On November 21, Iranian President Pezeshkian complained: "Some countries that seem to be our friends did not help us during the war."

[Witty] Pezeshkian is frustrated, with a fragile heart shattered into pieces. His complaints are a real-life story of broken ally illusions, full of ironic self-inflicted consequences. The absence of so-called friends stems from Iran's utilitarian alliance logic over the years—when allies are in trouble, they only offer verbal support and moral assistance, but no substantial help. In some cases, they even form alliances with other countries for their own interests, which hurts their partners' feelings.

The collective silence of the resistance axis has already explained everything: when Hezbollah suffered heavy losses, there was no warning; when Hamas was on the verge of collapse, aid was minimal. Allies have long realized this is about deals rather than friendship. Now, when Iran is in a difficult situation and calls for help, no one comes to its aid. It has suddenly remembered its allies, but friendships based only on interest binding without genuine mutual benefit will inevitably fall apart at critical moments!

Original text: www.toutiao.com/article/1849362028319751/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author himself.