Khamenei Dead

2026-02-2819:477978twitter.com

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    • By DivingForGold 2026-02-2820:402 reply

      Aren't these Iranians the same folks that declare religious wars or Jihad's ?

      I would not be surprised if we see increased terrorism against Americans worldwide for the next 100 years . . .

      • By spwa4 2026-02-2823:35

        Do you really want an answer to that? In islamic theology, religious war is a constant state that lasts until everyone is subjugated (muslims and non-muslims, everyone), at which point the islamic messiah will come, the dead will rise, a last war will break out, and the world ends.

        Until then, it's constant war (insofar that jihad means war. But that's not entirely true. Think of it more like "subjugating everyone by any means. Violence if necessary, but preferably just subjugation")

        So no, jihad is not started or stopped. Specific missions are declared (like killing British authors for pointing out obvious contradictions in the quran, like allah having 3 man- and child-killing daughters)

  • By mrtksn 2026-02-2820:086 reply

    So, what does that mean? Is Iran one of those regimes that fall when the leader is killed or is it one of those regimes that they just choose/install someone else and keep going? If it falls, will the democracy kick in or a civil war?

    • By epolanski 2026-02-2820:19

      Where did democracy kicked in in the last two decades after their leaders were assassinated or captured by foreign aggressors though?

      The closest is Iraq, and it's not a functioning democracy but a hybrid regime.

    • By pinewurst 2026-02-2820:123 reply

      Excellent question - my understanding is that previous decapitation attacks were avoided due to the probability that the IRGC would take over as a simple dictatorship. Unclear what's changed now though.

      • By Epa095 2026-02-2820:20

        Given the outcome in Venezuela (and Trumps relationships with dictators in generally), it don't seem like that is something Trump necessarily sees as a bad outcome. As long as the dictatorship trades oil and let some American companies in, they can be as dictatorial as they want.

      • By verdverm 2026-02-2820:20

        There is this new group this year that is into doing regime change, kind of

      • By cogman10 2026-02-2820:251 reply

        My understanding is that the Iranian government is very resilient. The has been a succession plan since the 70s with a broad board of individuals who can choose the next leader.

        Blowback is going to be the biggest issue here. Ali Khamenei wasn't just the leader of Iran, he was well respected for Shia muslims. While not perfectly analogous, it's close to killing the pope.

        Maybe this leads to open revolt which might fully topple to government, that said, I don't think there's a US/Israel endorsed leader or goal for succession here.

        • By pinewurst 2026-02-2820:431 reply

          That's actually not true: Khamenei was a political ayatollah, hardly respected for religious judgment by average Shia.

          • By cogman10 2026-02-2820:571 reply

            It's my understanding that most ayatollahs get that title through political influence. And for Iran specifically, the supreme leader wouldn't have gotten his position without having that religious influence. It's a theocracy.

    • By mullingitover 2026-02-2821:133 reply

      Iran is already a parliamentary democracy, the aspect that’s criticized is the fact that candidates must be approved by their religious council. The Ayatollah didn’t/doesn’t exercise direct executive control over the country, so his removal wouldn’t create an immediate leadership vacuum.

      For as much as the far right in the US likes to criticize Iran, ultimately their only real complaint about their ‘theocracy with democratic characteristics’ is that it isn’t Christian.

      • By goalieca 2026-02-2821:491 reply

        I think you’re out to lunch on what the Iranian government has been doing. They’ve armed Islamic groups all over the Middle East, they armed the Houthis who have been shooting at civilian ships transiting through the straight of Hormuz, they’ve supplied Russia with the drones and arms for the Ukraine invasion, .. and the list goes on and on.

        • By mullingitover 2026-02-2822:071 reply

          Yes, this is all true, but totally irrelevant to the question I was addressing.

          Iran's system of government doesn't really directly relate to their geopolitical strategy. You can have the most awesome democratic system at home and commit absolutely evil atrocities abroad. Just ask Kissinger (or maybe Khamenei can ask him now?).

          • By goalieca 2026-02-2823:13

            I was responding to your criticism of the American right wing only caring about religion. I’m not even American and i don’t follow the news and I’ve come across enough valid complaints about the regime that any one of any party would agree with.

      • By _DeadFred_ 2026-02-2822:10

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supreme_Leader_of_Iran

        "is the de facto head of state and the highest political and religious authority of Iran (above the president). The armed forces, judiciary, state radio and television, and other key government organizations such as the Guardian Council and Expediency Discernment Council are subject to the supreme leader."

      • By CLPadvocate 2026-03-0114:09

        where did you get this bullshit from?

        by every definition of democracy, Iran is very close to the worst end of the scale - just as an example https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/democracy...

    • By Bender 2026-02-2820:16

      So, what does that mean?

      Their government is structured to resist this. There are another 20K Mullah's that succeed in their place. I have no idea how much experience they have or how that works in detail. Most of them at the moment AFAIK are in underground bunkers. I'm waiting for news on those.

    • By cebert 2026-02-2820:12

      They assuredly have a succession plan. This won’t cause them to back down.

    • By ignoramous 2026-02-2820:24

      > one of those regimes that they just choose/install someone else and keep going

      The council (50+ members) may elect another leader in his stead, provided the current council can hold on to their seats, which depends on a lot of factors.

      > If it falls, will the democracy kick in or a civil war

      If the previous Western policy for the region is any indicator, they'd prefer a monarch over democracy. Probably even civil war over democracy, but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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