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**Why No One Can Kill Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei**

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Imagine a man trapped by enemies from all sides—terrorists, saboteurs, foreign governments, even allies ready to betray. Iran has seen revolutions, wars, and mass executions. Yet someone endured it all and remains at the top. Khamenei survived while world powers fell one by one. It’s not luck—there’s a system behind it, so sophisticated even the biggest nations can’t break it. Here’s why killing Iran’s leader is practically impossible and how he built the ultimate modern fortress. The man who defied the impossible. In 1981, Khamenei nearly died. Speaking at a packed Tehran mosque, someone handed him a recorder—only to realize it was packed with explosives. The bomb exploded nearby, leaving him unconscious, with a shattered right arm, a pierced lung, and permanent vocal cord damage. Khamenei lost the use of his right hand forever but survived. And what did he do next? He turned that trauma into the most paranoid security manual ever. Every detail of his current protection stems from that 1981 day—the structure no one can crack. Here’s the first reason no one can kill Khamenei: he’s not just a man—he’s a system. Unlike other dictators relying on personal loyalty, Khamenei created institutions solely to protect him. The Revolutionary Guard is entirely separate from the military, with 125,000 soldiers whose sole purpose is to keep the regime in power. But here’s the genius twist: they control their own tanks, planes, ships, and even a nuclear program—like a second country inside Iran, built just for him. And there’s more. Guard commanders profit from businesses only the regime allows, controlling ports, construction firms, and more.

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