
Iran's aging & paranoid Ayatollah is hanging by a thread – I know how it will all come crashing down, says ex-ambassador
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IRAN'S merciless regime is "fully on its heels" - leaving the Ayatollah's days numbered, a former US ambassador says.
But the West will not be able to topple Tehran's brutal dictatorship, Mark D. Wallace, CEO & Founder of United Against Nuclear Iran, warned.
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Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on July 5
Credit: Getty
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A building on fire after an Israeli strike in Tehran
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Airstrike craters at Iran's Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (FFEP)
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The ex-ambassador to the UN said it will be down to the Iranian people - who have suffered outrageous repression for decades - to finally end the regime's rule.
Iron-fist fanatics have used violent and ruthless measures, including executions and torture, in a twisted bid to stamp out opposition and silence critics.
The regime's future now appears to be hanging by a thread, however, as it sits in a "combustible state" following the obliteration of its nuclear empire by the US and Israel.
Several of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's top military brass were wiped out in the 12-day war - leaving the barbaric ruler vulnerable.
Power held by Iran's terror proxies - including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen - has also been severely depleted.
Wallace told The Sun: "The regime isn't just wounded, they're fully on their heels.
"The very old Ayatollah has been hiding in a bunker somewhere, and there's clearly going to be some sort of transition.
"Remember, there have only been two Ayatollahs. The question is, is there going to be a third."
Iran's first Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini seized power during the revolution of 1979 - ousting the Shah empire and transforming the state into a theocratic Islamic republic.
His bloody rule was taken over by Khamenei following his death a decade later.
Iran's Ayatollah breaks silence after WEEKS cowering in bunker during Israel's blitz and 'obliterating' Trump strikes
Since then, Tehran has ramped up its nuclear ambitions and become an increasingly bigger threat to not only the Middle East but the West too.
The US and Israel then took decisive action last month by staging an unprecedented blitz of Iran's nuclear bases.
It dealt a major blow to Khamenei's top military brass - wiping out the commander in chief, deputy commander and boss of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
At least seven other generals were killed, as well as politician Ali Shamkhani - a close confidant of the Ayatollah - and two nuclear scientists.
Khamenei cowered in hiding in a bunker as the chorus of voices fighting against repression and calling for the regime to be overthrown grew louder.
Before the 12-day war, Israel had almost diminished the capabilities of terror proxies largely funded by Ukraine.
Wallace said the "incredibly weak" Ayatollah will now be fearing his remaining generals could be spies.
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Mojtaba Khamenei could be a succssor
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The Chief Justice of Iran, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje'i, may also be in the running
Credit: Getty
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Iran's former president Hassan Rouhani could be selected
Credit: AFP
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An Iranian ballistic missile over the skies near Jerusalem in two salvos of missiles
Credit: EPA
"And there's no clear succession," he added.
"The Ayatollah is on his heels. When he finally came out [of hiding] he sounded very weak. He sounded like an 86-year-old man who had been hiding in a bunker, trying to keep his regime alive.
"Really it does call into question how long he will be there. We know he's going to die of either natural or unnatural causes sometime in the next couple of years.
"The question is, what happens next? And I think he's doing everything he can to try to find some sort of path to succession, to continue this revolutionary regime."
Khamenei will now be scrambling to have a clear succession mapped out - with at least five of his top confidants thought to be in the running.
The aging despot's son Mojtaba Khamenei is a cleric and close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, so could be high on the potential list of successors.
Also in the running is likely to be Assembly of Experts members Alireza Arafi and Hojjatal Islam Mohsen Qomi and reform-minded presidents such as Hassan Rouhani.
The head of Iran's judicial system Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje'i meanwhile is thought of as a front-runner to take the reins.
The ruling establishment will try to immediately name a successor to Khamenei if he is killed or dies naturally.
Despite the international outcry against the regime waging war against its own people and the threat of aggression to other nations, Wallace argued the West cannot help remove the fanatics.
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Ayatollah Alireza Arafi, pictured meeting Pope Francis, could be Khamenei's choice
Credit: Alamy
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Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi (right) speaks with the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamanei's representative, Hojjatal Islam Mohsen Qomi
Credit: Getty
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A demonstrator holding an Israeli flag and an Iranian flag in a protest against the Iranian government
Credit: Reuters
"The only path ultimately is for the regime to fall - but that is solely in the control of the Iranian people," he said.
"Sadly, the Iranian people will suffer, and a good number will likely have to die for that to happen, and they're being persecuted as we speak.
"There's this regrettable debate going on about regime change, as if somehow we can engage in a direct strategy to engage in regime change. We can't.
"We can do everything we can to support Iranian people and degrade the regime's ability to threaten all of us through nuclear weapons or threaten us with terrorism and transnational oppression.
"We can also do everything we can to sanction and impede the ability of the state security apparatus to oppress its own people.
"But, ultimately, the kinetic moment when the dry leaves and the twigs of a forest catch fire, as a metaphor for revolution, is up to the Iranian people."
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