 
What else does it take for our politicians, especially Trump, to stop protecting killers in the name of diplomacy?
All the peace talks with murderers are disgusting at this point.
Iran orders a hit, Russia supplies the shooters, and Washington smiles for the photo-op.
And though many might think my life, or Masih Alinejad’s, or Salman Rushdie’s, and the rest of the targeted names by Islam aren’t significant enough to create conflict with our so-called “allies,”
I need you to understand this:
It’s not about us.
This is a warning to every American who still believes safety is their birthright.
I could write an entire article naming every target, every plot, every successful hit, to show the pattern.
But today, let’s start with the proof already on the table.
On October 29, 2025, after years of evidence gathering and plea delays, a Federal Court in Manhattan convicted two Russian nationals on charges of murder-for-hire, extortion, and conspiracy. Prosecutors detailed how the operation was financed and directed from Tehran, routed through Russian mafia intermediaries to distance the regime from accountability.
The story that ended today in a Manhattan courtroom actually began three years earlier, when the Islamic Republic of Iran ordered yet another hit on U.S. soil.
In 2021, FBI counter-intelligence agents uncovered a plot to kidnap Masih Alinejad from her Brooklyn home. The plan was crude but unmistakable, an Iranian intelligence network using private investigators and foreign proxies to grab her off American streets and smuggle her by boat to Venezuela. That operation failed, and the regime simply switched tactics.
By mid-2022, Iran’s agents had turned to hired killers. Through the underworld pipeline that often connects Tehran to Russian organized crime circles, they found two men, Rafat Amirov and Polad Amirov. They offered them half a million dollars to finish the job. The regime even sent $30,000 up front to their New York contact, Khalid Mehdiyev, who parked outside Alinejad’s home with an AK-47-style rifle and a GoPro camera, recording her movements.
FBI surveillance caught Khalid Mehdiyev before the hit could happen. He flipped, cooperated, and became the government’s key witness. His testimony in court was chilling: he described orders to “spill blood in the streets of Brooklyn” as payment for Iran’s silence money.
Rafat Amirov and Polad Omarov, the masterminds behind the operation, were taken down months later after a joint U.S.–European investigation exposed the Russian-Iranian pipeline funding their mission.
Omarov was first arrested in the Czech Republic on January 4, 2023, and extradited to the United States in early 2024.
Amirov was arrested in New York on January 26, 2023, following a coordinated FBI counter-terror sweep.
Federal prosecutors urged the judge to hand down 55 years, arguing that these men weren’t just thugs; they were the hands of a foreign government using crime syndicates as disposable assassins. But the court gave them 25 years instead. Twenty-five years for an attempted political murder on American soil, paid for by Iran’s military-intelligence apparatus.
Justice was served, but not delivered.
Why the mercy? Because somewhere between the courtroom and the Capitol, terror ordered by Islam gets softened by the politics of appeasement.
Those of you who remember when I announced my first FBI call in 2021 know exactly what that means. I didn’t stop. I kept moving, just like Masih did. Then came Rushdie in 2022, stabbed on stage in New York for the same crime we all share: refusing to be silent.
The fatwa never expired; it just outsourced the execution.
And then came my next call in 2023. Another warning. Another hit list. Another reminder that no matter how many times we move, hide, or adapt, the threat doesn’t fade; it reloads.
So, tell me how many calls before they get us?
These aren’t “warnings.” They’re death notices with a grace period.
And yet Washington still hands out visas to Tehran’s envoys, signs trade waivers, and smiles for the camera like appeasement is strategy.
Because it’s never just Iran, it’s Islam as a political system, one that sanctifies violence, funds it through state channels, and disguises it as faith.
Make no mistake: this is not merely statecraft gone wrong. It’s the result of a global Islamist network, from the IRGC to transnational proxies and enabling institutions, that treats violence as policy and martyrdom as tools of power. We don’t have a diplomatic problem so much as an ideological one: political Islam in its militant form funds, plans, and prizes these hit lists.
How many Americans have to end up on an IRGC target before someone in power admits the truth?
This is a partnership with evil.
Every single assassination attempt on U.S. soil ordered by Tehran is an act of war.
Every dollar wired to an Iranian proxy or Russian front is blood money.
Every photo-op with these regimes tells the world that America is a nation sleepwalking into complicity.
The illusion that engagement tames evil is the biggest lie of our time.
So here’s the question that should be plastered on every State Department wall:
When is enough, enough?
Because until someone in power says never again, and means it, we’ll keep seeing courtroom victories that feel like funerals postponed.
 
            














