Whatever westerners think about the bombing of Iran and the death of its leader, people in Teheran were dancing in the streets, according to The New York Times. Please open the link to see video of joyous crowds.
The Times reported:
Large crowds of Iranians poured into the streets of Tehran and other cities across Iran overnight, celebrating the news that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had been killed during a day of coordinated U.S. and Israeli attacks.
The ayatollah’s death, after nearly 40 years of authoritarian rule, represented a historic shift for Iran’s theocratic regime. Many Iranians, inside and outside the country, rejoiced, even as the threat of more attacks by U.S. and Israeli forces cast a pall over some celebrations.
Landlines and cellphone service were down across Iran, making it difficult to gauge public sentiment in the nation of more than 90 million people as U.S. and Israeli forces struck targets for a second day. Early reports of the death toll in Iran suggested that more than 100 people had been killed in the first wave of strikes.
But in neighborhoods across Tehran, the capital, pockets of exuberance emerged. In video calls with The New York Times, three residents of Tehran showed the scenes unfolding in their neighborhoods: Large crowds of men and women dancing and cheering, shouting, “Woohoo, hurrah.” Drivers passing by honked their car horns. Fireworks lit up the sky and loud Persian dance music filled the streets. Many residents, from their windows and balconies, joined in a chant of “freedom, freedom.”
Sara, a 53-year-old resident of Tehran, who like others interviewed asked that her last name not be used for fear of retaliation, said in a phone call that when she heard on the news that Ayatollah Khamenei had been killed, she let out a scream and jumped up and down. Her husband started pacing and they hugged, she said.
“Then we bolted outside and shouted from the top of our lungs and laughed and danced with our neighbors,” Sara said. Just a month ago, she, her husband and daughter were among protesters who took to the streets in an uprising against the government. Security forces beat her and her husband with batons and sprayed tear gas in their eyes, she said.
For Iranian supporters of Ayatollah Khamenei who considered him a revered religious figure, watching the celebrations was difficult, they said on social media. But they were noticeably absent from the streets.
Ayatollah Khamenei, who had the final say in all government decisions in Iran, personally ordered security forces to use lethal force against protesters in January, leading to a massacre that rights groups say killed at least 7,000 people, with numbers expected to rise.
“Khamenei went to hell,” one man shouted from his rooftop on Saturday, according to a video posted on BBC Persian.
For families whose loved ones were killed or jailed under Ayatollah Khamenei, the news felt cathartic, many said. Dr. Mohsen Assadi Lari, a former senior official in the Iranian Ministry of Health, lost his son and daughter, both in their early 20s, when Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps shot down a Ukrainian Airlines passenger plane in 2020. On Saturday, he posted photographs of his children on his social media page with a message about freedom: “We will endure the winter, spring is near.”
In Abdanan, a Kurdish city in western Iran where the crackdown on protests was intense, young men and women cruised the streets after the announcement of the supreme leader’s death. They hung out of their car windows, showing victory signs and cheering.
“Tonight, Feb. 28, congratulations for our freedom,” said a voice narrating a video of the celebrations, which was verified by The Times. Parts of the video were already blurred.
“Am I dreaming?” screamed a man in another video, also verified by The Times. “Ah! Hello to the new world. Ah!” The footage shows people tearing down a monument bearing a man’s silhouette, possibly Ayatollah Khamenei’s, at a roundabout in Galleh Dar, in Fars Province, as fires burned around them.
People in Shiraz, a major Iranian city, were abandoning their cars for an impromptu dance party, whistling, cheering, clapping and screaming with joy. In many videos, celebrants joined together in a cheer that is typically reserved for weddings, symbolizing pure joy.
A video from Isfahan, another major city, in the south of Iran, shows at least a hundred people celebrating, many with their arms raised and waving white cloths. Cars can be heard honking their horns amid loud, jubilant cheering.
Iranians living abroad joined their families back home through video calls. Many sobbed from relief and happiness. Homayoun, an Iranian living in Paris, popped a bottle of champagne. Shadi, in Los Angeles, did shots with friends. Shirin, in Maryland, danced wildly at home to loud music.
“I am so happy,” Shirin said. “I don’t know what to do with myself. Is this real? Thank God I am alive to see this day.”
It remained unclear what would come next after Ayatollah Khamenei’s nearly four decades in power, whether a new system of government would take over or power would be transferred to successors as he had instructed before his death.

Will the ends, will the means. This blog has opposed the only plausible means to end the Iranian theocracy: American military action. This posting is risible.
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There’s a piece in the New Yorker by a jailed Iranian dissident who is not dancing in the street. Reads better than the NYT.
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I understand why some people are cheering in the streets in Iran, but I can’t share that feeling. The celebration after Muammar Gaddafi’s death was followed by years of chaos and suffering in Libya. That history makes it hard for me to cheer regime change without worrying about what comes next.
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An appalling post. Context-free. Of course people who suffered under the regime would be grateful. Same as with the toppling of Saddam. But in both cases, the regime being changed is that of America as much as Middle-Eastern, oil-rich dictatorships. And the change is one of anti-democracy.
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Diane — Be careful about drawing any conclusions at this point about what’s going on in Iran. As you pointed out, landlines and cell phone communications are cut off throughout Iran. So, ask yourself: How are these “reports” getting out?
Chas Freeman, former United States Assistant Secretary of Defense and former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia says that Israeli agents smuggled in 50,000 Starlink sets into Iran and distributed them to opponents of the Iranian regime. All the videos of “demonstrations” against the regime and all the reports of the regime’s crackdown have come from these Iranians who were selected by Israeli intelligence to report what Netanyahu and Trump want things to look like.
We also don’t know from our own major media what’s going on because (1) all the information and video about the situation is coming out through Israeli filters, and (2) U.S. media are fearful of reporting anything negative because the FCC will pounce on them.
Freeman, who is an expert on the region and on Iran, points out that it’s far more likely that the average Iranian is angry at the United States because all the hardships they have been suffering are the result of the sanctions that Trump imposed on Iran and that throughout the region the average person in the entire region is furious that current U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said in a recent interview with Tucker Carlson that it “would be fine if [Israel] took it all,” referring to a biblically described area of land that includes major regions throughout the Middle East.
How stupid…yet it genuinely reflects the perspective of Trump’s White House advisors, especially Stephen Miller.
Freeman, who has met with the now deceased Ayatollah Khamenei, also points out that Khamenei has been a staunch opponent of Iran developing nuclear weapons. Now with Khamenei out of the picture, the rabid anti-Israel/anti-Trump Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has free rein to go that direction.
And Freeman points out that the IRGC has a ready supplier of nuclear missiles in its ally North Korea. China and Russia are also both allies.
What happens if North Korea begins shipping missiles and nuclear technology to Iran? Will Trump attack North Korea which already has nuclear missiles that can reach cities throughout America?
And if Trump attacks North Korea which has China as an ally, what happens then?
The problem — a breath-stopping problem — is that there is NO END-GAME to what Trump has set in motion. Should U.S. cities begin oiling their air raid sirens and putting up signs directing people to the nearest underground air raid shelter?
Actually, according to former ambassador Freeman, it was Israel that set all this uncertainty in motion: Like Trump with the Epstein papers, Netanyahu is facing criminal charges and needed a huge distraction to give a lift to his sagging popularity. He doesn’t much care about what follows because in his perspective the United States is now on the hook to try to finish what he wanted started. Netanyahu is more interested in his political survival than in the consequences of launching what could — and will likely be, according to Freeman who knows the region’s dynamics very well — a rolling and expanding conflict throughout the region and whose directions and consequences are wholly unpredictable.
Retired CIA analyst for the region, Lawrence Johnson, says that the conflict could spread rapidly because Iran has an estimated 10,000 ballistic missiles in its stockpile. As the Pentagon pointed out in trying to dissuade Trump from launching this attack, that number of ballistic missiles far exceeds America’s and Israel’s COMBINED stockpile of anti-missile weapons. That puts not only Israel and Saudi Arabia at risk, it puts the entire U.S. Navy fleet at risk. Remember, the far-less sophisticated and less well-armed Houtis drove the U.S. Navy out of the region with far less deadly missiles because the fleet ran out of defensive weapons.
So, don’t go dancing around about how great this war is for the Iranian people because not only do we not actually know the percentage of Iranians who are happy about it, we also know that there are far bigger considerations now at play in this very vague picture — and some of those factors can do our nation and our people great harm.
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How can we cheer that our Ayatollah killed their Ayatollah? This is madness! Kidnapping leaders. Killing leaders. Where do we get that right? And why do we not suppose some young Iranian is now planning for the day when he can crash a plane into an American tower? We started the modern disruption of Iran by overthrowing their socialist government in ’54. Do we really imagine that Donald Trump cares one whit about anyone in Iran? Or Venezuela? We built the UN. Let’s use it. Iran had previously agreed to not do nukes. C’mon, folks. Don’t cheer on our despot!
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Jack,
So there’s no mistake, I opposed Trump’s kidnapping of Maduro, and I oppose his lawless attack on Iran.
The War Powers Act says only Congress can authorize an act of war. Trump went to war without going to Congress. Trump tone the law. He is acting like a King, who needs no one’s permission to do whatever he wants. He is a dangerous man, who thinks he is above the law.
Congress, including the Republicans, should censure him.
But that doesn’t change the fact that the Ayatollah was a brutal oppressor. When women sought the right to take off their head coverings, they were imprisoned and many were murdered.
When opponents of the regime protested in January, the Ayatollah crushed their uprising. Thousands died–the estimates ranged from 3,000 to 30,000.
I can understand Iranians reacting with joy.
I fear it will be short-lived because Trump will betray them.
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It’s true that Khamenei is someone that a lot of Iranians won’t miss. As for dancing in the streets, I’m not convinced. First, millions of dollars has been spent on social media disinformation (https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/our-man-for-tehran/). And second, Washington told people to stay in their homes, and some people are afraid to even go out for groceries.
Don’t cheer for death and destruction.
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There are Khamenei-wannabes waiting in the wings, who he designated to take over and that are still alive, including his grandson –just like there would be a lot of Trump-wannabes if they retaliated and killed him, including many MAGAts (and probably Jr). So it’s far from over, as can be seen here: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-01/us-and-israel-have-struck-iran-who-has-been-killed/106401908
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Ding dong the witch is dead….. Or is it warlock? & what comes next?
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I agree the leader of Iran was despicable but Trump should have gone to Congress with a plan. He just does what ever he wants and Congress is the biggest enabler!! They all need to re replaced so we have checks and balances!
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