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Saturday, 30 August 2025
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The Iranian regime is collapsing... Larijani in Iraq and Lebanon to avert the fall
Mohammed Al-Moussawi

He wanted to be a player sharing influence in the region alongside other Western tools, as the West had deceived him; but he realized—too late—that he was only a criminal tool in the hands of the West. Today, the mullah regime is crumbling after receiving painful blows from those who founded, supported, and maintained its existence to tell it: Stay put and do not exceed the prescribed scenario. We struck you but did not kill you, yet we may have to kill you and turn you into a cursed historical memory. Those who brought you and empowered you in Iran, Iraq, and the region can bring others. We brought your father then dismissed him, installed you, then the people ousted you, and we installed you again with your turbans. It was not difficult for us to humiliate and crush you; toppling and dragging you through the streets is the easiest of historical events. This was the underlying message behind the attack on the Damascus consulate, the killing of Haniyah, Nasrallah, and Saura, the explosion at the port, targeting military and security leaders, injuring Bazhkian, and the blows that destroyed a large part of the mullahs’ military capabilities and reactors. Today, Rouhani moves to prepare for what might happen in the future.

After some of us mistakenly thought that Larijani and others around the Supreme Leader had been sidelined from the top of power in Iran, Khamenei confirms that the regime has tools, which he modifies and rearranges according to circumstances and the needs of the situation. He appoints Ali Larijani as head of the Iranian Supreme National Security Council, with his first task being to reaffirm loyalty and allegiance among the power brokers in Iraq, and to subjugate the weak Lebanon, which lately shows great resolve—may it continue in its steadfastness.

Since ascending on the corpses of martyrs and stripping the gains of the Iranian national revolution, the regime has not been a national system belonging to Iran nor representing all its components. It is not a true Islamic regime, Shiite or Sunni; rather, it is a Western project that has harmed Islam itself and destroyed the youth of Iran who led the February 1979 revolution, martyred them at the fronts against Iraq, in the hangmen’s chambers, in prison tunnels, and forced many into exile. There’s nothing left threatening its existence except those who refused the regime altogether—those who did not participate in its army, guards, or any armed forces, choosing death in prison or bitter exile over allegiance to the regime and its founder.

The plan to completely destroy Iraq was part of a Western scheme to destabilize the region and enable the Iranian mullahs. After the 2003 invasion, the West handed Iraq as a gift to Iran’s ruling Guardians, who began dividing life in Iraq as they pleased. The West wrecked Iran when it handed it over to a handful of tyrants cloaked in religion. Though unable to destroy Iraq through war, it did so through sanctions, paving the way for its occupation and subsequent handing over to the evil mullahs, who then weakened Iraq’s opposition—particularly the residents of Ashraf—after they disarmed and promised to protect them according to international treaties. Iranian mullahs carried out massacres and crimes against humanity in Ashraf and Liberty residents through armed gangs loyal to the regime.

The truth about the West, the mullah regime, and the Middle East
They spread drugs in the region, destroyed Iraq and Palestine, sabotaged efforts to resolve the Palestinian issue, enabled Zionists to destroy the Oslo Agreement, and committed genocide against Gaza, displacing and starving its people, occupying Syria and part of Lebanon, and threatening that this is the beginning of establishing the Great State of Zionism. All of this would not have happened without the presence of the regime in Iran. But history has not witnessed an era where scoundrels uphold gratitude and virtue—rather, it records their bloody conflicts over influence and dominance, which is the real truth Iran’s mullahs have realized after decades of cooperation with Zionists. Decades of collaboration that everyone knows, exposed by former British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.

I wonder—are Larijani’s agreements and directives to his agents in Iraq feasible or capable of protecting Iran’s mullahs from collapse if a wave of downfall from Iraq sweeps along the borders extending over 1,200 km? Will not disarming Hezbollah bring the party back to life after Gaza’s destruction, Quds’ subjugation, and Syria’s occupation? I see only attempts from a dying regime that fears its grim fate, which is now clearly before its eyes.

A precise, realistic reading of the events and their outcomes in the Middle East and Iran admits that what has happened and is happening is a natural result of long-term Western planning. According to such a reading, the dark mullah regime in Iran will not remain a factor in the international equation. 

Mohammed Al-Moussawi