The Paris Police vs. Human Rights: When Appeasement Crosses the Red Line
A decade of appeasement: Exposing the systemic collapse of policy that has turned the streets of Paris into an extension of Tehran’s suppression machine. Read the dossier. T he summons of Behzad Naziri by the French police is not a "legal procedure." It is a disgrace—a betrayal of the very values France claims to uphold. It is the final stamp of approval on a decade-long policy of appeasement coursing through the corridors of the Quai d'Orsay: Protecting murderers to preserve short-term interests. If you analyze the trajectory of the Iranian regime’s reach into Europe over the last ten years, you will see that this trend has not merely persisted; it has become systemic. Years ago, appeasement was veiled under the mask of "diplomacy." Today, the mask has slipped. By summoning a human rights defender for the "crime" of organizing a peaceful pursuit of justice, the French authorities have effectively become an extension of the Iranian regime's suppr...