The Quiet Suburb That Set the Middle East on Fire It wasn't Tehran. It wasn't Beirut. It was a sleepy French village—Neauphle-le-Château—that became the unlikely launchpad of the most explosive revolution of the 20th century. Here, in a modest home lined with apple trees, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, cloaked in black, sat in exile. No army. No government. Just a microphone, cassette tapes, and a message. And yet… this man, hosted by France, toppled America's golden client—the Shah of Iran. But wait—why would France, a US ally, host the very man who would dismantle the West's foothold in the region? It's not just a historical quirk. It's a lesson in how freedom, miscalculation, and geopolitical ego can give birth to unintended chaos. Why Did France Give Khomeini Asylum? Khomeini Symbolism in the Iranian Revolution: Why Symbols Beat Guns 1. He had a legal visa. Khomeini wasn't a fugitive. He entered France through proper channels after being expelled from Ira...
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