Viral Videos Show Iranian Women Celebrating After Khamenei’s Death

A Nation Unveiled: Iranian Women Defy Tyranny to Celebrate Khamenei’s Elimination and Support Trump’s Military Intervention

Pro-IRGC Islamists LOSE IT as Iranian Women Celebrate Khamenei’s  Elimination - Side With Trump!

In the early hours following the confirmed elimination of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the world witnessed a scene that defied decades of diplomatic assumptions and media narratives. Instead of the monolithic national mourning often projected by the Islamic Republic, the streets of Tehran, Isfahan, and even the Iranian diaspora in London and Los Angeles erupted in a complex, often jubilant, response. The U.S. strikes, part of a high-stakes military operation authorized by President Donald Trump, have not only altered the geopolitical map of the Middle East but have pulled back the curtain on a deep-seated domestic longing for change that has been brewing for nearly half a century.

The most poignant symbol of this shift is found in the voices of those currently living under the falling debris of war. One young Iranian woman, recording a video as strikes hit her city, offered a perspective that has rattled international observers. “Thank you Mr. Trump,” she stated with a haunting calm. “Even if I die in this war, the only one to blame is Ali Khamenei. If this leads to the destruction of this regime, I’m okay with it.” This sentiment—a willingness to face mortal peril in exchange for the collapse of the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps)—highlights the extreme desperation of a population that has endured 47 years of systemic repression.

The Celebrations of the Disenfranchised

Across the globe, the reaction was equally visceral. In North London’s Finchley district, thousands of Iranians gathered, not to mourn, but to celebrate. The air was filled with the sounds of traditional Persian music, the sight of the pre-revolutionary “Lion and Sun” flag, and, perhaps most surprisingly to some, American flags and posters of Donald Trump. These demonstrators, a mix of monarchists, democrats, and secularists, described the moment as the “best news an Iranian could ever get.” For them, the elimination of the Supreme Leader was not an act of foreign aggression, but an act of liberation.

The visual of Iranian women dancing in the streets of Tehran without their mandatory hair coverings (hijabs) has become a viral testament to this defiance. For years, these women have faced imprisonment, torture, and death at the hands of the “morality police” for seeking basic bodily autonomy. The news of the regime’s decapitation provided a momentary vacuum of fear, allowing for an outpouring of joy that the IRGC has struggled to contain. “We have been waiting for this for 50 years,” one celebrant noted, emphasizing that the trauma of the 1979 revolution has never truly healed for many families.

WATCH What Iranian Women Do After Khamenei & IRGC Leaders Are WIPED OUT! -  YouTube

The IRGC’s Desperate Response

However, the jubilation is shadowed by a dark and violent counter-response. Reports indicate that the IRGC has launched a brutal crackdown on these public celebrations. Witnesses describe scenes of “mass murder” as security forces attempted to reassert control over a population that no longer fears them. The numbers of the dead are currently difficult to verify, but the rhetoric coming from the regime’s loyalists is one of absolute desperation and vengeful grief.

In mosques across Iran, pro-government supporters were seen in states of hysterical mourning, weeping for the man they viewed as the shadow of God on Earth. This stark divide—one half of the nation dancing while the other half weeps—illustrates the profound fracture within Iranian society. The loyalists, often beneficiaries of the regime’s complex patronage system or deeply ideological followers, see the U.S. intervention as a “Zionist” plot to destroy Islam. Meanwhile, those on the streets view the loyalists as the architects of their misery, with some even calling for the total annihilation of the IRGC structures to prevent a resurgence of tyranny.

The Trump Doctrine and the Diaspora

The role of the United States in this conflict has sparked a fierce debate within the West. While many liberal and progressive groups have protested the military intervention, citing the risk of civilian casualties and the history of failed American “regime change” wars, the pro-freedom Iranian diaspora has been vocal in its support. Many Iranians have expressed frustration with Western leftists, accusing them of “protecting a dictator” while ignoring the plight of the people who actually live under his thumb.

“Donald Trump stayed true to his word,” one protester in London shouted. “He said help was on the way, and it came.” This sentiment reflects a growing “Trumpian” alignment within certain sectors of the Iranian opposition, who believe that only raw military power could ever dislodge a regime as entrenched and violent as the Islamic Republic. There is even talk among some of erecting statues of Trump in a future, liberated Iran—a concept that would have seemed like political satire just a few years ago.

Looking Toward an Uncertain Future

Death of Iran’s supreme leader sparks divide across the globe

As the dust settles from the initial strikes, the question remains: what happens next? With the Supreme Leader gone and the IRGC in a state of wounded-animal aggression, the potential for a full-scale civil war is high. The “Council of Experts” in Iran is reportedly in chaos, and the lines of succession are blurred by the sheer number of high-ranking officials eliminated in the weekend’s campaign.

The international community is watching closely to see if this “miraculous” shift will lead to the return of the monarchy, as many in the diaspora hope, or if it will lead to a protracted period of anarchy. For the people on the ground, the immediate reality is one of both terror and hope. As the girl from Iran said in her video, they are “okay with it” if it means the end of a 47-year nightmare. The veil has been lifted, and the world is now forced to reckon with the reality of an Iran that is finally speaking for itself, outside the carefully curated propaganda of the state.