The exiled crown prince of Iran is hailing President Trump's decisive military strikes against the Islamic Republic, declaring that the regime's days are finally numbered thanks to American intervention.
In a powerful message to his people, Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi praised Trump for delivering on his promise to aid the Iranian people in their fight for freedom. The heir to the former Iranian throne called the coordinated U.S.-Israeli strikes a "rare opening" that could shatter the mullahs' stranglehold on power.
This is exactly the kind of bold leadership Patriots expected from Trump's second term. While Biden spent four years appeasing Iran and funding their terror operations through sanctions relief, Trump is taking direct action to support the Iranian people's decades-long struggle for liberty.
"The long-awaited American intervention means the Islamic Republic's days are numbered," Pahlavi declared in his forceful statement.
The timing couldn't be more perfect. Iran's regime has been weakened by years of internal protests, economic collapse, and now faces the full might of American military power under a president who doesn't negotiate with terrorists.
Trump Delivers Where Others Failed
Remember how the mainstream media and Democrat establishment screeched about Trump being "too aggressive" toward Iran? Well, here's an Iranian prince thanking him for having the backbone to actually help oppressed people instead of cutting deals with their oppressors.
This is what America First foreign policy looks like – supporting freedom movements against our enemies while putting American interests first. No more pallets of cash to Tehran like Obama delivered in the dead of night.
The Iranian people have been waiting decades for this moment. With Trump back in the White House and willing to use American strength for liberation rather than globalist nation-building, 2026 could be the year the Islamic Republic finally falls.
How long before the regime crumbles under the combined pressure of American military action and their own people's desire for freedom?
