Iran's Regime Is Falling Apart

Despite his critics, President Trump is serious in
his efforts to squeeze Iran's economy as much and as fast as possible. Trump intends to make the Islamic regime fall
on its own via crippling sanctions.
Iranians are swarming for U.S. dollars as Iran's
currency, the rial, plunges to historic lows amid economic and political
uncertainty. The rial has lost one third
of its value this year alone and is now officially 60,000 to the dollar. That number is a lot higher on the black
market.
During the campaign, Trump promised he would
withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal that Obama orchestrated. Trump unwillingly stuck with it for a number
of months longer than he wished while Rex Tillerson was secretary of state, but
once Tillerson was replaced by Mike Pompeo and joined by another anti-Islamic
regime expert, national security adviser John Bolton, the A team was created.
So let's be clear: the new strategy Pompeo laid out
is the same as the old strategy – the U.S. plans to impose maximum pressure on
Iran to force it to change.
As for the oil question, the global oil supply chain
easily can handle the loss of 500,000 bpd of Iranian crude, although we may
notice some higher prices at the pumps.
While both India and China have the scope to lower their imports from
Iran, they will possibly be reluctant, especially given the ongoing quarrel
over pricing between China's top refiner Sinopec and Saudi Arabia.
It is becoming quite clear that President Trump's
decision to depart from the Iran nuclear deal was just the first step in the
White House's plan of action toward the regime in Tehran.
The
administration is engaging all of America's instruments of national power to
isolate and defang the mullahs.
European allies, and even America's adversaries,
appear to be following the aggressive U.S. policy against the Iranian regime,
which is backed by sanctions intended to cut off Tehran from the global trade
market.
On May 8, 2018, President Trump stated:
The Iranian regime is the leading state sponsor of
terror. It exports dangerous missiles,
fuels conflicts across the Middle East, and supports terrorist proxies and
militias such as Hezbollah, Hamas, the Taliban, and al Qaeda. Over the years, Iran and its proxies have
bombed American embassies and military installations, murdered hundreds of
American service members, and kidnapped, imprisoned, and tortured American
citizens. The Iranian regime has funded
its long reign of chaos and terror by plundering the wealth of its own people
... while the deal itself contains no provisions for withdrawal, Iran has
threatened to reactivate its nuclear program if the United States reneges on
any of its obligations under the pact's terms.
France and Germany, whose leaders visited
Washington, D.C., in recent weeks to appeal to Trump, have warned that
nullification of the agreement could lead to all-out war in the Middle
East. Former British foreign secretary
Boris Johnson, who recently resigned, said that as far as he knows, the
administration has no clear "Plan B" for what to do next.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration isn't looking to
invade and occupy Iran, but it does have a fairly clear goal of regime
change. Pompeo, Bolton, and other key
figures in Trump's circle, including key Republicans in Congress, are open
advocates of overthrowing the Islamic Republic and its ruler, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, as are millions of Iranians.
It does also appear that the Iranian regime is
facing serious setbacks in Lebanon, in the Palestinian territory, in Syria, and
even in Iraq. The mullahs' attempt to
seize power in Lebanon has provoked much of the Lebanese population against
them, and their proxy, Lebanon's Hezb'allah, is in a state of frenzy. The Iraqi thug-cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and his
Mahdi Army, the mullahs' mercenary force, face serious problems due to the
pressures from the U.S. and the Iraqi government.
After years of using its proxies and interfering in
the Middle East region, the Islamic Republic now finds itself isolated and has
decided not to carry out its threat of suspending relations with countries that
voted in support of the U.N. sanctions.
We should keep this in mind: before we get involved
in Iran, we must declare unequivocally the commitment to respect the
territorial integrity of Iran, as well as the rights of Iranians to decide,
through democratic processes, all matters pertaining to their lives and their
country.