Share this @internewscast.com
Where’s the Opposition in Iran to Oust Regime?
David Asman and Jonathan Schanzer dissect the ongoing U.S. military offensive in Iran, known as Operation Epic Fury, during which CENTCOM claims to have hit over 10,000 targets. They delve into the substantial impact on Iran’s regime leadership and the unexpected hesitance of European allies to fully endorse President Trump’s assertive tactics, attributing this to historical diplomatic tensions and potential economic repercussions. The discussion also highlights the difficulties faced by Iran’s internal opposition amid severe human rights violations.
EXCLUSIVE: Amidst the chaos of war, oppression, and near-total internet censorship in Iran, the opposition movement struggles to rally around a unifying leader. Meanwhile, the husband of imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize recipient and Iranian human rights advocate, Narges Mohammadi, reports that although she has suffered physically from a harsh arrest and beating, her political spirit remains unbroken.
“Narges is a steadfast advocate for human rights and civil society,” her husband, Taghi Rahmani, shared with Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview from his place of exile in Europe. “She is a bold and active force in mobilizing society and shaping civil institutions.”
As Iran’s leadership grapples with the consequences of U.S. and Israeli attacks, a tenuous ceasefire, economic turmoil, and heightened repression, Mohammadi’s name gains prominence. She emerges not only as an emblem of global resistance but also as one of the few opposition figures whose credibility stems from enduring hardships within the system, rather than being associated with exile, dynastic lineage, or factional politics.
Imprisoned while receiving the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize, Mohammadi has long been a leading figure in women’s and human rights advocacy in Iran.
Originally an engineer and later a journalist, she served as vice president of the Defenders of Human Rights Center, an organization established by fellow Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi. Mohammadi gained international recognition for her opposition to compulsory hijab laws, solitary confinement, prisoner mistreatment, and the death penalty.

Narges Mohammadi, Iranian human rights activist and vice president of the Defenders of Human Rights Center, poses for a portrait in an undated photo. (Reuters)
Now, according to her husband, her condition has worsened dramatically.
“Narges is currently detained in Zanjan prison,” he said. “She was arrested in Mashhad during the month of Dey (around January) and was severely beaten. During her arrest, she received numerous blows, resulting in severe injuries to her chest, head, body and lungs.”
Rahmani said prison medical authorities determined she should be transferred for treatment under her own physician’s supervision in Iran, but that Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence is refusing the transfer and insisting she remain in Zanjan.
“Spiritually and mentally, Narges remains steadfast,” he said. “She believes the Islamic Republic is not desirable for the Iranian people, and advocates for a system based on freedom, human rights and open relations with the world. Physically, however, she has sustained severe trauma and urgently requires medical attention.”
Rahmani said the last time he spoke with his wife was the night before she left for Mashhad, Iran, where she was later arrested.

The Nobel banquet at the Grand Hotel in Oslo on Sunday, in connection with the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize 2023. Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi is imprisoned in Iran and is therefore represented by her children Ali and Kiana Rahmani and her spouse Taghi Rahmani, in Oslo, Norway Dec. 10, 2023. (NTB/Rodrigo Freitas via Reuters)
His account offers a rare inside look into the life of one of Iran’s most internationally recognized dissidents at a moment when questions over who could realistically lead opposition to the regime are intensifying.
“We hear a great deal about the Iranian opposition, yet media in the free world often lack a precise definition and a full understanding of what the Iranian opposition actually is,” Iranian anti-regime activist Maryam Shariatmadari told Fox News Digital.
Shariatmadari, one of the most recognizable faces of Iran’s “Girls of Revolution Street” movement, a wave of anti-regime protests that began in 2017 when Iranian women publicly removed their hijabs and stood in defiance of the country’s mandatory veiling laws, was sentenced to prison in 2018 after publicly removing her hijab in protest.

Ali Rahmani, son of imprisoned Iranian human rights activist Narges Mohammadi, speaks after receiving the Nobel Peace Prize 2023 on her behalf at Oslo City Hall in Norway. (Fredrik Varfjell/NTB)
According to Shariatmadari, one camp consists of Iranians who view the 1979 Islamic Revolution itself as the foundational national disaster, believing Iran’s trajectory was derailed when the Shah fell. The second includes former revolutionaries, reformists, communist factions and groups such as the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), many of whom emerged from or once supported the revolutionary system before later opposing it.
“The first group considers the 1979 revolution a disaster and seeks a return to Iran’s previous path,” she said, while the second includes “those who participated in the revolution but later became opposition figures after being excluded from power.”
That distinction, she argues, helps explain why Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s last shah, remains uniquely recognizable among many anti-regime Iranians despite spending decades outside the country.
Lisa Daftari, foreign policy analyst and editor-in-chief of The Foreign Desk news platform, told Fox News Digital, “Inside Iran, Pahlavi remains one of the only opposition figures with broad name recognition, and his message clearly resonated during the January protests, which is why his name still carries weight for many Iranians both inside the country and in the diaspora.”
Pahlavi himself sharpened that message Friday after a series of European appearances, accusing both European politicians and journalists of ignoring the scale of Iranian suffering.
“I spent the past several weeks traveling across Europe, speaking to members of parliaments, governments, and the press,” Pahlavi said in a video statement on his official X account. “My visit had one objective: to give a voice to the millions of Iranians held hostage by the Islamic Republic … But I can now say with confidence that silencing, that censorship is not just happening at the hands of the regime in Iran, but by the international and particularly the European media.”

Iran’s Reza Pahlavi, exiled son of Shah Reza Pahlavi, is protected by security after he was attacked with a red fluid, following a news conference in Berlin, Germany, April 23, 2026. (Markus Schreiber/The Associated Press )
He went on to condemn what he described as European indifference to the mass killing of protesters and political executions, saying that across two press conferences in Stockholm and Berlin attended by more than 150 journalists, “not a single one” asked about the tens of thousands he says were killed during January’s crackdown or the political prisoners facing execution.
“Whether or not Europe stands with us … I will fight for my people and my country,” Pahlavi said. “We will fight until Iran is free.”
Still, even some supporters acknowledge why the administration has hesitated to openly embrace him as a transitional figure.
Daftari warned that overt Western backing could backfire by making him appear externally imposed rather than domestically legitimized.
“The Trump administration’s decision not to more openly embrace him as a transitional figure likely reflects several factors: a deep wariness of making regime change the explicit end goal or appearing to engineer it after Iraq and Afghanistan, concern that overt U.S. backing could put an even bigger target on his back and a strategy that is currently focused less on anointing a successor and more on degrading the regime’s capacity to threaten its own people, the region and the United States,” she said.
If Pahlavi represents dynastic memory and explicit regime-change politics, Mohammadi represents something profoundly different.

Reza Pahlavi, son of Iran’s former Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, speaks during a press conference in Paris June 23, 2025. (Thomas Padilla/AP)
Mohammadi’s place within that landscape is distinct due to her unique kind of legitimacy at a time when many Iranians are searching not only for opposition to the regime, but for a figure who embodies endurance under it.
For now, however, Rahmani warns that Iran’s domestic conditions may make any mass uprising extraordinarily difficult.
“As you know, war serves as an excuse to suppress domestic forces within a country,” he said. “This war has now increased the intensity of the regime’s actions against the opposition.”
He argued that despite internal divisions, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has effectively consolidated power, militarized the streets and severely weakened civil society.
“The Islamic Republic has practically taken control of the streets during wartime and has severely weakened Iran’s civil society, which is the guarantor of democracy. In our opinion, this war, under these conditions, is not to the benefit of Iran, nor to the benefit of the Iranian people.”

A picture of Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi on the wall of the Grand Hotel in central Oslo before the Nobel banquet, in connection with the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize 2023, in Oslo, Norway, Dec. 10, 2023. (NTB/Javad Parsa via Reuters)
That may be the defining challenge for Iran’s opposition today: not simply finding a leader, but surviving long enough under extraordinary repression for one to emerge.
Whether Mohammadi can become that figure remains uncertain. But from prison, her husband says, she has not stopped believing Iran’s future can be different.
The Iranian mission to the United Nations did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.