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پترایوس: ترامپ ممکن است رهبری رژیم اصلاح‌شده ایران را بپذیرد

دیوید پترایوس، رئیس پیشین سیا، به یورونیوز گفت ممکن است چهره ای میانه‌روتر ظهور کند که «بخواهد مستقیم حرکت کند»، اما این «قطع رابطه ای چشمگیر» با وضعیت کنونی خواهد بود.

لب بیشتر : http://parsi.euronews.com/2026/03/03/trump-could-accept-leadership-from-reformed-iran-regime-former-cia-chief-petraeus-says

مشترک شوید: یورونیوز به یازده زبان دیگر در دسترس شماست

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00:08Joining me now to discuss the escalating conflict in the Middle East is the former CIA director
00:13and retired U.S. Army General David Petraeus. General, thank you so much for joining us here
00:19on Euronews. Good to be with you. Now, let me start by asking you, given what you've seen
00:24over the past three days in terms of the U.S.-Israeli military attacks against Iran,
00:32what is President Trump's endgame here, and is he fulfilling his objectives so far?
00:38Well, there's a number of objectives for the military campaign. Among those are certainly
00:44degrading the missile capabilities that Iran has been trying to reconstitute, which pose such a
00:51threat to the region and specifically to Israel, and we've seen that manifest itself tragically.
00:58In addition, it is to ensure that any leftover nuclear capability is destroyed. And we heard
01:06from the International Atomic Energy Agency just a few days ago that there may be a stockpile of 60%
01:13rich uranium in tunnels under Isfahan, that facility, which was struck during the 12-day air campaign,
01:21but where that might have survived. And then, of course, there's the effort to dramatically
01:27degrade the capabilities of the regime, of the regime forces, the regime leaders. And there have
01:34been numerous very important individuals who have been killed by precision. In this regard, then the
01:40effort continues and is now expanding to go after headquarters, storage sites, other weapons facilities,
01:51even the manufacturing facilities for the short and long-range missiles, drone launch points, and even the
01:58ships of Iran as well. Whether what the President first laid out in his very first speech, which suggested
02:06regime change as one of the options, suggested regime change as one of the options. And that's the real
02:11question, I think. He has since sought to focus at a little bit on the U.S. and Israel creating
02:20the conditions
02:20for regime change that would be capitalized upon by the Iranian people. The challenge there, of course,
02:30is that most of the times that you have a situation like this, the guys with the most guns and
02:38the most
02:38willingness to be brutal prevail. And in this situation, of course, the Iranian regime forces,
02:46which total nearly a million when you add them all up, they are armed. They are brutal. They've shown
02:53that repeatedly over many decades, not to mention just the last two months when they put down the
02:59enormous demonstrations by killing probably tens of thousands of citizens and imprisoning
03:07tens of thousands more. So the question is, is there someone who can break apart from that,
03:13who has real capability, real weapons with large numbers and leadership capacity that can mobilize the
03:20people and together take on the regime? And unfortunately, I don't think that is the base case right now.
03:28You mentioned that's not the case right now because we do know that although the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
03:33has been killed, the Islamic regime is very much still on its feet. There is an interim leadership
03:41council and vows to appoint another supreme leader quite swiftly. Do you mean to say that toppling the
03:49regime will not be possible through this military intervention that will need to come from within,
03:55or do you think that this will help create the conditions for a toppling of the regime from within
04:00Iran? Well, with the president and also then our secretary of defense and also chairman of the joint
04:05chiefs, what they have noted is that this will create the conditions that could be capitalized on if there
04:12is the kind of development that I have outlined. But I'm not sure that that is the base case at
04:18this point.
04:19Again, you have nearly a million men under arms who have a demonstrated capacity to be brutal and kill
04:28people if they demonstrate against them. Do you think we could potentially see a situation similar to
04:33what we saw in Venezuela where the head, the figurehead of the regime is removed, but we potentially see a
04:41slightly softened, more moderate version of that same regime come into force? Is that something
04:47President Donald Trump could contemplate accepting? I think the answer to that is yes. And I think that
04:54it is possible. It's conceivable. I don't know that it is the most likely outcome. Keep in mind that,
05:01as you noted, there is an interim council right now led by the president, the senior judicial official,
05:06and a cleric that are taking the place of the supreme leader. The assembly of experts will gather
05:13the conclave, if you will, that will select the next supreme leader. In the past, there's only been
05:20one case of that in the past. But generally, as you look at the candidates for this, they tend to
05:26be
05:27pretty hard line ideologues, similar to the most recent supreme leader. And you've seen already
05:35defiance by the foreign minister. He's the one person who has spoken publicly on this.
05:41So again, I think we have to be cautious about our hopes that a pragmatic figure could emerge.
05:46It's by no means impossible. Kareem Sajipour, the great Iranian analyst here in the United States,
05:52has noted that it used to be that the regime was comprised of 80% true believers, true ideologues,
05:59hardliners, and 20% charlatans are called. They're just basically opportunists trying to get what they
06:06can by being part of the regime. But now it's 20% hardliners and 80% charlatans. So the possibility
06:14is there, certainly, that someone could emerge who might say, look, Mr. President, you're right.
06:21What the nuclear program and the arming of proxies and our killing of Americans and Arabs and Israelis
06:28has brought us is ruin. And we see the error of our ways and we want to sail straight. We
06:35want to get
06:35along with our neighbors and those in the region and with you. And we're willing to give up our
06:42aspirations in all these cases. That would obviously be a very dramatic departure.
06:47In terms of what we could expect to see next in terms of the joint U.S.-Israeli campaign in Iran,
06:55do you think that this could extend into a prolonged war? We saw the war secretary,
07:02Pete Hegseth, today refusing to rule out potentially troops on the ground. Do you think
07:08that this could evolve into something more dangerous, more spiraling than the U.S. maybe originally intended?
07:14No, I think the president and the secretary and others have been very clear that we're not going
07:19to put boots on the ground. And frankly, I think that as the days go by, while noting that there
07:25is
07:25still a very real possibility of additional casualties, again, those in host nations,
07:30those in Israel, those of American forces and others, that over time, there will be a degradation of
07:36the ability of Iran to retaliate, will continue to reduce their missile stocks, the launchers,
07:44the short range missiles, and even the drones. So I think they will be hard pressed to maintain even
07:51remotely what the pace has been by Iran so far. And there's been so much damage to the command
07:57control facilities and indeed the commanders themselves that this is all quite decentralized now,
08:02but it appears that they plan for this. Yet we are seeing quite a relentless response from Iran.
08:09We've seen unmanned vehicles, drones flying towards the EU island state of Cyprus, for example.
08:16Do you think they've been preparing for this, that the response is intentionally relentless
08:23in order to scare off the U.S.? Because we are seeing talk of...
08:27Well, they're not going to scare off the U.S., so put that aside. They have retaliated, as I noted,
08:33and I do think that they did prepare for the eventuality that there may not be central command
08:38and control, and they have a deck of targets that they are executing. We'll see if that pattern
08:44continues. It's premature to assess based on that. But no, our focus is on what they have that they can
08:53use to retaliate. We are seeing, General, also European nations talking about potentially supporting
09:00the defensive capacities of the U.S., including the U.K. Do you think President Trump is expecting
09:07the support of its European allies here and is counting on them to support this operation in some way?
09:14I think the plan that was conceived was essentially the U.S. and Israel, and then the host nations
09:20in the region, whose air and ballistic missile defenses are always integrated into those of
09:26the U.S. and Israel. I don't think there was an assumption made that the Europeans would join in.
09:32It would have been good if they had, at least for defensive purposes from the very beginning,
09:38because it's very clear, it should have been clear at the outset that Iran is not going to limit its
09:43targets to just U.S. bases, Israel and so forth. It's going after civilian targets, airfields,
09:51ports and so forth in the Gulf states and beyond and reaching as far as Cyprus, as you noted.
09:59So I think from a purely defensive standpoint, that would have been wise from the beginning.
10:04The question now is whether or not they go on the offensive and start contributing to taking down
10:10the retaliatory capabilities of the U.S. and Israel.
10:14Is that something that you can foresee happening? European nations joining in a more offensive
10:19capacity? My understanding is that that has been discussed. I don't know that I'd predict what the
10:24outcome would be, but the fact that it's just being discussed, I think, indicates that it's certainly a
10:29possibility. Very briefly, just to close off. Do you believe that the U.S. has the lessons learned from
10:36its experience in Iraq in mind here when we know that Saddam Hussein's government and administration
10:42was completely wiped out by the U.S., leaving the country essentially not functioning? Is that something
10:50you feel that the U.S. administration is bearing in mind as it continues with this campaign?
10:54Well, very much so. I think they've been explicitly clear about that. I'd just also note that it was not
11:01just that the regime was toppled, is that we then took some catastrophically bad decisions. I was part
11:07of the invasion force, and we were cut off at the knees when the decision was made to fire the
11:12entire
11:12Iraqi military without telling them how we were going to enable them to provide for themselves and
11:18their families. And then when we fired the entire Ba'ath Party down to level four, the level at which
11:24was tens of thousands of bureaucrats, many Western educated, that we needed and were already using
11:31to help us in a country that we didn't sufficiently understand. So we could have very quickly, I think,
11:39brought back major elements of it and had sort of a Venezuela light, if you will, because the top
11:46levels clearly were gone or in the deck of cards to be pursued.
11:50Okay. General, thank you so much for your time and for joining us on U.S. Good to be with
11:54you. Thank you.
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