
There is something almost surreal about the idea that the United States and Israel could ever imagine Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the acceptable face of a post-clerical Iran. It sounds less like geopolitics and more like the setup to a cynical late-night comedy sketch. The man spent years branding America as the “Great Satan,” denying the Holocaust, antagonizing Israel at every opportunity, and becoming the international symbol of Iranian hard-line populism. Yet in the twisted logic of regime-change politics, yesterday’s monster can suddenly become tomorrow’s “stabilizing figure.”
That is the part the public is rarely supposed to see. Foreign policy elites often divide the world into categories that have little to do with morality and everything to do with utility. The question is not whether someone is good, democratic, moderate or even sane. The real question is whether they are manageable. Ahmadinejad, despite his rhetoric, was always a creature of the system. He understood the machinery of the Islamic Republic, knew the power centers, and had nationalist credibility among ordinary Iranians that exiled opposition figures simply do not possess.
And that is the uncomfortable truth haunting every fantasy about “decapitating” the Iranian regime. You cannot bomb a political order out of existence and then replace it with Instagram activists, monarchist dreamers in Los Angeles, or Western-approved technocrats with no roots inside the country. Power vacuums do not stay empty for long. They get filled by the people who already know how the state works, how the security apparatus operates, and how fear can be converted into loyalty.
Ahmadinejad fits that description far more than many would like to admit. The irony becomes almost absurd. After decades of presenting him as the embodiment of Iranian extremism, the same strategic minds could easily convince themselves that he represents “continuity,” “order,” or “controlled transition.” In the language of intelligence agencies and military planners, these euphemisms are endlessly reusable. One year a man is a threat to civilization; the next he becomes the least bad option.
History is crowded with these contradictions. Washington has armed dictators before denouncing them. It has overthrown allies before rehabilitating former enemies. Israel, too, has often prioritized tactical survival over ideological consistency. States are not loyal to narratives. They are loyal to interests.
What makes the Ahmadinejad scenario particularly grotesque is how perfectly it captures the bankruptcy of modern interventionism. The public is sold moral clarity while governments operate through layers of cold pragmatism. Citizens hear speeches about democracy and liberation. Behind closed doors, officials debate which authoritarian figure might best prevent chaos after missiles stop falling.
And chaos is always the unspoken fear. Because the nightmare for outside powers is not merely an anti-Western Iran. It is an uncontrollable Iran: fractured militias, collapsing institutions, loose weapons, civil war, refugee waves, and regional fires nobody can extinguish. In that environment, even a former firebrand suddenly starts looking “responsible.”
That does not make the idea smart. It makes it revealing. The possibility alone exposes how shallow the rhetoric surrounding regime change has always been. The same powers that spend years demonizing certain leaders are often the first to recycle them when reality intrudes on ideology. In the end, geopolitics is not a morality play. It is a marketplace of contradictions where enemies become assets, principles become slogans, and yesterday’s villain can quietly re-emerge as tomorrow’s solution.









