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[🇮🇷] Iran’s ailing supreme leader resorts to his only playbook as crises mount and protests erupt
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Iran’s ailing supreme leader resorts to his only playbook as crises mount and protests erupt​

By
Mostafa Salem
Updated Dec 31, 2025

TEHRAN, IRAN  DECEMBER 11: (----EDITORIAL USE ONLY - MANDATORY CREDIT - 'IRANIAN LEADER PRESS OFFICE / HANDOUT' - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS----) Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei gives a speech during an event in Tehran, Iran on December 11, 2025. (Photo by Iranian Leader Press Office/Anadolu via Getty Images)




Iranians protest over soaring prices
2:22
Hundreds of women lined up for a marathon on Iran’s resort island of Kish in early December wearing matching shirts and leggings with hair tied loosely behind their backs.

In a country where ignoring dress codes could land you hefty fines and prison sentences, the runners turned their focus on the course ahead, ignoring government directives and the complimentary headscarf placed by the race organizers in the marathon starter pack, in anticipation of violations.

In October, a band played the “Seven Nation Army” riff to a headbanging crowd on the streets of the Iranian capital Tehran in a viral moment on social media reposted by the American guitarist behind the White Stripes hit, Jack White.

This week, shopkeepers, bazaar merchants and students took to the streets in several Iranian cities, chanting anti-regime slogans over their inability to pay rent after the currency hit record lows. The protests were the largest since a 2022 nationwide uprising sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody after she was arrested for allegedly wearing her headscarf improperly.


The US State Department said in a post on X that it was concerned about reports that protesters were facing “intimidation, violence, and arrests” and called on the authorities to end the crackdown.

“First the bazaars. Then the students. Now the whole country. Iranians are united. Different lives, one demand: respect our voices and our rights,” the State Department said in a post on its Farsi account on X.

Despite being so far limited, the protests mark the latest chapter in growing discontent in Iran while a population quietly reclaims public spaces and personal freedoms through uncoordinated acts of defiance. The Islamic theocratic regime – long opposed to Western cultural influence – appears to be overlooking the growing civil disobedience to focus on its own survival.

People walk past a display sign at a currency exchange bureau as the value of the Iranian rial drops, in Tehran, Iran, December 20, 2025.

People walk past a display sign at a currency exchange bureau as the value of the Iranian rial drops, in Tehran, Iran, December 20, 2025.
Majid Asgaripour/Wana News Agency/Reuters
At the helm is Iran’s ailing 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who spent decades trying to fortify his regime from domestic and foreign threats, but must now contend with a failing strategy. Domestically, a frustrated youth are showing unprecedented defiance of Islamic norms, the national currency has plummeted to record lows, Iranian cities are running dry and protests are beginning to emerge. Outside its borders, its arch-enemy Israel continues lobbying the United States over further military action against the Islamic Republic.

With limited options, Khamenei is now adopting a cautious waiting game, avoiding major decisions and drastic strategies despite the mounting domestic challenges.


“Many observers relay a sense of no one being at home; no one making any big decisions, or rather that Khamenei is not permitting any real decisions,” Mohammad Ali Shabani, editor of Amwaj.media, a London-based news site focusing on Iran, Iraq and the Arabian Peninsula countries, told CNN.


“Right now, whatever decision Khamenei may make will likely feature a significant downside, so it seems as if he’s sitting out any major decision,” he said.

The Supreme Leader, or “Vali-ye Faqih” – a significant title granting its holder ultimate authority over all state and religious affairs – was reportedly incommunicado and confined to a secure underground bunker for his own safety during a 12-day war with Israel in June, a conflict that caught Tehran off guard despite decades of preparation.


Khamenei emerged after the conflict with a weakened military, a heavily damaged nuclear program, and a population rapidly losing faith in the 36-year-old policies of the once-revolutionary leader.

In the months that followed, Iran’s struggling population watched their nation grow increasingly dysfunctional with mounting crises. Persistent electricity blackouts, record inflation and soaring unemployment have left citizens disillusioned by their powerless leadership.

Smog fills Iran’s skies after the government, desperate to keep power on this winter, switched to cheaper, lower-quality fuel, that’s dirtier than natural gas.

Iranian women perform a prayer for rainfall at the Saleh Shrine in Tehran on November 14, 2025, as the country suffers from severe water shortages.

Iranian women perform a prayer for rainfall at the Saleh Shrine in Tehran on November 14, 2025, as the country suffers from severe water shortages.
AFP/Getty Images
Twenty provinces across Iran suffered this year through the country’s worst drought in more than 40 years. A mismanaged water crisis that has become so dire that President Masoud Pezeshkian has openly proposed the idea of residents evacuating Tehran to ease the massive strain on the capital’s dwindling supplies.

Economically, the country suffers as inflation soars. The rial hit historic lows this month triggering protests by shopkeepers as basic necessities spiral out of reach. Years of heavy money printing has devalued the currency so dramatically that the government’s latest budget ran into the quadrillions of rials.


Iran’s once cunning and innovative foreign policy has ground to a halt, with no diplomatic breakthrough in sight as Western powers tighten the screws through relentless sanctions. The Revolutionary Guard’s network of militant proxies, long a cornerstone of Iran’s regional influence and deterrence, is badly weakened amid near-daily targeting from Israel, and a key territorial advantage was lost when Syrian rebels overthrew the Iran-aligned Assad dynasty last year.

Weathering the pressure​

The Islamic Republic of Iran has long been accustomed to crises and relentless pressure. Soon after the 1979 revolution the country became locked into an eight-year brutal war with Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, but it endured that conflict with fierce determination and ultimately survived.

Inheriting a nation that was wrecked and regionally isolated by war, a younger Khamenei faced the daunting task of resurrecting his fractured economy and society. He had to manage internal dissent and rivalries within Iran’s complex clerical circles, confront unyielding international economic pressures, all while preserving the revolutionary ideals of sovereignty and independence.

People wear masks on the street during daily life as air pollution continues to negatively impact life in Tehran, Iran on November 27, 2025.

People wear masks on the street during daily life as air pollution continues to negatively impact life in Tehran, Iran on November 27, 2025.
Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu/Getty Images
As Iran’s current mounting crises deepen in the aftermath of yet another war and the country’s political elite engage in a bitter blame game, the older Supreme Leader watches on, sticking rigidly to his familiar playbook: churning out missiles and drones, scrambling to rebuild battered regional proxies, and refusing Western preconditions for negotiations.

“Everybody in Iran wants change. The hardliners want a return to the past, the reformists a shift to the future and many moderates want any change. Nobody is happy with the status quo,” said Shabani, of Amwaj.media.


Khamenei had spent decades loyally consolidating the Islamic Revolution across all levels of Iranian society such that his inevitable end, whether by death or overthrow, will mark a monumental moment, one that could profoundly alter Iran’s trajectory, depending on who comes after him.

“Undoubtedly his departure from the scene would be the most pivotal moment in the history of the Islamic Republic … and there would be an opportunity in changing Iran’s geostrategic direction, but it depends on who and what comes after Khamenei,” Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at the International Crisis Group, said.

It remains unclear whether the establishment is set on a successor to the Supreme Leader. Analysts cite potential candidates like Mojtaba Khamenei, his son and a cleric with influence, or Hassan Khomeini, grandson of the 1979 Revolution’s founder.

“The outside world has very little influence on who would come next, and it really depends on the internal dynamics and the balance of power between internal forces,” Vaez said.


“Equally important is whether the West will provide the new leadership in Iran with a way out…if the West is to be prepared to capitalize on that moment of change in Iran it needs to start thinking about that as of now,” Vaez said.

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hold hands during a press conference Monday after meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hold hands during a press conference Monday after meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida.
Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

‘Job unfinished’​

Amid protests, civil disobedience and the simultaneous convergence of disasters, Khamenei now faces another external threat with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who flew to the US this week to press President Donald Trump on taking more aggressive action, sounding the alarm on Iran’s ballistic missile program.


Trump had repeatedly declared Iran’s nuclear program destroyed, politically closing the nuclear file and removing Israel’s most powerful historical justification for US support for war with Iran, Sina Toossi, a senior non-resident fellow at the Center for International policy said.

“Netanyahu’s pivot to missiles should therefore be read not as the discovery of a new threat, but as an effort to manufacture a replacement casus belli after the nuclear argument collapsed” Toossi said.

“I hear that Iran is trying to build up again, and if they are, we’re going to have to knock them down,” Trump said after meeting Netanyahu, adding, “We’ll knock the hell out of them.”
 
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Well a hearty welcome back to Brother @Aryobarzan.
خوش آمدید!
View attachment 23389
View attachment 23390
Well a hearty welcome back to Brother @Aryobarzan.
خوش آمدید!
View attachment 23389
View attachment 23390
Thank you my friend..I will come more often when the fate of this regime is sealed..remember if the regime is gone all those million of Iranians inside Iran that can not come to any forum and express their opinion (they will be arrested if they do ) will show up in places like this.
 
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Thank you my friend..I will come more often when the fate of this regime is sealed..remember if the regime is gone all those million of Iranians inside Iran that can not come to any forum and express their opinion (they will be arrested if they do ) will show up in places like this.


@Lulldapull @Vsdoc
 
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Due to ongoing event in Iran I have decided to come back for a short time and give a view on Iran that many non_iranians do not receive in forums such as this one.
The protests are real...for every protester that you see on the streets hundreds are still waiting and scared of coming out because they get shot, or be photographed and lose jobs, get arrested and disappear..(recently due to drought the water on a dam near Tehran was so low that they discovered 70 bodies all wraped in plastics and thrown into the reservoir)..such is life for any dissident under this corrupt/criminal and incompetent regime of mullahs.
do not be fooled by their claim of being "muslim" ..they are theives and mafia gangs disguised as "Islamic clerics" ..have destroyed any positive view of religion in Iran...Iran is now a muslim minority country in midle east accoring to last poll done 5 years ago ..only 37% of Iranians identified themselves as being muslim..If I get a chance i will publish that report and this is what happens when a bunch theives rule a country in the name of religion.
 
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  • Wow (+2)
Reactions: Afhan
Due to ongoing event in Iran I have decided to come back for a short time and give a view on Iran that many non_iranians do not receive in forums such as this one.
The protests are real...for every protester that you see on the streets hundreds are still waiting and scared of coming out because they get shot, or be photographed and lose jobs, get arrested and disappear..(recently due to drought the water on a dam near Tehran was so low that they discovered 70 bodies all wraped in plastics and thrown into the reservoir)..such is life for any dissident under this corrupt/criminal and incompetent regime of mullahs.
do not be fooled by their claim of being "muslim" ..they are theives and mafia gangs disguised as "Islamic clerics" ..have destroyed any positive view of religion in Iran...Iran is now a muslim minority country in midle east accoring to last poll done 5 years ago ..only 37% of Iranians identified themselves as being muslim..If I get a chance i will publish that report and this is what happens when a bunch theives rule a country in the name of religion.
some statistics about the decline of Iran under the mullah regime will provide you with some understanding why Iranians are on the streets ..these not mosad agents ..they are young Iranians that see no future in front of them under such a corrupt regime.. Pakistani members do know for example that Mullahs buy 5 cents subsidized gasoline per liter in Iran and smuggel them to Pakistan for over a dollar..pocket the profit with all the top mullahs while Iran has to import gasoline at international prices ..Iran now has the largest executions globally after China and we are only 90 million population.!
Just look at the following statistics,
Facts.webp
 
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Due to ongoing event in Iran I have decided to come back for a short time and give a view on Iran that many non_iranians do not receive in forums such as this one.
The protests are real...for every protester that you see on the streets hundreds are still waiting and scared of coming out because they get shot, or be photographed and lose jobs, get arrested and disappear..(recently due to drought the water on a dam near Tehran was so low that they discovered 70 bodies all wraped in plastics and thrown into the reservoir)..such is life for any dissident under this corrupt/criminal and incompetent regime of mullahs.
do not be fooled by their claim of being "muslim" ..they are theives and mafia gangs disguised as "Islamic clerics" ..have destroyed any positive view of religion in Iran...Iran is now a muslim minority country in midle east accoring to last poll done 5 years ago ..only 37% of Iranians identified themselves as being muslim..If I get a chance i will publish that report and this is what happens when a bunch theives rule a country in the name of religion.
I believe its even less than 37% in Iran who identified as being muzz-limms. Its probably in da single digits. In our shiit-hole of baqistaan, the brainwashing is intense and a lot of CIA/ Mossad money is poured in via Sawdi Judea/ UAE/ Qatar to keep the lower caste hendu/ sikh converts in line, otherwise it will all just very quickly fall apart. India/ baqistaan are a total joke!.....lol
Poor colludzz people trying to make sense of their existence in the modern world. Its pathetic.
 
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