After the assassination of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Donald Trump and the CIA, in their eagerness to believe that they can create a new "Delcy" in Iran. The CIA's Plan B, which is being discussed more vigorously, is to play the card of the only candidate still alive, leader Reza Pahlavi, the Shah's eldest son, a self-proclaimed figure who is working with Senator Lindsey Graham (RSC), whom he affectionately nicknamed “Uncle Lindsey,” to present his plans to a bipartisan group in the Senate in order to propose himself as Khamenei's successor.
Although the son of the slain supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, has emerged as the favorite, Trump criticized him as “incompetent” in his interview with Politico:
Speaking to press in the Oval Office on Tuesday, Trump said that he preferred to work with “somebody from within” the current regime — though he admitted that the number of options was dwindling as “most of the people we had in mind are dead.”
The president also weighed in on the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s son, who is in contention to be the new supreme leader saying, “Now they’re looking at the son. The reason the father wouldn’t give it to the son is they say he’s incompetent.”
Trump emphasized the U.S. is going to “work with them to help them make the proper choice” because he wants to avoid having a head of Iran “that’s going to lead to having to do this again in another 10 years.”
POLITICO
Trump had recognized Pahlavi as a “very good person,” but had downplayed the possibility of him assuming leadership of Iran, saying he preferred a figure within the country to take control. “Some people like him (Pahlavi), and we haven't been thinking too much about that,” Trump said, adding, “It seems to me that someone from within might be more appropriate.”
The week
In this sense, Pahlavi would be playing the role of
Corina Machado. In fact, the Nobel Prize-winning opposition leader emphasized that
“a free Iran and Venezuela are more than just goals; they are essential conditions for a secure and democratic world.”
Whoever is appointed
“will have no legitimacy and will be seen as an accomplice to the bloody history of this regime and its criminal leaders,” declared the son of the last Shah.
The Iranian people have called on me to lead the transition after the regime is gone. I have accepted that responsibility. Part of their great mandate to me is to return our nation and our foreign relations to normalcy. I will do exactly that.
My commitment is to ensure the transition is orderly, the country is stabilized, and Iranians determine their future through the ballot box. We will not repeat the mistakes of past transitions. We will avoid de-Baathification scenarios and maintain as many bureaucrats and public servants in the transition as possible.
Iranians have made their choice — at an enormous price. Now I ask our friends in the Arab world to join us. To prepare to recognize and engage our transitional government.
This connotes the way, or rather the formula, in which Israel and the United States shape their wars with lies, with continuous repetitions and different puppets, a formula with little imagination, designed specifically to show the people that there is not much choice and that this is how things are.
What can be said, It is no different from democratic political configurations or repressive judicial apparatuses that last for decades under regimes such as that of the ayatollahs. It is more than likely that with the eventual rise of the Iranian candidate to replace Khamenei,
Mohnseine Ejei, the tension of war would increase exponentially, as he is a judicial executor who has strengthened the state regime based on security operations, which would leave the clerical revolutionary model in the background, that is, a hardening of the regime.
This illegal and propagandistic war, fought in the interests of a few, has an unacceptable economic, energy, and human cost for the entire planet.
Iran's exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi has said that he accepts the responsibility to lead the country's transition after the current regime, promising orderly change and a return to normalcy
www.theweek.in
The week
When the war with Iran officially began on Saturday, I annoyed quite a few people by replying to James Delingpole on twtter with this comment: I stand by it. In fact I can amplify it. There’s…
off-guardian.org