Exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi isn’t whispering from afar anymore. He’s sounding the alarm. And he wants President Donald Trump to hear it loud and clear.
“Iranians are rising. They’re dying in the streets. And they believe you’re the only world leader who won’t betray them,” Pahlavi declared in a stunning Sunday broadcast. “Help us finish this. Help us liberate Iran.”
Pahlavi says the country has reached a breaking point. Entire cities are shaking with nightly demonstrations. Regime forces are firing on crowds. Hospitals are overflowing. The internet is shut down. And the unrest is spreading faster than authorities can contain it.
“This is a defining moment,” he said. “I am prepared to return the minute the path opens. I’ve waited my entire life for this.”
The Islamic Republic is facing its most explosive uprising since it seized power in 1979. Videos show protesters torching government buildings and tearing down portraits of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Unverified reports say security forces have suffered casualties. Many Iranians insist the regime is close to losing control.
“It feels like the walls are cracking,” a Tehran resident said through an encrypted connection. “People aren’t scared anymore. They want the regime gone. Completely gone.”
Officials have imposed a near-total blackout on communication. But eyewitness clips continue to slip through — and they paint a picture of a country on the brink.
Trump didn’t wait. He jumped into the fray.
“Iran is looking at FREEDOM, perhaps like never before,” he posted on Truth Social. “The USA stands ready to help!!!”
At a press briefing, he ramped up the threat.
“If they start slaughtering people, we will hit them very hard,” Trump said. “Not boots on the ground. But blows they won’t recover from.”
Inside Iran, the message landed with force. Some protesters even waved American flags — a scene unthinkable a decade ago.
“They rename streets after Trump,” Pahlavi said. “They believe he’s the only U.S. leader who won’t cut a deal behind their backs. That trust matters.”
Pahlavi didn’t hold back.
“President Trump, partner with us,” he said. “Together, let’s make Iran great again.”
He revealed he already has a transition team preparing for the collapse of the regime, including legal advisers and security experts planning for free elections.
“I don’t want a throne,” he said. “I want a country reborn.”
Yet critics warn that once the regime falls, chaos could follow. Iran is fractured. Ethnic tensions run high. Millions don’t remember the monarchy. But Pahlavi insists he is ready anyway.
“Iranians are prepared to die for this,” he said. “And so am I.”
Washington’s allies are watching anxiously. A former CIA official told us the Iranian regime is “more brittle than ever before,” citing internal feuds, financial collapse, and widespread public hatred.
“It wouldn’t take much to push them over the edge,” he said. “If the U.S. applies pressure, this could spiral fast.”
The protests show no sign of fading. In several cities, crowds chanted, “This year is the year of freedom.” Police retreated in some areas. Barricades went up in others.
“The fear is gone,” a protest organizer in Isfahan told us. “Either the regime falls, or we do. There is no middle ground anymore.”
As the world watches the fire spread across Iran, Pahlavi’s message to America remains the same:
“If Washington steps in now, history will remember who stood with the Iranian people — and who stood aside.”
Discover more from Red News Nation
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

To bad in the USA doesn’t think that. Libs worry more about illegals more than Americans.