DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — He has been in exile for nearly 50 years. His father — Iran's shah — was so widely hated that millions took to the streets in 1979, forcing him from power. Nevertheless, Iran's Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi is trying to position himself as a player in his country's future.
Pahlavi successfully spurred protesters onto the streets Thursday night in a massive escalation of the protests sweeping Iran. Initially sparked by the Islamic Republic's ailing economy, the demonstrations have become a serious challenge to its theocracy, battered by years of nationwide protests and a 12-day war in June launched by Israel that saw the U.S. bomb nuclear enrichment sites.
What is unknown is how much real support the 65-year-old Pahlavi, who is in exile in the U.S., has in his homeland. Do protesters want a return of the Peacock Throne, as his father's reign was known? Or are the protesters just looking for anything that is not Iran's Shiite theocracy?
Pahlavi issued calls, rebroadcast by Farsi-language satellite news channels and websites abroad, for Iranians to return to the streets Friday night.
''Over the past decade, Iran's protest movement and dissident community has been increasingly nationalist in tone and tenor,'' said Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert with the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which faces sanctions from Tehran.
''The more the Islamic Republic has failed, the more it has emboldened its antithesis. ... The success of the crown prince and his team has been in drawing a sharp contrast between the normalcy of what was and the promise of what could be, versus the nightmare and present predicament that is the reality for so many Iranians.''
Pahlavi's profile rose again during President Donald Trump's first term. Still, Trump and other world leaders have been hesitant to embrace him, given the many cautionary tales in the Middle East and elsewhere of Western governments putting their faith in exiles long estranged from their homelands.
Iranian state media, which for years mocked Pahlavi as being out of touch and corrupt, blamed ''monarchist terrorist elements'' for the demonstrations Thursday night during which vehicles were burned and police kiosks attacked.