Son of ousted shah says ready for Iran transition 'under my leadership'
Iran's former crown prince and now key opposition figure Reza Pahlavi attends a discussion during the 62nd Munich Security Conference (MSC) on February 13, 2026 in Munich, southern Germany. (Alexandra BEIER / AFP)
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The exiled son of Iran's last shah who was ousted by the
1979 revolution, said on Saturday he was ready to lead a transition "as
soon as the Islamic Republic falls".
In a message on his social media channels, US-based Reza
Pahlavi said he had already been working to select individuals both inside and
outside Iran to serve on what he called a "Transitional System".
Pahlavi leads one of several opposition movements based
outside Iran but his prominence grew after January protests against the
clerical system, with some demonstrators calling for a return of the monarchy.
Longstanding supreme leader Ali Khamenei was killed on
February 28 in US-Israeli air strikes but after a fortnight of war the clerical
system remains in place even if his successor, his son Mojtaba, has yet to make
a public appearance.
Pahlavi said that Saeed Ghasseminejad, senior Iran and
financial economics advisor at the US-based think tank Foundation for Defense
of Democracies (FDD), which is staunchly critical of the Islamic republic, had
been leading the process to select members of a transitional body.
"Capable individuals both inside and outside the
country have been identified and evaluated to lead various sections of the
Transitional System," he said
"The Transitional System, under my leadership, will be
ready to assume governance of the country as soon as the Islamic Republic
falls, and in the shortest possible time, establish order, security, freedom,
and the conditions for Iran's prosperity and flourishing," he added.
In a boost to Pahlavi, vast pro-monarchy rallies took place
in February in Munich and several cities in North America in the biggest yet
such show of support.
But he has notably also failed to win recognition from US
President Donald Trump, who has never officially met with Pahlavi and
repeatedly expressed scepticism over his ability to lead Iran.
"They talk about the son of the shah, they talk about
other people, but (he) hasn't been there in many years," Trump said this
week.
Pahlavi was undergoing air force training in the US when his
father, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was ousted and never returned to the country.
Trump has repeatedly referred to Venezuela, where in January
US forces captured president Nicolas Maduro, with Washington now working with
his former deputy Delcy Rodriguez.
But it remains unclear how such a scenario could play out in
Iran.
"I like the idea of internal because it works well, I
think we have proven that so far in Venezuela," Trump said.


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