free Iran “a force for peace. For prosperity. And for partnership,” the prince said.

Trump casts doubt on Pahlavi’s prospects

President Donald Trump has expressed reservations about whether Iran’s population of over 90 million will embrace Pahlavi as their leader, while saying there is a chance that the ayatollah regime could collapse.

“He seems very nice, but I don’t know how he’d play within his own country,” the U.S. leader told Reuters on Jan. 14. “And we really aren’t up to that point yet.”

The president added that “I don’t know whether or not his country would accept his leadership, and certainly if they would, that would be fine with me.”

Independent surveys suggest that support for restoring the monarchy in Iran is significant but still a minority preference, with around 19%–21% backing some form of monarchy, while larger shares favor a secular republic or are undecided.

The royalist slogan “Javid Shah” (“Long live the Shah”) has been widely heard during the current wave of protests, chanted in cities including Tehran, Kermanshah and Bandar Abbas, and amplified in numerous videos shared from Iran and by diaspora activists.