
by Elizabeth Blade
RT Middle East correspondent
June 17, 2025
from
RT Website

Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu
has vowed
to crush
Iran's
nuclear capabilities
as experts
warn of a
broader
Western agenda...
In his first public address since the beginning of Operation
Rising Lion, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to
strip
Iran of the ability to develop
nuclear weapons, eliminate its ballistic missile capabilities, and
remove what he called an existential threat to the State of
Israel...
"This is a battle for survival," Netanyahu
told reporters in a Zoom press conference on Monday.
"We will continue this operation until the
Islamic Republic of Iran is no longer a nuclear threat - not to
Israel, not to the region, not to the world."
Netanyahu's bold declaration came as Israeli jets
continued a fourth day of coordinated strikes deep into Iranian
territory.
According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF),
over 370 missiles and hundreds of UAVs have been launched from Iran
since Friday, prompting swift Israeli retaliation.
The IDF claims to have struck more than 90
strategic targets across Iran, including,
suspected missile depots, radar
installations, and command centers near Tehran, Esfahan, and
along the Persian Gulf coast...
The operation has already resulted in more than
200 casualties in Iran, though precise numbers remain unverified due
to restricted access for international media.
Satellite imagery reviewed by analysts at the
Institute for Science and International Security showed
significant damage to facilities near
Natanz and
Parchin, long suspected of being
part of Iran's nuclear infrastructure.
But critics of the Israeli campaign - and its justification - are
raising serious concerns about the underlying motives of Netanyahu
and his allies.
'The Regime is Lying'
Mohammad Marandi, a prominent Iranian academic, political
analyst, and adviser to Iran's nuclear negotiating team, rejects
Netanyahu's claims outright.
"The regime is lying about nuclear programs
just to justify aggression and murder," Marandi told RT.
"Tulsi Gabbard, who is the Director of
US National Intelligence, just
recently said Iran is
not developing nuclear weapons.
So it's clear that the issue is Netanyahu,
neat escalation, and the Zionist lobby in the United States is
behind him."
Iran's nuclear program has long been a subject of
contention.
While Tehran has enriched uranium and developed
advanced centrifuge technology, it has consistently denied seeking
nuclear weapons.
Iranian officials argue that their nuclear
program is designed solely for peaceful energy production and
medical research - a position grounded, they say, in religious
doctrine that prohibits weapons of mass destruction.
To prove its intentions, Iran signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan
of Action (JCPOA)
in 2015, an international accord with the US and European powers
that limited uranium enrichment in exchange for sanctions relief.
However, in 2018, then-President Donald Trump
unilaterally withdrew the US from the deal, reigniting tensions.
Since then, Tehran has allowed international
inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
limited access to its facilities, but Israel remains unconvinced.
'They want Regime Change'
According to Marandi, Israel's true objective lies far beyond
neutralizing a nuclear threat.
"It's always been so-called regime change,"
he said.
"Whether it's the Israeli regime or the
Americans or the Europeans. That's how they are. They don't want
independent countries, and especially countries like Iran, which
support the Palestinian cause."
Marandi is not alone in his assessment.
Syrian analyst Taleb Ibrahim, a longtime
commentator on Iranian affairs and an author of several books on the
Islamic Republic, agrees that Western powers - particularly the
United States - are pursuing a broader geopolitical agenda.
"If the United States will put its hands on
Iran again [like it was before 1979]," Ibrahim told RT, "they
will block the Russian southern wall.
This means that Russia will not be able to
expand its influence beyond the Caspian Sea. And it will be
restricted to a very narrow place between Central Asia and the
Arctic."
Ibrahim warns that China, too, would suffer
consequences from a weakened Iran.
"China will not be able to reach the Middle
East. Because if Iran becomes part of the Western bloc, it will
sever China's access.
And the most important thing of all - a
New World Order will
emerge. It will be a New American World Order."
Ibrahim believes this is not a regional conflict,
but part of a sweeping strategy to restore American hegemony.
"To make America great again is to regain
American control across the globe. The war in Iran is just a
chapter in that plan."
Trump's Denial - And strategic
Silence
President
Donald Trump has thus far
distanced himself from the Israeli "operation", saying
America's goals are purely defensive and promising that he will not
be starting any wars.
But Ibrahim is unconvinced.
"In strategy, if you want to make war, talk
about peace," he said.
"The United States is preparing for a very
big war - first against China, then Russia. After this, they
will try to build an American century. One government for the
world, headquartered in the White House.
That's the final goal."
A dangerous Gamble
Both Marandi and Ibrahim agree that forced regime change in Iran
would unleash chaos across the region.
The fall of Tehran's current government could lead to the
fragmentation of Iran, a multi-ethnic nation with Kurds, Azeris,
Arabs, and Baloch who may pursue autonomy or independence in the
power vacuum.
It could ignite sectarian warfare akin to what
unfolded
in Iraq after the 2003 US invasion,
and destabilize fragile neighbors like Iraq, Afghanistan, and even
Turkey.
Moreover,
Iran's alliances with Hezbollah in
Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and various Shia
militias across Iraq and Syria mean that a collapse in
Tehran could trigger cascading violence across the Middle East.
Global oil markets, already rattled, could see
disruptions on a historic scale.
Yet, both experts maintain that such an outcome is unlikely.
"Regime change is more likely in
Israel and across Europe than anywhere near Iran," Marandi
said.
"These Western governments failed with
Russia, failed with China, and they'll fail with Iran too."
Ibrahim agrees:
"It is impossible to make regime change in
Iran by force.
The Iran-Iraq war was designed to do exactly
that - to overthrow the Islamic Republic established by
Ayatollah Khomeini.
But after eight years of war, billions of
dollars, and support from the US, France, and Gulf states, Iran
survived - and emerged stronger.
The only way to change the regime is through
the Iranian people. And right now, the Iranian people are
standing with their leaders.
They believe they are fighting the Satan..:
the US, the bigger Satan, and
Israel, the smaller one...
And that gives them unity and strength."
As Israel continues its campaign and the
international community watches nervously, the implications of the
current conflict are far from limited to the Middle East.
"This war," Ibrahim concluded, "will be the
starting point of reshaping the world.
If Iran wins - and I believe it will,
eventually - the world will shift to
a multipolar order.
That is the shared vision of Iran,
Russia, and China.
But if Iran loses,
we will all live under an 'American
empire'...
The White House will rule from Washington to
Beijing.
This is a decisive battle - not just for
Iran, but for the destiny of the world."
As missiles fly and rhetoric intensifies, what
began as a regional standoff may ultimately determine the
balance of power in the 21st century...
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