A video clip highlighted on Sunday by U.N. Watch, a non-governmental organization based in Switzerland, showed students at Iran’s Tehran University refusing to trample on American and Israeli flags as directed by agents of the Basij, a paramilitary force controlled by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
In the video, only a handful of Iranian regime agents were willing to walk on the flags. The students responded by heckling them as “dishonorable” and “shameless.”
Other video clips of the incident illustrated how much care the students took to avoid stepping on the flags:
President Donald Trump approvingly commented on the trend Monday morning, hailing it as a sign of “big progress” in Iran:
Some of the responses to Trump’s tweet from Iranians indicated that many of them have always been uncomfortable with disrespecting the flags of other countries and resented the regime for forcing them to deface American and Israeli flags. The rulers of Tehran have placed American flags on the ground in front of building entrances for many years to get their people accustomed to walking on the flag.
“These courageous Iranian students who refuse to trample the U.S. and Israeli flags represent the hope for a better Middle East. Engage with and promote them instead of their oppressors, and maybe Iran-backed wars and terror across the region will end,” UN Watch executive director Hillel Neuer said of the video posted by his organization.
H.A. Heller of the London-based Royal United Services Institute told NBC News he doubted the Iranians were signaling any great affection or respect for the United States or Israel by refusing to step on the flags. Instead, he said it was their way of telling the regime they “aren’t interested in deflection” from their government’s culpability for shooting down a Ukrainian passenger jet last week.
This would not explain why the Iranian people are enthusiastically defacing and destroying photos of slain Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Quds Force leader Qasem Soleimani, hailed by U.S. media as a “revered military leader” whose death in a U.S. airstrike was certain to unite Iranians in shared hatred of America:
“Another video shows Iranians tearing down a Soleimani poster. You know why? 78 people killed in a stampede at his funeral, 178 people killed in exacting his revenge by downing the Ukrainian plane, and 1500 killed by the IRGC in protests. People are furious when you call him a hero,” one Iranian said online.