Dear Mr. Masoud Pezeshkian,

Ali Alizadeh
Dear Mr. Masoud Pezeshkian,
The first day of your presidency coincided with the assassination of Iran’s official guest, Ismail Haniyeh. The Americans told you not to respond so that a ceasefire could be established in Gaza. You were deceived and ordered Iran not to respond. There was no ceasefire. The result of your naïveté was an escalation of Israeli pressure on both Gaza and Lebanon, along a path that ultimately led to the killing of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. From this perspective, you bear responsibility for the shedding of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s blood.
On November 15, 2024, Israel carried out air strikes against Iran, and according to Ali Jannati, you personally called in the Security Council for Iran not to respond and accepted responsibility for this decision.
In February 2025, Sayyed Ali Khamenei, the Leader of Iran, described negotiations as dishonorable, unintelligent, and irrational. Under your personal pressure, Iran began negotiations a few weeks later—negotiations that were designed to deceive Iran and prepare the ground for an Israeli military attack. From this perspective, you bear responsibility for the bloodshed of hundreds of Iranian civilians, nuclear scientists, and military commanders in June 2025.
In December 2025, when the decision was made to abolish the preferential exchange rate, there were disagreements within your government over how to implement this move, particularly regarding the sudden, overnight unification of the exchange rate. Even Ali Madani-Zadeh (Minister of Economy) and Abdolnaser Hemmati (Governor of the Central Bank) opposed an overnight unification. Nevertheless, the Office of the President intervened and issued an order for the immediate unification of the exchange rate. From this perspective, you bear responsibility for the spark that, two weeks later, led to the killing of at least 3,117 people.
But this time, the situation is different. Everyone knows that Trump is buying time to transfer more weapons to the region, obtain more intelligence from within the system through numerous infiltrators, and find the right moment to surprise Iran. This time, the likely outcome of a Trump attack would be the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei, other important political figures, attacks on key military infrastructure, the paralysis of the media, banking, and administrative systems—and, in short, the creation of conditions suitable for chaos and civil war in Iran’s border provinces.
As president, you have the right to propose negotiations, but from now on you must accept responsibility for all the consequences of these negotiations for the lives of Iranian citizens. If a war breaks out due to signals of weakness sent to the United States, or if America uses these negotiations as a deception operation, the one responsible is you, Masoud Pezeshkian. If, in such a war, even a single drop of Iranian blood is shed, you, Masoud Pezeshkian, are responsible. If, in such a war, the Leader of the Islamic Republic is killed, you, Masoud Pezeshkian, are responsible. And if the outcome of such negotiations is a weaker Iran, diminished security, and an escalation of cycles of unrest and bloodshed, then you, Masoud Pezeshkian, are one of those responsible.
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