Trump’s words stunned the world. In a single, swaggering sentence, he claimed he’d toppled a regime and bent a war toward his will.
But behind the cameras, the reality in Tehran refuses to match his script.
Power has shifted, not fallen. Allies are restless, oil prices are biting, and one key US partner has just issued a chilling warni… Continues…
Donald Trump’s boast that he has achieved “regime change” in Iran collides sharply with the facts on the ground. After the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s leadership did not collapse; it reconfigured. His son, Mojtaba Khamenei, stepped into the role of Supreme Leader, and the machinery of the state kept turning. Key officials in government, the IRGC, and the military have been replaced, not removed from history. The war grinds on, diplomacy drags forward, and ordinary people on all sides pay the price.
Meanwhile, the political pressure on Trump is mounting. Rising oil and gas prices are squeezing American households ahead of mid-term elections, and Gulf allies are growing wary of an open-ended conflict. Mediation efforts led by Pakistan, with support from Egypt and Turkey, signal how desperate the search for an exit has become. From Canberra, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has demanded clarity: what is Washington’s real endgame in Iran? He backs preventing a nuclear-armed Tehran and has “nothing but contempt” for the regime, yet warns that forcing change from the outside is perilous. His call for de-escalation is a reminder that victory speeches cannot substitute for a strategy—or for an honest reckoning with the human and economic cost of war.
Donald Trump’s boast that he has achieved “regime change”
in Iran collides sharply with the facts on the ground.
After the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s leadership did not collapse; it reconfigured.
His son, Mojtaba Khamenei, stepped into the role of Supreme Leader, and the machinery of the state kept turning. Key officials in government, the IRGC, and the military have been replaced, not removed from history. The war grinds on, diplomacy drags forward, and ordinary people on all sides pay the price.
Meanwhile, the political pressure on Trump is mounting. Rising oil and gas prices are squeezing American households ahead of mid-term elections, and Gulf allies are growing wary of an open-ended conflict. Mediation efforts led by Pakistan, with support from Egypt and Turkey, signal how desperate the search for an exit has become. From Canberra, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has demanded clarity: what is Washington’s real endgame in Iran? He backs preventing a nuclear-armed Tehran and has “nothing but contempt” for the regime, yet warns that forcing change from the outside is perilous. His call for de-escalation is a reminder that victory speeches cannot substitute for a strategy—or for an honest reckoning with the human and economic cost of war.