LONDON – First and foremost, we must admit Iran was hit with a painful blow at dawn on Friday when Zionist groups launched dangerous attacks with blatant American accomplices in residential areas and nuclear and military facilities.
The attack brought martials of military commanders, nuclear scientists, women and children. But we must take into account that the Zionist entity was struck by Iran that not only was painful, but dragged its pride through the mud, rekindling difficult questions about its survival and inevitable loss.
History records pivotal moments. Under a siege, obstruction and assassination campaign for decades, Iran chose to respond to the wild assaults launched by the system of occupation of child murders, in dignity, strategic patience and the blood of its pure leader. The administration now recognizes that its era is gone and it is approaching extinction.
The occupied Jaffa sirens were more than just a stimulating sound for the settlers. They marked the beginning of a new era. Iran is a military unit equivalent to the “Kirya” headquarters of the Zionist regime – the US Department of Defense. This is not a small detail. That’s a clear message. Iran no longer speaks – it acts. The missile is no longer a warning. They are retaliation.
The attack, made with high-precision missiles, struck one of the most sensitive sites of Zionist forces despite heavy defensive measures and the most strengthened infrastructure in West Asia. At the same time, other strikes targeted military bases in the south and Intelligence News Institute in direct retaliation for the assassination of nuclear scientists and senior IRGC commanders. But God chose to bestow them with the highest honor: martyrism on the battlefield, at the hands of the most evil of his creation, for the path to Al-Kud, for the Palestinian cause, for the cause of the righteous.
Iran’s response was not spontaneous. Zionist aggression has escalated dramatically in recent weeks, due to famous assassinations by Mossad agents within Iranian territory and open regional accomplices. Syria is no longer a strategic alliance, and is now dominated by a caricature of its leader, Abu Mohammad Arjurani. Iraq is also in a volatile mist, lacking a balance between forces, increasing America’s presence and unsettling tolerance for Zionist aircraft to attack Iran across the airspace.
Iran’s response today is in changing the global political situation. Donald Trump returns to the White House and is more reckless and brave than before. His new administration revives the rhetoric of “Great Satan” and embarrassingly supports the Zionist regime, sharing its intelligence and coordination tactics.
This dark background raises fundamental questions. Do Zionist entities have the internal resilience to survive until 2040?
The answer is in a recent article by Haaretz Editor-in-Chief Aluf Benn, entitled “Does Israel Live to See 2040?” This is not Iranian propaganda. It is an insider’s testimony from the Hebrew press, and is caught up in fear and entry. Ben compares the current state of the Zionist regime with the Soviet Union on the eve of its collapse, eroding from within the regime that has shifted the narrative from an external threat to an internal crisis.
Perhaps this is the most surprising indication of the psychological and social realities of Zionist organizations. It is the only government in the world where settlers publicly debate how long it will last. There is no country on earth that citizens openly ask. Or “How much remains on this map?” Even in the darkest civil war, the Lebanese, Yemenis, or Ukrainians never enjoyed such existential questions.
But in Zionist society, the story of the regime’s loss of is part of everyday consciousness, circulating in the media, among the soldiers, and even in the informal education curriculum.
This public recognition of existential uncertainty is not merely a sign of psychological vulnerability, but a dangerous indicator that the administration lives in a state of anticipated collapse. Those who view themselves as temporary and temporary cannot build sustainable projects or escape self-destruction. And that’s exactly what’s unfolding right now.
As Soviet opposition Andrei Amalick predicted in the 1970s that the Soviet Union would not survive past 1984 and that it was ultimately proven through the long war of attrition in Afghanistan, Alf Ben sees a Zionist regime heading in a similar direction.
Reverse migration, military collapse, distrust of government, widening gaps between religion and secular, and institutional collapse are all clear indicators. Plus, worsening personal security, rising crime rates, loss of national identity, and even settlers have spoken openly about “the end of Israel” and “the date of its end mise.”
Iran today presented a model of disciplined, calculated responses, despite the heavy prices it paid. Despite the militarization of the entire Zionist society, it did not target civilians. Instead, it responded legitimately and powerfully to military assassinations. And now, Iran recognizes more than ever that owning nuclear weapons is no longer a tactic of luxury or threat.
The world’s silence over the assassination of nuclear scientists and its neglect of such crimes proves that international law protects only deterrent people. Therefore, Iran currently has no choice but to complete its military nuclear program. Not for war, but for peace. Pakistan has developed bombs under Indian pressure, France and Britain use nuclear threats to protect sovereignty, and Iran, surrounded and targeted by nuclear-armed regimes supported by nuclear states, has the right to possess weapons of deterrence.
Martism, a nuclear scientist and IRGC commander, is painful, but divine blessing. They were elders and were approaching retirement, but God chose them for Martianism, paving the way for a new generation of scientists and fighters who carried the project’s torch with strength and immovableness.
In conclusion, Aluf Ben’s words assert the truth of what Imam Khamenei says repeatedly: the Zionist entity will not survive until 2040. That fall will not come from the missile.
Until that day arrives, Iran is in a lonely state of opposition to tyranny, continuing its path, with ideology, martial blood and support from local people. Today, nuclear deterrence is no longer a dream. It is the need for survival.