Ayatollah Khamenei Funeral Becomes Largest in World History With 100 Countries Represented
"This is going to be the largest funeral in history of the world. It's bigger than the number that showed up for the burial of John F. Kennedy, bigger than the burial of Mahatma Gandhi. We haven't had anything comparable with over 100 leaders or 100 countries represented. Iran already holds the record in the Guinness Book of World Records for the largest percentage of a country's population to attend a funeral from the Ayatollah back in 1989 and there you didn't have more than 50 representatives from other countries. Now you got over a hundred."
About this episode
Host Mario conducts an emergency briefing with geopolitical analyst Larry Johnson focusing on escalating tensions in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The discussion centers on a US intelligence warning to Poland that Russia may launch a limited armed provocation on Polish territory within months to test NATO's resolve under Article 5. Possible scenarios include missile strikes, drone attacks, cyber operations, or small cross-border incursions from Kaliningrad or Belarus disguised as accidents. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk warned the coming months may be truly critical, particularly for Baltic states. The conversation also covers significant US military withdrawals from Europe, with all B-52 strategic bombers departing RAF Fairford in the UK and F-15 fighter jets returning from Jordan, marking a notable drawdown despite ongoing tensions. Johnson and Mario extensively discuss the funeral of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, which Johnson describes as the largest in world history with over 100 countries represented, surpassing the funerals of John F. Kennedy and Mahatma Gandhi. The seven-day commemoration running through July 9th has created concerns about potential Israeli strikes during the proceedings. Johnson argues that any Israeli attack during the funeral would exhaust Iranian patience and trigger sustained missile strikes on Israeli military bases. The analysts also examine Lithuania's constitutional amendment to allow nuclear weapons deployment, which Johnson warns would make the country a Russian nuclear target. Additional topics include reports of Saudi fighter jets nearly bombing a Houthi delegation at a Yemeni airport, signs of proxy conflicts emerging across the Middle East, and claims that Iran failed to send a delegation to peace negotiations in Doha. Throughout the discussion, Johnson maintains that Russia is no longer interested in negotiating with the West after viewing the Minsk agreements as fraudulent, while Mario emphasizes his concern that direct NATO-Russia conflict could emerge from the Polish situation.
Key takeaways
- US intelligence warns Poland that Russia may launch limited armed provocation within months including missile strikes, drone attacks, or border incursions disguised as accidents to test NATO Article 5 response.
- Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk states coming months may be truly critical for Poland and Baltic states amid heightened Russian threat warnings and regional tensions.
- All US B-52 strategic bombers have withdrawn from RAF Fairford in UK and F-15 fighter jets returned from Jordan, representing significant military asset drawdown from Europe and Middle East.
- Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's funeral becomes largest in world history with over 100 countries represented, surpassing funerals of JFK and Gandhi in seven-day commemoration through July 9th.
- Lithuania pursues constitutional amendment to allow NATO nuclear weapons deployment, which analyst Larry Johnson warns would make country immediate Russian nuclear target.
- Saudi fighter jets reportedly nearly bombed Yemeni airport to prevent Houthi delegation from attending Khamenei funeral before being warned off by air defense threat and missile retaliation warning.
- Reports indicate Iran failed to send delegation to Doha peace negotiations despite prior commitments, signaling possible shift in Iranian diplomatic posture.