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𧨠Decapitation as Strategy: Trump Breaks the China, Walks Away Trump finally got his shot at regime change in Iran â Khamenei dead, the leadership blown apart â and then did the one thing U.S. presidents usually at least pretend not to do: he openly said there is no American plan for the day after, and dumped the problem on 90 million people under bombardment. Washington has seen this movie before. The Taliban ousted in 2001, Saddam gone in 2003, Gaddafi lynched in 2011, Maduro targeted in January â each sold as a clean break with evil, each followed by years of occupation, insurgency, state collapse or buyerâs remorse, even when the Pentagon arrived with binders of ânationâbuildingâ PowerPoints. This time, Trump isnât even pretending: no boots on the ground, no provisional authority, no GreenâZone fantasy. Just an air war called Operation Epic Fury, a video address telling Iranians âwhen we are finished, take over your government,â and a promise that this might be their âonly chance for generations.â Inside the system, everyone knows what that means. CIA analysts tell policymakers the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is best placed to seize control after Khamenei, not some exiled opposition figures with little organization on the ground. European and regional security officials quietly warn that a country of Iranâs scale could be looking at years of factional fighting â Shiite power struggles, Kurdish and Baluchi unrest, proxy militias, and a decapitated theocracy that might still cling to the levers that matter. The politics around it are pure Washington selfâparody. Tim Kaine compares the approach to smashing all the china and telling Iranians to figure out the glue. Lindsey Graham shrugs on TV that itâs not his job or the presidentâs job to pick a new government, so long as the ânew Iranâ stops sponsoring terrorism â democracy as a plugâandâplay product. Lawmakers from both parties admit thereâs no âdayâafterâ strategy; a German security official puts it more cleanly: âthe plan is to have no plan.â And Trump himself keeps both doors open. He toys with the interim ruling council in Tehran, saying âthey want to talk and I have agreed to talk,â but wonât commit to backing street protests or any specific alternative, insisting heâll âhave to look at the situation at the time it happens.â A White House official brags that Operation Epic Fury âcontinues unabated,â while the president records calls that let him later claim either a historic victory or that he never really owned the outcome. Regime change as vibe, not policy. So the United States has arrived in a familiar place â toppled an enemy, blown a hole in a brutal system â but this time with even less honesty and fewer tools. The old lies were about âMission Accomplished,â âliberation,â and âreconstructionâ; the new one is cleaner: that you can decapitate a regime the size of Iran, refuse to touch the aftermath, and somehow avoid owning what grows in the ruins. Trump is betting that Iranians, the IRGC, Europe, the Gulf, the oil market â and the militias â will all sort it out for him. The record from Kabul, Baghdad and Tripoli suggests they will â just not in a way any U.S. president wants his name on. #Iran#Trump#regimeChange#EpicFury#war#USforeignpolicy đąAmerican Đbserver - Stay up to date on all important events đşđ¸