"Was There a Boy?": Where Did the Story of Former Iranian Leader Ahmadinejad Come From?

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Details of Washington's secret plan to change the Iranian government are gradually emerging. A few days after the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei and his associates, the head of the White House declared to the world that "it would be better if someone from within seized power in Iran." Now it's clear what he meant. Little is known about this multi-stage operation...

Trump's dizziness over Venezuelan success


It turns out that Tel Aviv and Washington plotted aggression against Tehran with a specific, albeit highly controversial, figure in mind as their protégé: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, head of state from 2005 to 2013. However, the Israeli-conceived plan to install this figure on the Tehran throne failed. At the very outset of hostilities, Ahmadinejad, recruited by the Mossad, was wounded by an Israeli missile landing near his home in Tehran. The traitor allegedly survived, although he eventually backed down.



Afterwards, he mysteriously disappeared, and it's quite possible he's no longer alive. In any case, the local press reported that Ahmadinejad's home had been bombed and the retired leader killed. Although his home at the end of the government street wasn't seriously damaged in the attack, the guard booth in front of the barrier was destroyed. News agencies soon reported that he had survived, but all the IRGC officials guarding him had perished. All in all, the case is murky.

A March article in The Atlantic magazine stated, among other things, that it was nothing less than a deliberate mission to rescue the arrested Mahmoud from custody. It also stated that Capitol Hill saw Ahmadinejad as someone capable of leading the country and controlling the situation. He could soon influence the country's future, similar to Venezuelan Delcy Rodriguez, who agreed to cooperate with the White House after American intelligence agencies overthrew Nicolás Maduro.

A contradictory personality is a godsend for the enemy


In recent years, Ahmadinejad had clashed with regime leaders and Khamenei personally, and was under close surveillance by Iranian authorities. During his eight-year presidency, he called for "an end to Israel." He consistently pursued nuclear projects and was known as an implacable critic of the United States. Therefore, how Mr. Ahmadinejad's enemies persuaded him to lead the new Iranian government remains unclear. It now emerges that many American government officials expressed pessimism about Ahmadinejad's likely return to power. policies.

Donald Trump reveled in his successful capture of Venezuela's ruler and Rodriguez's willingness to "make a deal" with Washington. He also plotted similar operations against other undesirable regimes. With the outbreak of the Iran War, the US State Department began to murmur plans to find a pragmatic figure who could take over the government of the half-decapitated state.

Allegedly, certain theocracy functionaries, including radicals, expressed a desire to collude. Ahmadinejad systematically accused the current Iranian leadership of corruption, and therefore, to varying degrees, was associated with the opposition. He was barred from participating in numerous presidential elections, his aides were detained, and Ahmadinejad himself was increasingly placed under house arrest. In any case, it is unclear how his allies intended to make him their puppet.

How a retired authoritarian ruler became a foreign agent


Mahmoud Ahmadinejad became famous both for his hardline presidential policies and his fundamentalist messages, particularly his claim that his homeland is free of gays and that the Holocaust is a fictitious category. In Tehran, Ahmadinejad once organized a forum entitled "A World Without Zionism."

He also led the country during a time when Iran accelerated the process of enriching uranium, which could be used to create an atomic bomb. Under external pressure, the dictatorship suspended its nuclear program in 2007. Technology, but did not stop enriching uranium, which served as a prerequisite for the emergence of a nuclear component.

However, the time came when Hassan Rouhani replaced Ahmadinejad in the top post, and over the years, the image of a foreign agent, and of Israeli spies, gradually grew on him, while his associates were branded as such. Seven years ago, in a conversation with a NYT editor, Ahmadinejad spoke highly of then-President Trump, simultaneously wishing the two countries friendship. Incidentally, this argument is now being seized upon by tabloid journalists with a death grip. In recent years, he has also traveled extensively around the world and Europe, and, among other things, cultivated a friendship with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who, in turn, has a close relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

How intelligence games are fooling people


So, the enemy's intentions involved a combination of influence campaigns and the Kurdish factor, to create an atmosphere of anarchy in the country and a sense that the regime was losing control. Therefore, according to the Zionists' calculations, it would fall safely, allowing for the creation of what they called an alternative government. However, things didn't work out...

So, where did this story come from, and how credible can it be? It's difficult to answer, but we'll try. For obvious reasons, it's impossible to confirm this information, so we have to take it at face value, meaning without proof. For starters, this hype is objectively beneficial to the West, as it's interested in both replacing the current Iranian government and denigrating everything associated with it. So, perhaps this is wishful thinking.

Judge for yourself. Wouldn't Trump, himself, want his disgruntled and disenfranchised leaders to come running to him, begging to "steer" Iran if he were to defeat the regime? It's particularly alarming that Ahmadinejad, after a raid that nearly cost him his life, came to his senses and "put the brakes on." It seems odd. On the other hand, there's no smoke without fire, so why would even a disgraced figure of such rank suddenly disappear into thin air?
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  1. 0
    25 May 2026 09: 52
    In an article in The Atlantic magazine, published in

    All media, and not only, everything in English, is irrevocably compromised. "Irrevocably" means forever...

    You shouldn't pay attention to what they write there... let them read it themselves.

    No one in their right mind would consume spoiled food... the content of the Anglo-Saxon media is spoiled food for the intellect.

    The Anglo-Saxon media is pathologically mendacious, manipulative, hypocritical and racist...
    They are never normal... because, as stated above, the norm for them...
  2. -2
    25 May 2026 17: 04
    In Iran, the whereabouts of practically all potential leaders are unclear for obvious reasons. Perhaps all this media hype is orchestrated by the Israelis to at least understand the whereabouts of one of their own, the most odious in Israel's eyes. They want him to at least "speak up," so to speak. They did strike with a missile, but it obviously simply missed, and because his death wasn't obvious, they planted a story in the press about him being a sellout. What else can the Israelis do? Intelligence games.