Karroubi Returns and Blames Khamenei for Iran’s Destruction Since the 2009 Elections… By Mehdi Aghaei, Iranian Writer and Member of the National Council of Resistance of Iran

- Europe and Arabs
 - Monday , 3 November 2025 8:47 AM GMT
 
Tehran is boiling over: Larijani cries out, "A catastrophe is coming," Qalibaf threatens Rouhani with prosecution, and Karroubi breaks his silence to accuse Khamenei of destroying the country… Will the time bomb of internal conflicts explode within the mullahs' palace?
Tehran is currently experiencing one of its most turbulent periods, as conflicts between factions within the Iranian regime escalate to unprecedented levels, revealing the depth of the crisis plaguing the foundations of the Supreme Leader's rule.
Ali Larijani, recently appointed Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council amidst this atmosphere of division, issued a striking warning reflecting the extent of the anxiety at the top of the regime. He stated that "Iran's political leaders do not grasp the sensitivity of the current situation, and at the slightest incident, they attack each other and create chaos," adding that "misunderstanding the current situation could inflict significant damage on the country."
This fear-filled warning is nothing less than a frank admission of the depth of the crisis afflicting the regime, a crisis that has clearly erupted in the conflict within the parliament. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the Speaker of Parliament, launched a scathing attack on former President Hassan Rouhani and his former foreign minister, accusing them of promoting the regime's ties with Russia. Meanwhile, voices within the parliament grew louder, demanding Rouhani's trial on charges of corruption and mismanagement.
MP Thabeti declared Rouhani "the most hated politician in Iran," calling for his imprisonment. Mullah Rasaei questioned why the judiciary had ignored the cases of the theft of valuable carpets from Saadabad Palace and Rouhani's plagiarism in his university thesis.
This fierce campaign is a direct result of Khamenei's weakening position within the regime, particularly following Rouhani's remarks in which he explicitly criticized the parliament and the Guardian Council, stating that "laws passed by a minority representing only 10% of the people lack legitimacy, even if they appear legal on the surface."
The angry reactions were not confined to parliament. The regime-affiliated website Asr-e Iran launched a fierce attack on Qalibaf, claiming his assault on Rouhani stemmed from his “chronic thirst for power.” The website reminded him that he had previously run for office claiming to represent 96% of Iranians, while today he represents only 6%.
The most dangerous development, however, is the resurgence of Mehdi Karroubi. In a meeting with the sons of Mir Hossein Mousavi, he stated, “Khamenei is the one who destroyed everything in Iran. He supported the rigging of the 2009 elections and accused us of sedition and lack of foresight, while he is the one who ruined the economy, culture, morals, and security. What we see today is the fruit of that misguided approach.”
These successive statements from prominent figures within the regime, from Larijani to Karroubi, and including Rouhani and Qalibaf, confirm that the mullahs’ regime is experiencing a comprehensive internal collapse and that the conflict between its factions is no longer manageable, at a time when popular and international pressure demanding fundamental change in Iran is mounting. With each passing day, the cracks in the Iranian regime's internal structure widen, and disagreements transform from whispers in closed rooms into public cries echoing through parliament and official platforms. The people, burdened by inflation, sanctions, and repression, watch this collapse with growing tension in silence, the embers of anger smoldering beneath the ashes. This fire no longer awaits a random spark; it is now coalescing under the banner of organized resistance and uprising units that unite Iranian youth from every province. Every warning from Larijani, every accusation from Qalibaf, every outcry from Karroubi fuels the engine of an imminent uprising; an uprising that will not demand partial reforms but will uproot the regime entirely, so that the Iranian people may declare that the era of the Supreme Leader is over, never to return.

                                      
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
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