The walls are closing in on Iran's brutal Islamist regime, and even the exiled Crown Prince knows it. Reza Pahlavi, son of the last Shah of Iran, issued a desperate plea to his country's military, police, and security forces to abandon what he called the "crumbling" regime of the Ayatollah following devastating U.S. and Israeli strikes over the weekend.
This stunning admission from the crown prince reveals what many patriots have long suspected – the Islamic Republic's grip on power is finally weakening after decades of terrorizing both its own people and the world.
Trump's Maximum Pressure Strategy Bearing Fruit
The timing of Pahlavi's call is no coincidence. President Trump's return to the White House has reinvigorated American leadership in the Middle East, and our enemies know it. Unlike the weak-kneed Biden regime that practically begged Iran to return to the disastrous nuclear deal, Trump 2.0 is backing our allies and putting the terror-sponsoring mullahs on notice.
The coordinated strikes by U.S. and Israeli forces represent exactly the kind of strength-through-deterrence approach that actually works against bad actors like Iran. When America leads from the front instead of leading from behind, even exiled royalty starts seeing the writing on the wall.
"The regime is crumbling under the weight of its own corruption and the pressure from freedom-loving nations," sources close to the situation indicate Pahlavi's message conveyed.
For too long, Iran's Revolutionary Guard and security apparatus have propped up a regime that exports terrorism, oppresses women, and threatens Israel's existence. But when the bombs start falling and the economic pressure mounts, even the most loyal enforcers start questioning whether they're backing the right horse.
What This Means for America First
Patriots should celebrate this development as vindication of Trump's tough-but-smart approach to Iran. Rather than sending pallets of cash like Obama did, or desperately chasing a new nuclear deal like Biden, President Trump understands that strength and resolve are the only languages these tyrants understand.
The question now is whether Iran's military will heed the crown prince's call and finally put an end to four decades of Islamic extremism. Either way, one thing is clear: American leadership is back, and our enemies are running scared.
