Settings

Theme

Khamenei Dead

twitter.com

64 points by harscoat 2 hours ago · 71 comments

Reader

0l 2 hours ago

Better source: https://www.reuters.com/world/iran-crisis-live-explosions-te...

  • DivingForGold an hour ago

    Aren't these Iranians the same folks that declare religious wars or Jihad's ?

    I would not be surprised if we see increased terrorism against Americans worldwide for the next 100 years . . .

arisudesu 2 hours ago

Quoting the site guidelines:

> Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. Videos of pratfalls or disasters, or cute animal pictures. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.

  • lukan an hour ago

    "interesting new phenomenon"

    I would argue, directly targeting the leaders of another state is a "interesting new phenomenon".

    • gmuslera 34 minutes ago

      Sleepwalking into a dystopia that would had made Aldous Huxley and George Orwell to blush falls into the interesting arena.

    • Shank an hour ago

      This has happened for thousands of years.

  • Sabinus an hour ago

    We can talk about Hulk Hogan's death for 100 comments but not this?

  • krapp an hour ago

    We allow death threads for all kinds of celebrities and people with no relationship to tech. Out of all of the guidelines, this one is probably the most often quoted and the least consistently followed.

  • on_the_train 28 minutes ago

    Yeah NOW it's suddenly about the guidelines lmao

mrtksn 2 hours ago

So, what does that mean? Is Iran one of those regimes that fall when the leader is killed or is it one of those regimes that they just choose/install someone else and keep going? If it falls, will the democracy kick in or a civil war?

  • mullingitover 42 minutes ago

    Iran is already a parliamentary democracy, the aspect that’s criticized is the fact that candidates must be approved by their religious council. The Ayatollah didn’t/doesn’t exercise direct executive control over the country, so his removal wouldn’t create an immediate leadership vacuum.

    For as much as the far right in the US likes to criticize Iran, ultimately their only real complaint about their ‘theocracy with democratic characteristics’ is that it isn’t Christian.

    • goalieca 6 minutes ago

      I think you’re out to lunch on what the Iranian government has been doing. They’ve armed Islamic groups all over the Middle East, they armed the Houthis who have been shooting at civilian ships transiting through the straight of Hormuz, they’ve supplied Russia with the drones and arms for the Ukraine invasion, .. and the list goes on and on.

  • epolanski 2 hours ago

    Where did democracy kicked in in the last two decades after their leaders were assassinated or captured by foreign aggressors though?

    The closest is Iraq, and it's not a functioning democracy but a hybrid regime.

  • pinewurst 2 hours ago

    Excellent question - my understanding is that previous decapitation attacks were avoided due to the probability that the IRGC would take over as a simple dictatorship. Unclear what's changed now though.

    • Epa095 2 hours ago

      Given the outcome in Venezuela (and Trumps relationships with dictators in generally), it don't seem like that is something Trump necessarily sees as a bad outcome. As long as the dictatorship trades oil and let some American companies in, they can be as dictatorial as they want.

    • verdverm 2 hours ago

      There is this new group this year that is into doing regime change, kind of

    • cogman10 an hour ago

      My understanding is that the Iranian government is very resilient. The has been a succession plan since the 70s with a broad board of individuals who can choose the next leader.

      Blowback is going to be the biggest issue here. Ali Khamenei wasn't just the leader of Iran, he was well respected for Shia muslims. While not perfectly analogous, it's close to killing the pope.

      Maybe this leads to open revolt which might fully topple to government, that said, I don't think there's a US/Israel endorsed leader or goal for succession here.

      • pinewurst an hour ago

        That's actually not true: Khamenei was a political ayatollah, hardly respected for religious judgment by average Shia.

        • cogman10 an hour ago

          It's my understanding that most ayatollahs get that title through political influence. And for Iran specifically, the supreme leader wouldn't have gotten his position without having that religious influence. It's a theocracy.

  • Bender 2 hours ago

    So, what does that mean?

    Their government is structured to resist this. There are another 20K Mullah's that succeed in their place. I have no idea how much experience they have or how that works in detail. Most of them at the moment AFAIK are in underground bunkers. I'm waiting for news on those.

  • cebert 2 hours ago

    They assuredly have a succession plan. This won’t cause them to back down.

  • ignoramous 2 hours ago

    > one of those regimes that they just choose/install someone else and keep going

    The council (50+ members) may elect another leader in his stead, provided the current council can hold on to their seats, which depends on a lot of factors.

    > If it falls, will the democracy kick in or a civil war

    If the previous Western policy for the region is any indicator, they'd prefer a monarch over democracy. Probably even civil war over democracy, but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

hleszek 2 hours ago

https://xcancel.com/BarakRavid/status/2027830773328302396

anigbrowl 2 hours ago

I consider any claims this fundamentally unreliable because there's too much propaganda value in lying, especially during the opening phases of a war. I also don't consider Khamenei that significant; he's an important theocratic figure obviously but doesn't have the same kind of weight or charisma that his predecessor had.

  • bell-cot 2 hours ago

    Disagree about the first part. Israeli intel agencies have very deep roots in Iran, and could very quickly be humiliated if Khamenei popped up with a jeering rebuttal to their claim.

    • cogman10 an hour ago

      Israel also doesn't tend to report on major kills that didn't happen. It's one thing that they are fairly reliable on. If they say someone is dead, they likely are.

tokyobreakfast 2 hours ago

Well that was quick.

CrzyLngPwd an hour ago

It's such an off timeline, where Israel can commit de facto genocide and there is no nato bombing like there was in Yugoslavia, and the USA, defenders of Ukraine's sovereignty, kidnap a state's leader and try to murder another state's leader, neither of which were a threat to the USA.

The board of peace means nothing, the USA cannot be trusted since it is a lapdog of Israel (did Epstein have something on somebody), and the president of peace starts his own war, hoping to outdo previous presidents in unprovoked murder and destruction.

All of the above gives Russia political ammunition to justify its SMO, and encourages China to step up its hopes to bring Taiwan back to the family.

And we have been told that AI and climate change are the biggest threats to humanity, ffs.

  • throwaway3060 an hour ago

    The same state's leader that sold to Russia the drones being used to violate Ukraine's sovereignty?

    • CrzyLngPwd an hour ago

      Do you believe that allies shouldn't sell weapons to each other?

      Do you think people should try to kill the leaders of countries that sell weapons in such circumstances?

      • tim333 11 minutes ago

        It depends a bit on what they do with the weapons. The Ukraine invasion is a nasty business.

pleonasticity an hour ago

“Israel says…”

helaoban 2 hours ago

So now heads of state are fair game for unilateral elimination without a declaration of war

This should be fun.

  • beloch an hour ago

    The U.S. hasn't declared war since WWII.

    Korea, Vietnam, Iraq (I and II), Afghanistan, etc. were not technically wars in the sense that there was any form of formal declaration by congress. The U.S. constitution allocates the authority to declare war to congress but, in practice, it's been under the sole authority of the POTUS since long before Trump.

    This reallocation of authority hasn't been a huge problem until now. Now you have a POTUS whose motives for starting a war are entirely suspect. It's true that negotiations between Iran and the U.S. would have had significant trust hurdles to overcome. The U.S. and Iran had a deal that granted Iran relief from economic sanctions in exchange for a halt to Iran's nuclear program. It was working, but Trump is the president who unilaterally broke that agreement in his previous term[1]. Trump has also repeatedly broken his own agreements in his current term. Even his own signature is now completely worthless. What would it have taken to assure Iran the U.S. could be trusted to honour its word with Trump in power?

    Moreover, the timing of this war makes it hard to view as anything other than the bloodiest case of "Wag the Dog" of the modern era. Americans need to put this "president of peace" behind bars or he'll just keep starting wars. Once that's done, serious consideration should be given to restoring many of the powers the constitution allocates to congress, including the authority to declare war.

    [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_withdrawal_from_...

  • tokyobreakfast 2 hours ago

    Generally when you murder 30k of your own people the civilized world doesn't let you get away with it.

    • epolanski 2 hours ago

      It actually does, or even supports this based on the narratives it sees fit and the interests at hand.

    • UncleMeat 31 minutes ago

      More than 30k dead palestinians.

    • croes an hour ago

      Unless it’s our dictator like Pinochet

    • gambiting 2 hours ago

      I just wish we'd apply this rule slightly more widely and didn't let countries get away with say - just as example - killing 20k children in Gaza. I guess you did say "generally".

    • krapp an hour ago

      Generally it does, actually.

      Neither the US nor Europe would have cared about Hitler's mass murder as long as he kept it in Germany and didn't disrupt business, his antisemitism was not unusual, and he was generally popular in the US. Stalin got away with it. Mao Zedong got away with it, and his authoritarian regime is a nascent superpower. Pol Pot more or less got away with it. He was deposed by his own people and died in his sleep. Israel has killed tens of thousands Palestinians and the world did nothing to stop it, America funded it. Idi Amin murdered hundreds of thousands of people and died in luxury. How many Russians and Ukrainians has Putin and his invasion of Ukraine sent to the slaughterhouse? Do you think anything is going to happen to him? How many North Koreans have the Kims starved to death or executed? Repercussions for the Armenian genocide? None. History is replete leaders whom the "civilized world" let "get away with it."

  • 7e 2 hours ago

    Israel does not need a declaration of war to kill heads of state. Their targeted killing policy has been upheld by their own Supreme Court. Whether international law agrees is another matter.

    The US has also done this since 1945 (at least) although executive orders have, at times, placed some restraint on the practice.

  • antonvs 2 hours ago

    One could easily imagine certain foreign leaders saying, “Will no one rid me of this turbulent orange buffoon?”

    • SllX 2 hours ago

      There’s a reason every POTUS has a Secret Service detail. So yeah, it’s been imagined. Presidents have been shot and killed before, and Trump himself was shot during the lead up to the most recent election.

      • lukan an hour ago

        Yes, by one lone shooter without support in the background. If there is a determined team of assassins .. all it takes is one well placed shot.

        • SllX an hour ago

          Again, the Secret Service is there to protect against all threats and the US Military there for every single other threat above the Secret Service’s pay grade and scale.

          It’s the most dangerous and most protected job in America no matter what the POTUS is actively doing at any and every single moment.

    • Applejinx 2 hours ago

      Not Russians. He's their guy.

  • dralley an hour ago

    Did you miss that time Russia sent multiple kill squads after Zelensky? Seems like it's been on the table for a few years now.

  • libertine 2 hours ago

    What's the time window of "now"?

    For example in 2022 Russia tried to take out the Ukrainian president with a "3 day special military operation", that is still going on.

  • vixen99 2 hours ago

    Do you think the estimated 6,221 men and women protesting against the regime who were killed on orders from that head of state should get a vote here?

rvz 2 hours ago

Iranian media is very quiet today (due to the blackout), but until they confirms this, then this is complete speculation and unconfirmed. We just don't know.

I'd take the Israeli media with a grain of salt and they can still fake this, just like the Iranian media can do as well given that AI exists, it's very easy to fake.

One side is not telling the truth. Only time will tell.

  • vixen99 an hour ago

    If the 86-year old leader is still alive one would imagine that he would want to offer reassurance and & encouragement to his supporters by making some kind of appearance.

Simulacra 2 hours ago

I'm not sure this is a sic semper tyranis but it's close.

  • bell-cot 2 hours ago

    More relevant is who'll take his place, and whether they're better or worse.

    Note that regime collapse, in a major petrostate with a population of 92 million and in the middle of a critical yet volatile region, can be worse than "the devil you know".

paganel 2 hours ago

Funny how the Americans/Israelis are still so enamoured with the Big-Bad-Boss military view of the world, they've killed so many Taliban leaders in the past that they (the Americans) ended up giving control of Afghanistan to the same Taliban.

The same goes for their (both the Americans' and the Israelis') obsession about Douhet and his Air Power thing, a long-running mistake on Americans' part. So much so that their (the Americans') bases in places like Manama (Bahrain) are now getting pounded by lousy Shaheed drones, with no AD to speak of, none at all. This is a huge fuck-up for the Americans/Israelis, I wonder when will their MSM start to write that reality down.

technate4eva 2 hours ago

Anyone who still believes the zionist-american misinformation empire is gullible beyond sanity. big mistake

  • JshWright 2 hours ago

    There is no benefit, and significant risk, in lying about that (it's an easily disproven claim if they're lying).

    I don't trust them because I like them. I trust them because being truthful is in their best interest (and I trust they will always act in their own interest).

    • technate4eva an hour ago

      It is not in their best interest, since it's obvious that for at least a decade, blatantly lying and even being caught lying has no impact on their so-called credibility. Lying about this does improve morale among troops and citizens, and gives them some form of early justification. So no. They do benefit from lying about this.

foxrider 2 hours ago

Going to pour one out for all the Iranian refugees celebrating

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection