
Iranian-Americans largely back Trump's bombing and compare the Ayatollah's regime to ‘Hitler and Stalin'
Donald Trump has garnered a wave of support from Iranian- Americans following recent U.S. military strikes in Iran, with many expressing hope that the actions could help topple the rule of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Ahead of an apparent ceasefire deal brokered by the president on Tuesday morning between Tehran and Tel Aviv, Iranian communities around the U.S. began to express cautious optimism over the attack on key nuclear sites over the weekend.
Simone Derayeh, who grew up in Iran following the Islamic Revolution in the 1980s, is one of nearly 141,000 people of Iranian descent living in Los Angeles.
She said the Iranian people have been 'held hostage' by the nation's Supreme Leader and his theocratic regime.
'The oppression that has been going on is of the likes of Stalin and Hitler,' Derayeh told NBC Las Vegas, referring to the totalitarian rule of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Nazi Germany's Adolf Hitler. 'It is the stuff of storybooks.'
Derayeh claims she is just one voice among many supporting efforts to weaken Khamenei's authoritarian rule, as Trump mused about Making Iran Great Again.
'Many Iranians are actually happy about the Islamic Republic being weakened,' Derayeh said. 'I unfortunately experienced the oppression firsthand through the early '80s, which was some of the toughest times.
'Mass murders, mass executions. Very, very oppressive laws, especially against women and minorities,' she added.
Alireza, an Iranian-American who lives in Washington, D.C., told the Baltimore Sun that the U.S. attack on Iranian nuclear facilities filled him with hope.
He argued that while other leaders stood by as the Iranian people suffered, Trump's strikes sent a clear message: that Iran 'can't do anything and they are weak.'
Reza Rofougaran, a 72-year-old real estate broker in Maryland, emigrated from Tehran shortly after the Pahlavi dynasty was overthrown in 1979.
He told the newspaper that he is '100 percent against the Islamic regime in Iran and hope for a regime change.'
However, Rofougaran himself condemns the attacks on his home country. He said other Iranian-Americans are more in favor of strikes.
'You are not attacking civilians, people. They are attacking the mullahs, the top [Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] commanders and the people in charge,' he said.
Others, Rofougaran said, are 'saddened' by the attacks.
Elham Yaghoubian, a student activist who fled Iran almost three decades ago, supports the attacks, telling CNN that they are 'beneficial' for Iran, the Middle East and the world.
'These infrastructures, roads, factories, buildings, they can rise again, but what we can never recover are the lives of all young men and women we've lost to the brutal regime every time they rise for their basic rights,' she said.
While Yaghoubian acknowledged that most Iranians do not want war, she argued it could bring a positive outcome: the fall of the Iranian regime.
'No negotiation, no appeasement will bring an end this war,' she added. 'Only with removing this regime from Iran will bring peace and prosperity.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
10 minutes ago
- Sky News
Do Israel and Iran know ‘what the f***' they're doing now?
👉Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim on your podcast app👈 In this episode, Richard and Yalda react to US President Donald Trump's "they don't know what the f**k they're doing'' comment on the White House lawn as the shaky Israel-Iran ceasefire comes into effect. Yalda gives Richard her inside scoop on the phone call Trump had with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop him from bombing Iran and further violating the ceasefire. They also ask each other what could come next and answer a question on what regime change would entail in Iran. This episode contains language some will find offensive.


Daily Mail
12 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Fed Chair Jerome Powell sticks it to Trump as he reveals the BIG reason interest rates haven't been cut
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell struck back at President Donald Trump on Tuesday, claiming his sweeping tariff plan is the main reason he has not lowered interest rates. 'Increases in tariffs this year are likely to push up prices and weigh on economic activity,' Powell told members of the House Financial Services Committee. 'For the time being, we are well-positioned to wait to learn more about the likely course of the economy before considering any adjustments to our policy stance,' the Fed chair testified. Powell has served atop the Federal Reserve since 2018 and has long caught the ire of the president, who has recently nicknamed the banker 'Too Late' Powell for not yet lowering the cost of borrowing. 'We should be at least two to three points lower. Would save the USA 800 billion dollars per year, plus,' Trump said in a late-night social media post ripping Powell ahead of his hearing. The president also called on his GOP lieutenants in Congress to pummel Powell for refusing to lower interest rates. 'I hope Congress really works this very dumb, hardheaded person, over. We will be paying for his incompetence for many years to come.' Several Republican lawmakers took Trump's memo and pressed Powell on why the central bank has yet to lower interest rates this year. During a pointed questioning from Rep. Bill Huizenga, R-Mich., Powell continued to reiterate that Trump's tariffs have prompted uncertainty over rising inflation. 'The reason we're not is the forecast by all professional forecasters that I know of on the outside and the Fed do expect a meaningful increase in inflation over the course of this year,' he said. The central bank chairman also conceded that tariffs may not push inflation up to forecasted levels. In that case, the Fed would move to quickly reduce rates, Powell testified. A drastic increase in unemployment could also prompt the bank to lower borrowing costs, he said. 'We could see inflation come in not as strong as we expect,' he said. 'And if that were the case, that would tend to suggest cutting sooner.' Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., slammed the Fed chair for being too late in raising interest rates in 2021 when inflation from COVID-19 began to grip the nation. 'Do you believe we are in a position where we may be able to cut rates in July?' Lawler asked. Powell responded: 'If it turns out that inflation pressures do remain contained, then we will get to a place where we cut rates sooner rather than later... I don't think we need to be in any rush,' he added. The impact of Trump's tariffs are expected to show up in the June inflation report, the Fed chair said. However, the analysis won't be released until July 15. The 19-member Federal Reserve members unanimously voted against changing interest rates last week.


Telegraph
14 minutes ago
- Telegraph
How the ‘most terrifying night' of Israel's war on Iran unfolded
Kamran pulled over on the motorway as he drove towards Tehran with his wife and two children. They were finally returning after days of air strikes pumelled their home city. But their hopes were dashed as news reached them that Donald Trump's ceasefire was already crumbling. 'We packed up at my grandmother's house when we heard the news of the ceasefire and started driving around 5am,' Kamran told The Telegraph. 'We're no longer sure whether to go back or turn around and head north again.' Even before Israel broke the ceasefire on Tuesday morning, pockets of Tehran were smouldering. Residents of the Iranian capital of 10 million people described how bombs rained down all night before the deadline the US president set for the truce. Israeli warplanes struck at least 12 locations in what witnesses described as the most terrifying night of the war. The Telegraph gathered a detailed account of the night's events by speaking to civilians on the messaging apps still permitted by the regime. Journalists are restricted from operating freely in Iran. The attacks began at 2.58am and continued for hours, with explosions rocking central districts and north eastern suburbs as weakened air defence systems activated throughout the night. At about 3am, residents reported old Soviet air defence systems opening up again as multiple explosions were heard in central and north eastern Tehran. 'My building in Ekbatan was constantly shaking,' said Shahla. 'I was shaking the whole night. I must have heard over 100 explosions, big ones. 'I was hugging my daughter, she kept waking up terrified.' Narges, a university student, said the bombs could be heard 'from every direction'. 'They were hitting us in such a way that fire was everywhere – the sky was orange throughout the night,' she added. 'It was so intense and close that I couldn't catch my breath.' Elsewhere in the city, residents described windows shattering and buildings shaking with each impact as the strikes continued until dawn. Previous air strikes over the last week or so had closed in on the city centre, starting on air defence units and spreading to state TV newsrooms, government buildings and even the notorious Evin prison, where dissidents silenced by the regime are locked up. It remains unclear how many people were killed in the latest strikes. The war has gone largely under-reported inside Iran thanks to censorship and the regime's tight control on the media. According to the Human Rights Activists News Agency based in the United States, Israeli strikes had killed at least 387 civilians but that was before Monday night's attacks. 'Banking systems, transportation, communications, and healthcare services have been disrupted,' it reported. 'Citizens are facing shortages of goods, long queues, rationing, and widespread anxiety.' Despite the bombings, and some calls for regime change, the clerics who lead Iran have faced limited dissent. There has been some evidence that citizens have rallied around the flag to a degree. Pro-regime supporters have also come out on the streets to celebrate Iranian attacks on a US military base in Qatar and Israel, although it remains unclear whether the gatherings were encouraged or supported by the regime. The strikes on Tuesday morning extended beyond Tehran's city limits to Karaj where residents reported that buildings had been targeted. Families who had followed distant conflicts through news reports suddenly found themselves potential targets in an active war zone. Tehran province officials said security remained under control despite the attacks. 'No halt has been made in identifying, arresting and chasing unauthorised nationals,' the capital's governor said as bombs were falling. 'Tehran is under security supervision.' Then, suddenly, the strikes stopped. 'Until just an hour ago, the sounds of explosions and firing did not stop,' activist Hossein Ronaghi said in the morning. 'Now the street sweepers are busy cleaning, and the crows and sparrows are both busy singing. Tehran is still beautiful.' The Islamic Republic claimed it had forced Israel into a ceasefire after 12 days of heavy fighting. State television broadcast a statement claiming the Islamic Republic's 'successful resistance' had halted attacks. Regime officials said the war launched by Israel had failed in its goals, and had only galvanised 'unprecedented national unity' in Iran. 'The noble Iranian nation imposed a ceasefire on the enemy' and demonstrated the 'exemplary solidarity of our dear people in defending the homeland', state television reported. By evening, no new bombings were reported. The fragile ceasefire appeared to hold after both sides blamed each other for violations.