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Ayatollah Under Siege as Iranian Government Braces for Direct Challenges to Power

by admin477351
Picture credit: www.picryl.com

The presence of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Mediterranean has placed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the most precarious position of his long tenure. For the first time, U.S. military options are being explicitly framed as a means to “remove the supreme leader from power.” This direct threat to the clerical leadership marks a departure from decades of policy focused on containment or nuclear non-proliferation, signaling a new era of “regime-change” rhetoric from the Trump administration.
Khamenei’s advisors are divided on the best path forward. While some, like Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, call for a total withdrawal from the negotiating table, others fear that such defiance will only hasten a military strike. The Iranian government is bracing for an attack that targets the very symbols of the Islamic Republic, aiming to embolden the millions of protesters who have already sacrificed thousands of lives in the current uprising.
The internal crackdown has been brutal, with unverified reports of fatalities reaching as high as 17,000. This level of violence has alienated even those Iranians who are traditionally wary of Western intervention. The regime’s tactic of charging “ransoms” for the bodies of the dead has further eroded any remaining moral authority, leaving the leadership to rely almost entirely on the threat of the Revolutionary Guards to maintain order.
Washington, however, is also dealing with internal divisions. The U.S. administration is debating the logistics of a post-Khamenei Iran, fearing that a sudden power vacuum in a nation of 90 million could lead to a regional catastrophe. President Trump has reportedly sought a “detailed battle plan” that ensures the protection of Israel from the inevitable Iranian reprisals, which could include long-range missile strikes across the Levant.
As the carrier group holds its position, the Supreme Leader faces a grim reality: his domestic support is cratering, his economy is in a 60% inflation death spiral, and the most powerful navy in the world is parked on his doorstep. The Iranian government is bracing for a strike that could end forty-seven years of clerical rule, and for the first time, they may not have the means to stop it.

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