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Who Was Ali Khamenei? How Iran’s Supreme Leader Built 37 Years of Absolute Power
For thirty-seven years, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei held absolute power over Iran — above its presidents, beyond its courts, untouched by the protests that shook his country again and again. He wasn’t a crude dictator. He was something more durable: a man who used the architecture of a republic as a filtering system to make sure real power never moved. On February 28, 2026, US-Israeli airstrikes killed him. But the machine he built is still running. This is the story of how he came to power, how he kept it, and what Iran faces now.
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Iran in 2026: The currency crash, the uranium clock, and the thin line between a deal and a war
Gunfire at a mourning ceremony. A currency that can lose credibility overnight. A nuclear program that has turned diplomacy into a countdown. Iran is slipping into a moment where every lever of pressure is being pulled at once, and each move carries the risk of lighting the next fire. As protests flare and the state responds with force, Washington weighs strikes, Tehran hardens its stance, and the world is left staring at a single, terrifying question: which breaks first, the talks, the regime, or the region?
