General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIran has been planning for THIER regime change for many years.
I wonder if anyone in the trumpian regime understands that?
Iran has an entire plan for their own leadership change. It has been held in secret for decades.
I learned today from the news reporting.
And why wouldn't they have a plan in place. They are not stupid. They wouldn't leave it to chance one day.
Think of monarchies having an entire lineage of who is next in secession.
SleeplessinSoCal
(10,391 posts)That was probably part of the Netanyahu plan. given how corrupt he and Trump are, they ought to anticipate. Imagine if Mad King Don goes, what we get.
DetroitLegalBeagle
(2,480 posts)Though they were correct with khamenei's death, are saying upwards of 40 senior leadership has been killed so far. If that number is even half accurate, that would be a good chunk of any continuity of government plan they may have had.
Jack Valentino
(4,807 posts)trying to 'cut the head off the snake' would have little lasting effect....
In any case, there has never been any 'regime change' accomplished through bombing alone....
but I have seen nothing to indicate any plans to 'put American 'boots on the ground' in Iran---
Trump seems to rely on bombing and unarmed Iranian citizens to 'take over'... LOL
(Good news that he thus far seems to have no plans to
"put American boots on the ground"
and is already looking for a way out! LOL)
(sounds like the 'Iranian TACO'!)
pat_k
(12,949 posts)A few tidbits from The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/feb/28/strategic-options-iran-retaliate-us-israel-analysis
....
The early indications are that the US and Israel plan a bombing campaign that could last weeks, while Iran runs down its estimated stock of 2,000 ballistic missiles. Its ability to retaliate at scale may only last a few days, while the US can run in excess of 125 bombing missions a day from each of its aircraft carriers alone.
Iran has few good strategic options now it is under sustained attack. The regimes best prospect may be to try to endure the waves that are likely to come, continue to retaliate while it can, and try to retain control of the streets given that the US and Israel have so far expressed no intention of mounting a ground invasion.
If that is the case, it is not obvious how the war will end. In short, the US and Israel have started this war with vague and unachievable objectives, with no international law base, and little or no support from Gulf states or other US allies, said Lord Ricketts, a former UK national security adviser.
And from WaPo
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/02/28/iran-war-strikes-bombing-trump-nuclear/
...
Its essential to think through the endgame when deciding to kill the leaders of another country. Trump urged civilians to take over the government after the airstrikes finish. It will be yours to take, he said. This will be probably your only chance for generations. If only it was that easy.
Its possible a military junta gains control and intensifies repression. Its also possible that a country of 93 million, more than twice the geographic size of Texas, splinters along ethnic lines. That could mean civil war and instability that leads to the intervention of neighboring armies.
Its hard to see how freedom for the people can be accomplished in any meaningful sense without some U.S. boots on the ground, at least for a time. Yet Trump appears to lack any appetite for doing so. That might give pause to civilians trying to decide whether to risk their lives by rising up.
I can't find the article, but one article I didn't bookmark speculated that the attack could strengthen, not weaken, the IRGC. I did come across a headline from Foreign Policy to that effect, but hit a paywall. If anyone has a subscription to, I'd love to see a gift link to this article:
https://foreignpolicy.com/2026/02/28/iran-khamenei-ayatollah-assassination-israel-us-war/
The U.S. and Israeli militaries are targeting Irans leadersbut that may only strengthen the state.
...
paywall
Melon
(1,307 posts)The question is whether they change course after watching the last leader blown into 20 pieces. Iran doesnt have the technology to prevent the same thing happening to the next guy if the path is the same. Its the Iranian people that need to rise up for real change. Its up to the people.