Monday, April 13, 2026

Donald Trump Pulls The Wabbit Season Trick On the Iranian Regime

Almost 40 years ago, one of the great buddy cop franchises was born. Lethal Weapon, starring Mel Gibson and Danny Glover, hit the screens for the first time. It made a whole bunch of money and spawned three sequels over the next dozen years.

In one early scene, Gibson's character, a L.A. cop going through an immense amount of personal and mental grief and trauma, is up on a roof with a potentially suicidal jumper. The conventional wisdom, of course, is to talk to him, keep talking, and wear him down by talking until he gives up and lets himself be taken away in a rubber truck. Gibson's Martin Riggs read the situation, improvised, and came up with a better and more expedient game plan. 


That's pretty much what Donald Trump just did to the Iranian regime after ceasefire talks broke down in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Saturday. The regime elements, including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Ghalibaf, went back home believing their strategy of holding the Strait of Hormuz hostage for $2 million dollars a ship for safe passage is a winner. 

What is silly about that claim, obviously, is that while talks were ongoing, the United States Navy had traversed the Strait twice, deployed unmanned underwater drones seeking mines the regime claims they forgot where they dropped due to the fog of war, and began plotting a safe route of passage for oil tankers and cargo container ships. 

But after the talks broke off, the ripples of which we'll cover in the course of this column, President Donald Trump, a proven master at the art of unpredictability, flipped the script 180 degrees on its head. He all but slapped the cuffs on, looked the Iranians in the eyes, and said, "Do you really want to close the Strait? Do you wanna? Okay. Let's close the Strait. Let's do it." 

Before the air strikes by United States and Israeli forces began on February 28th, a little over a week before, in fact, Rich Goldberg of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies posted this on X while the world was speculating on when, or if, kinetic war was finally going to come to Iran. 

It turns out that this option has moved up to take its rightful place at center stage. 

For weeks leading up to the Caracas incursion by Delta Force and the Night Stalkers of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment on January 3rd, Donald Trump used our naval assets, forward staged in the southern part of the Western Hemisphere, to play pirate - interdicting and capturing oil tankers illegally exporting Venezuelan crude in violation of international sanctions. 

By announcing the Strait is closed for real this time to Iranian-related commercial traffic, and the United States having an actual naval presence to enforce it, Kharg Island has become the loneliest Route 66 gas station after the interstate came to steer people away from it. 

Iran already has no money. Their currency is far less valuable than the paper on which it is printed, and they have no meaningful access to the international banking system. Their economy is currently suffering 71% inflation due to the conflict. Now, it cannot export oil, which is 90% of the revenue, into the Islamic Republic of Iran, and it can no longer charge its fantasy toll on Larak Island for any other ship going through the hairpin curve. 

So the question becomes, why now? Why didn't this happen weeks ago? As it turns out, in war, as in deal negotiations, timing is everything. 

A couple of weeks ago, Saudi Arabia was spinning up their East-West pipeline to the Red Sea, bypassing the Strait of Hormuz entirely, to its capacity of 7 million barrels per day. It was estimated that it would take months, maybe years, to get to full capacity. The regime in Tehran was counting on that, actually, because that would give them more perceived leverage in the Strait. 

Coinciding quite nicely with Donald Trump's announcement that the U.S. is now blockading Iranian-based traffic through the Strait, the pipeline has reached 100% oil flow. Either their workers were fibbing on how long it would take, or they're the busiest beavers in the Middle East. 

And that's not the only workaround to traversing the Strait currently underway. The market self-corrects and creates alternatives out of necessity. Fanatical eschatological Iranian terrorists are that necessity. And part of that self-correction is numerous plans in the works to build and install more pipelines, some even through Israel, to the Mediterranean.

With Saudi Arabia's pipeline at peak performance, the pressure on opening the Strait lessens every day that the market is re-orienting itself for a post-Strait world. In short, the more the regimists in Tehran remain defiant, the more golden geese they're trying to hold for ransom are flying away in search of safer wetlands. 

But if you have to give the regime anything, it's their defiance. They're positively Hakeem Jeffriesesque in their rhetoric. Chuck Schumer would love to be as bold as Ghalibaf and Araghchi have been of late. Here is a paraphrasing of the back and forth between the Trump administration and regime negotiators since the ceasefire went into effect. 

Trump: "The Strait is open." 

Regime: "The Strait is closed." 

Trump: "It's open." 


Regime: "It's closed unless you pay us." 

Trump: "We just sent through two ships and swept for mines. It's open." 

Regime: "Any ship that doesn't pay us will get hit. It's closed.">

In my nearly 60 years lapping around the Sun on this rock, I never thought I'd get to the point where virtually every geopolitical issue can be distilled into something I watched as a kid. I swear I've seen this bit before. 

 

Once the talks were over and Vice-President Vance boarded the plane home, President Trump pulled the Wabbit Season trick on the regime.

If Trump had blockaded the Strait a few weeks ago, the negative impact would have been felt by virtually the entire oil-producing Middle East, because the alternative means of delivery had not fully developed. Now, they have. 80% of the oil that used to flow through Hormuz has been accounted for via another route. The remainder of what would have to travel through the Strait to equal the net equivalent amount of oil flowing is around three tankers a day. 

How did the regimists react to that news? Just like Daffy Duck...and American Democrats. They flipped on a dime. 

It's really a brilliant strategy by President Trump if you think about it. Before this, Trump and the American military were in the position of proving a negative - that Iran wasn't a threat to maritime and commercial traffic through the Strait. We were pretty sure we carved out a safe lane, but thus far, there have not been too many takers, or tankers, because no one wants to be the first one to find out there's a mine that was missed or learn that an IRGC hiding behind a tree has a Stinger sitting on their shoulder.  

Instead, the President has closed Hormuz to Iranian-centric traffic and dared the Iranians to demonstrate they have the naval or military capacity to take us on and clear a path for their Chinese and Indian patrons. If they do attempt to fire on a destroyer or, God forbid, make a run at one of the aircraft carriers we have deployed in the Gulf region, that might just be the last thing the Iranian regime does. 

If they can't make a lane for tankers to get to and from their oil docks and ports, or worse for them, loaded tankers get interdicted by the Americans and Iran loses both the oil and the revenue from it, then the rest of the world, including the skippers of those tankers on either side of the Strait waiting for a green light, will know once and for all that Iran is all talk, no walk. In short, Iran is now in the position of proving the negative - that they have a functional navy or air force when they don't. 

Suddenly, the Democratic-inspired Daffians from the regime now see throttling ship traffic, their ship traffic, as violating the ceasefire. What a difference a day makes. But seriously, let's consider the proposition of the Iranian regime - that they will handle this firmly. With what? Their entire naval fleet is reef lattice at the bottom of the Strait, their senior naval leadership commanders and advisors dead, now replaced with underlings with little or no experience or expertise. What does Iran have that's going to be deployed as a counter to four aircraft carrier groups, aided and assisted by a growingly capable and increasingly pissed off coalition of Sunni Arab countries? The Late Charles Krauthammer's proverbial strong letter to follow? 

If the Iranians truly do violate the ceasefire by launching anything at American ships or non-Iranian-approved commercial shipping, Trump has a smorgasbord of weaponry at his disposal to essentially time-travel the regime back a few geological eras. 

The biggest concern, of course, is not what Iran can or might do. We'll get to their latest hope for salvation - the Houthis - in a bit. But the biggest geopolitical concern facing the Americans after shutting down the Strait to Iran is who actually gets screwed the most - the People's Republic of China. 

The Secretary-General of the Communist Chinese Party, Xi Jinping, was reportedly instrumental in forcing the regime to enter into the ceasefire in the first place, something Saturday's failed talks demonstrated was a choice not entirely of their own making. How will the CCP react to the blockade of their tankers in the Gulf? Perhaps it wouldn't have come to this if Secretary-General Xi Jinping hadn't pulled a Swalwell move. 

Part of what may have obviously entered Donald Trump's decision-making was this report that China was going to airlift in supplies to Iran. Not food, medicine, or things the civilian populace needs, mind you, but new air defense systems to install. 

That was a very bad miscalculation on the CCP's part. This was how Trump reacted to that threat. 

That would be crippling to China's economy. As it is, they're scrambling just to get oil, affecting their economy just as much as the previous tariffs they were handed by Donald Trump at the beginning of 2025. Before the campaign in Iran began, China imported somewhere in the neighborhood of 1.5 million barrels of oil a day from Iran, primarily out of Kharg Island. It has reduced dramatically over the last six weeks, but going to zero as of 10:00 AM EDT Monday morning is going to be crushing. 

So does that mean they're going to send those brand-new, yet untested warships of their own to the Gulf to take on the Americans and force their will on the Strait? Not bloody likely. They have petroleum reserves of their own they can tap, but not enough to sustain that kind of military adventurism for any significant period of time. And they've had a pretty good glimpse for six weeks of what they'd be up against. I'm not sure they're willing to tag team into the ring. 

Could they choose now to enforce a blockade through the Strait of Taiwan in order to distract and pressure Donald Trump? Sure. They face the same problem, though. They would need to expend a tremendous amount of energy to do so, and Taiwan will have something to say about it. And undoubtedly, Taiwan has much more military might than what we've seen of the Iranians. 

China is a net importer of oil. We have plenty. And now that Venezuela is on board with the United States, they've got vast amounts available as well that have been largely closed off to the CCP. 

China now has to shop for oil in the same stores as the rest of the world, and they're going to have to pay close to retail for it now.  

Second look at the Gulf of America? 


With oil in the mid-$90's per barrel, each one of those dots is worth about $210 million dollars fully loaded. Care to take a guess who's nuzzling up to the trough in the Gulf of America again? China. 

Before the war broke out in the Gulf, China and the United States' trade relationship had cooled significantly. Tariffs will tend to do that. But specifically regarding oil imports, China, which historically had imported somewhere around 225,000 barrels per day from the U.S. before Trump, dropped that number down to essentially zero since early 2025. 

The current environment in the Strait of Hormuz has changed that. This month, the CCP is on tap to import 600,000 barrels per day. That's a pretty big hike from zero. As I said, they're a net importer, and they have a billion-plus people. Their thirst for oil cannot be sated. If they can't get it from Iran or Venezuela, they're realizing we are the world's emergency gas station.  

Still think China is willing to militarily intervene when Donald Trump can cut them off from Iran's oil, but Venezuela's, ours, and probably our allies in the Sunni Arab world as well? My guess is that one of the reasons Trump is instituting this blockade, one out of many, is that this squeezes Xi to the point where he gets more forceful with his Iranian friends to cave once and for all. When Trump says he's holding all the cards, he is. But more importantly, he's holding all the pressure points around the globe and is pressing on them as necessary to get what he wants.

And what does Donald Trump want? Everything. 

Iran is stating they're willing to fight this war with the Americans and Israelis down to the very last...Houthi?

So just to understand the Iranian regime logic, the Strait is closed, unless a fee is paid, but now it's open to everyone else but them, and their response is we'll reopen this strait by force, and our buddies in Yemen, the Houthis, will close down the other strait, Bab el-Mandeb. How much do you think the Israelis are licking their chops at the prospects of destroying the Houthis if they fall for this? That's another score that needs settling. Perhaps that time is coming soon if the Houthis are dumb enough to become cannon fodder for a regime that can never help them again. 

As for the Iranian regime, you might think that due to the over-the-top bluster they're issuing as though they're winning this conflict, which by any objective measure they aren't, they have plenty of turmoil internally - lots of it. 

That's basically the Iranian regime power struggle in one tweet - the politicians are trying to browbeat the Americans into the best settlement they can achieve and still survive the conflict, while the hard-liners in the IRGC are not having any of it, and don't trust the politicians as far as they can throw them off buildings. 

So why go through the motions of this flurry of marathon negotiations in Islamabad on Saturday? Why send J.D. Vance, Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner against 71 Iranians, or one virgin short of a full martyr's Paradise complement? Several reasons, actually. 

Of anyone in the Trump administration who is part of the national security team, J.D. Vance is probably the most dovish. He doesn't like this conflict with Iran very much at all, especially with one eye looking forward to the 2028 presidential election. If there is anyone in the administration willing to work tirelessly to get some concession, any concession, out of the Iranians in order to end the conflict and declare victory, it would be V.P. Vance. 

The fact that the Iranians got their hindquarters handed to them for six weeks, unfortunately, was not enough motivation to get them to yes at the table. This frees up the much more hawkish Donald Trump to use whatever force he deems appropriate to escalate if Iran so much as twitches in the direction of our naval blockade or our allies in the Middle East re-route the oil milkshake straw away from Hormuz forever. Does Trump still want a deal? Maybe, but maybe not. He doesn't seem to care at this point. 

The Strait of Hormuz will open. It may be a while before courage spreads like a virus among tanker captains, but again, only a few have to make it for the market's oil demands to be met. Does Trump need a deal right now? No. The economic chokehold on Iran will continue to tighten like a boa constrictor until the life of the regime is extinguished. If Iranian citizens decide 100% inflation sucks and walking everywhere sucks more, the regime will have more on their plate than it can handle. Maybe the next time someone from the regime calls to negotiate, the overture will begin with an image texted of a white flag flying over Tehran. 

Two, the oil export bonanza that is coming to the United States, literally and figuratively, should deliver an absolutely amazing 2nd quarter GDP print. I don't presume to be able to tell you what it will end up being, but that many dots leaving $210 million behind in the United States as they leave the Gulf of America with boatloads of Uncle Sam crude, that should do wonders for the U.S. economy. The failed talks showed that the Iranians aren't reasonable, have never been reasonable, nor will they be for the foreseeable future.

Now that the Gulf of America is poised to do standing-boat-only business very soon, there is an island that naturally creates a minor chokepoint. And for a very long time, that island has been very unfriendly to the United States. If you ever wanted to know why Cuba mattered, look at how much hostage money sailing above and below the despotic regime is about to take place. Cuba has historically had no qualms about using economic terrorism in order to survive. When Donald Trump says Cuba is next, it would seem to me that next should be moved up to now. The boom that is coming to the United States is very large and very real, and the last thing we need is for Cuba to perform as an Iranian regime understudy. 

On a tarmac before boarding Air Force One Sunday night back to Washington, President Trump was asked about the coming blockade of Iranian sea traffic. 

I'll close by answering the question of how China will react to being shut off from Iranian oil. Very late last night, this news dropped. 

Qatar is on the south shore of the Persian Gulf. It looks like the CCP is already recalculating. Instead of messing with the American blockade of Iran, they're negotiating a deal with Qatar to fill up the boats there and use the American Navy as the crossing guard through the Strait of Hormuz, leaving Iran holding their Swalwell in their hands. 

Now tell me again how Trump is losing this war to Iran? 

https://hotair.com/generalissimo/2026/04/13/donald-trumps-key-to-defeating-the-iranian-regime-treat-them-like-democrats-n3813827

The Ghost in the Bunker: Three Theories About Iran’s Invisible Supreme Leader


When Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening hours of Operation Epic Fury on February 28, 2026, the Islamic Republic lost the man who had held its contradictions together through sheer force of will for thirty-six years. What Iran gained in his place may be something stranger than a successor — it may be a symbol, a myth, or depending on how dark your reading of current events runs, something far more ominous.

His son, Mojtaba Khamenei, was named Supreme Leader on March 8. Since that day, he has not been seen. Not on camera. Not in a photograph. Not in person at any public event, including the memorial for his own father. His “statements” have been read aloud by television anchors — not delivered by the man himself. The regime’s silence around its own leader has produced exactly the kind of vacuum that conspiracy theories are made for. And in this case, the theories are not entirely unreasonable.

What follows is an attempt to examine three competing explanations for Mojtaba Khamenei’s disappearance — ordered from most to least likely — with an honest accounting of what the evidence actually shows. None of these can be confirmed. That is precisely the problem. In a regime that governs by opacity, the absence of verifiable truth is not an accident. It is policy.
Ali Khamenei was killed on February 28, 2026, in a joint U.S.-Israeli airstrike on his compound in Tehran. Iranian state media confirmed his death in the early hours of March 1.
His son Mojtaba Khamenei was appointed Supreme Leader on March 8 by the Assembly of Experts, reportedly under heavy pressure from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Mojtaba was wounded in the same strike that killed his father. Sources describe severe facial disfigurement and serious injuries to one or both legs, with one U.S. intelligence source suggesting he may have lost a leg.

Since his appointment, Mojtaba has issued no video, no audio, and no verified photograph. His communications have been written statements read on state television by news anchors.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth stated publicly that Mojtaba is “wounded and likely disfigured,” and questioned why a leader with access to cameras refuses to use them.
A viral video purporting to show Mojtaba in a war room analyzing Israel’s Dimona nuclear facility was widely debunked as AI-generated propaganda, with AI detection tools putting the probability of synthetic generation above 71 percent.
Mojtaba Khamenei is described by former associates as “apocalypse-obsessed,” and some of his supporters within the IRGC believe he is the prophesied Khorasani — a messianic figure from Shia eschatology destined to pave the way for the return of the Mahdi.
Analysts warn the IRGC, not Mojtaba, is effectively making the strategic decisions during the ongoing war, raising serious questions about who actually commands Iran’s military.

Theory One: The IRGC Is Running the Show, and Mojtaba Is the Mask

This is the least dramatic of the three theories, which is one reason to take it seriously. The history of authoritarian regimes is filled with moments when a figurehead leader was kept visible — or made to appear visible — while a deeper power structure made the real decisions. Lenin spent his final years incapacitated while the Soviet apparatus ground forward. Kim Jong-il’s inner circle managed a transitional fog for months after his health deteriorated. The mechanics of autocracy do not require a functional autocrat. They require the appearance of one.

The Council on Foreign Relations said it plainly in the days after Ali Khamenei’s assassination: “Taking out Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is not the same as regime change. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is the regime.”

That assessment now hangs over the question of Mojtaba’s fitness to lead with considerable weight. Multiple senior Iranian sources have told Reuters that Mojtaba “will be one voice but it will not be the decisive one,” and that the IRGC — the same force that pressured the Assembly of Experts into selecting him — has emerged as the dominant decision-making voice on strategic matters during the war. His first “statements” as Supreme Leader were not delivered by him at all. It was read by a news anchor, an arrangement that allowed the regime to invoke his authority without requiring his presence.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth put the skepticism in plain terms. Mojtaba is “scared,” Hegseth said in a press briefing on March 13. “He’s injured. He’s on the run, and he lacks legitimacy.” Trump himself has publicly questioned whether anyone has actually seen Mojtaba, musing that the new leader might be dead. The White House’s posture — conducting ceasefire negotiations with Iran’s elected president Pezeshkian rather than with the Supreme Leader — suggests that Washington has already drawn its own conclusions about where functional authority actually resides in Tehran.

What this theory implies is not that Mojtaba is dead, but that a wounded, inexperienced, mid-ranking cleric who was propelled into the world’s most dangerous job by a military faction now serves primarily as a legitimizing symbol while the IRGC prosecutes a war in his name. That is not a conspiracy theory. It is a reasonable inference from observable facts.

Theory Two: He Is Alive, But the Regime Cannot Afford to Show You What He Looks Like

The most detailed picture of Mojtaba Khamenei’s current physical condition comes from three anonymous sources close to his inner circle who spoke to Reuters and whose accounts align with public statements by U.S. officials. His face was disfigured in the February 28 strike. He suffered serious injuries to one or both legs; one U.S. intelligence source said he is believed to have lost a leg. Iran’s own state television, in what amounted to an accidental admission, referred to Mojtaba using the Farsi word janbaz — a term specifically used for those badly wounded in war — after naming him Supreme Leader. The regime has provided no official statement on the extent of the injuries. But the word choice was telling.

The question is not whether Mojtaba is incapacitated. The sources close to him are insistent that he remains “mentally sharp” and is participating in meetings by audio conference. The question is whether the Islamic Republic — a system that derives its authority from the image of a divinely guided, supremely confident, spiritually formidable leader — can sustain that image when the man himself is faceless, voiceless, and physically broken. The answer may explain more about his absence than any injury does.

The strongman mythology is not incidental to how the Islamic Republic functions. It is load-bearing. Khomeini’s portrait still hangs beside his successor’s across Iran. The system is built on the idea of an unshakeable clerical authority appointed by God, not elected by men. A Supreme Leader who cannot walk, whose face was disfigured by American and Israeli bombs, who communicates through scripted text read by strangers on state television — that is not a man who inspires the revolutionary fervor the regime needs to keep fighting. It is a vulnerability. And the IRGC, which helped install him, knows it.

Sources close to his circle told Reuters that images of Mojtaba could be released within one or two months, and that a public appearance might follow — “when his health and the security situation allow.” That is a diplomatic way of acknowledging that neither condition has been met. The irony, if it can be called that, is that Mojtaba’s physical absence may be prolonging the war. Iranian society is already fractured. Ordinary Iranians celebrated in the streets when Ali Khamenei was confirmed dead. Chants of “death to Mojtaba” circulated on social media following his appointment. A regime that cannot show its own leader to its own people is a regime in a kind of undeclared crisis, no matter how loudly its military fires missiles.

Theory Three: The Wounded Leader, the AI Avatar, and the Shadow of Prophecy

This is the theory that requires the most careful handling, because it sits at the intersection of genuine Islamic eschatology, observable technology, and the documented belief system of Iran’s new Supreme Leader himself. It is the least likely of the three in any literal sense. It is not, however, invented from nothing.

Jaber Rajabi is an Iranian exile, former IRGC operative, and one-time study partner of Mojtaba Khamenei at the Qom Seminary. He has given numerous interviews since Mojtaba’s appointment, and his descriptions of the man are not the profile of a conventional politician. Mojtaba, Rajabi told The Atlantic, is “apocalypse-obsessed.” He believes there are milestones on the path to the end of the world, and that he himself “will have a special part in hastening humanity down that path.”

Rajabi described him as “a brilliant zealot, much more extreme and uncompromising than his father, and a uniquely dangerous potential successor” — and called him “more dangerous than 50 nuclear bombs.” He also recounted that Mojtaba reported a dream in which the patriarch Adam appeared to him and confirmed his identity as al-Sayyid al-Khorasani.

The Khorasani is a figure from Shia eschatological tradition — a leader from the historical region of Khorasan, in eastern Iran, who according to prophecy will raise black banners, wage war against Iran’s enemies, and march toward Jerusalem to pave the way for the return of the Mahdi, the Hidden Twelfth Imam. Mojtaba was born in Mashhad, in Khorasan. His supporters within the IRGC — where the apocalyptic doctrine of Mahdism has been a central element of ideological indoctrination since at least 2009 — have already referred to him as a “living martyr” for surviving the February 28 strikes, noting that surviving an enemy attack mirrors another detail of the Khorasani prophecy. His appointment was announced on laylat al-qadr, the Night of Power, one of the most sacred nights in the Islamic calendar. Whether this timing was deliberate or coincidental, Rajabi says Mojtaba used it to “grant himself a form of sanctity.”

Now consider what is already confirmed about the information environment surrounding his absence. A video circulated widely in early April purporting to show Mojtaba entering a military command center with coordinates to Israel’s Dimona nuclear facility displayed on a large screen. The clip garnered millions of views and was treated as breaking news by numerous outlets.

It was AI-generated. Fact-checkers confirmed unnatural lighting, blurred facial features, and glitch-like transitions. AI detection tools rated it at over 71 percent likely to be synthetic. No official Iranian account posted the video. Yet it spread globally and shaped public perception of a man that almost no one has actually seen. The Brookings Institution published an analysis noting that Iran has turned to “generative AI to accelerate its existing information warfare playbook,” and that a coordinated deepfake campaign with synchronized posting windows had been traced to the Iranian regime.

Here is where the third theory emerges — not as prediction, but as a pattern worth watching. A Supreme Leader who cannot show his face. A regime that has already deployed AI imagery of that leader for propaganda purposes. A belief system in which Mojtaba sees himself as a prophesied messianic precursor. And an eschatological tradition that anticipates a great leader who will announce the return of the Mahdi and lead armies to Jerusalem. The technology to construct a convincing, speaking, commanding digital avatar of Mojtaba Khamenei exists today. The ideological motivation to do so — to present a “miraculously healed” or divinely transfigured Supreme Leader who then positions himself as the fulfillment of ancient prophecy — is not foreign to the worldview of the men around him. It is native to it.

Scripture long anticipated the appeal of signs and wonders as instruments of deception. “For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect,” warned the Lord in Matthew 24:24.

The technology of our moment has simply given that ancient warning a new vector. An AI avatar of a disfigured Supreme Leader, deployed to announce himself as the forerunner of the Mahdi to hundreds of millions of Shia Muslims, would not require a miracle. It would only require a camera, a render farm, and a population already prepared to believe.

What the Silence Actually Tells Us

Taken together, these three theories are not mutually exclusive. The IRGC may be making the strategic decisions while the regime uses Mojtaba’s name as cover — and the reason his name can be used rather than his face is precisely because his face cannot be shown. And the deepest strand of his own belief system may be guiding the propaganda strategy that will eventually be used to re-present him to the world in a form the regime finds acceptable, which may not be the form reality left him in.

What is not a theory is this: Iran is being led by a man that no one outside a small circle of IRGC officers and medical personnel has seen since February 28. His communications are scripted and secondhand. His government is waging a war against the world’s most powerful military alliance in his name. And the ideology driving the men around him is one in which apocalyptic war is not a failure of statesmanship but a sacrament — a required milestone on the path to the end of the world. Whether Mojtaba is a puppet, a patient, or something darker is a question the regime will not answer. The silence itself is the answer that matters most.

‘Insane Update’: TPUSA Reporter’s Alleged Attacker Also Linked To Minnesota Fraud

 

The tentacles of Minnesota’s fraud problem are far-reaching, as evidenced by what Turning Point USA reporter Savanah Hernandez calls an “insane update” to her recent assault.

Hernandez says Chris Ostroushko, the man accused of attacking her at a recent anti-ICE demonstration, also has a criminal record of unemployment fraud stemming from Minnesota.

As the Daily Caller reported:

Ostroushko, who was born in 1975 according to a court document, was in his late 20s at the time the unemployment fraud took place. He ultimately received a stay of execution on his sentencing and was discharged from probation after less than two years, according to the signed document dated March 2007.

“On December 31, 2002, Christopher Ostroushko applied for unemployment insurance benefits by completing an application via the Internet,” the complaint posted by CrimeWatchMpls read. “Based upon the information provided, a weekly unemployment benefit of $452.00 beginning January 5, 2003, was established for Ostroushko. Ostroushko received said benefit through July 12, 2003.”

“When calling in for the weeks ending January 18, 2003 to July 5, 2003, Ostroushko reported that he had an income of zero,” the complaint continued. “The Department of Economic Security learned that Ostroushko claimed unemployment benefits for the weeks ending January 4, 2003 to July 12, 2003, during which time he was working for Becker Carpet Service.”

“As a result of this unreported income, Ostroushko received $6,905 in unemployment benefits to which he was not entitled,” the complaint added.

Dakota County District Court did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

Here’s what Hernandez reported about the experience and subsequent revelation about Ostroushko:

Here’s the full text of the post above:

I’m waking up with a headache and stiff neck this morning due to how violently anti-ICE activist, Chris Ostroushko, shoved me down yesterday.

A second angle shows that he had to be held back by 5 men as he continued to charge at me.

I didn’t speak a word to him all day yet he repeatedly called me a bitch and very clearly looks like he wanted to violently hurt me even worse than he did.

I’m happy to report that charges will be brought against this man, his wife and daughter.

Here’s what Fox News reported about the incident:

Frontlines TPUSA reporter Savanah Hernandez was attacked while covering an ICE protest in Minneapolis on Saturday.

At the Whipple Federal Building, protests took place over a local ICE field office that is also a detention facility.

Protesters swarmed Hernandez, blowing horns in front of her face, yelling obscenities and waving adult novelty products in front of her, as she tried to cover herself and run away.

“Get the f— out of here,” one protester is heard repeatedly yelling at Hernandez. 

Hernandez escaped from the swarm of protesters and then said, “get away from me” to a protester who continued to be up close to her. The protester then pushed Hernandez, who fell on the wired fence.

Hernandez got up and attempted to leave again, while yelling at protesters to get away from her.

Another protester attempted to tussle with Hernandez, but she was able to escape.

“Stop touching me!” Hernandez yelled back at protesters, and almost immediately after, a grown man is seen pushing Hernandez forward to the concrete.

Here’s some additional coverage:

https://wltreport.com/2026/04/13/insane-update-tpusa-reporters-alleged-attacker-also-linked/

Donald Trump Pulls The Wabbit Season Trick On the Iranian Regime

Almost 40 years ago, one of the great buddy cop franchises was born. Lethal Weapon, starring Mel Gibson and Danny Glover, hit the screens fo...