Gentlemen, sharpen your quills and pour yourself a stiff one. The latest dispatch from the crumbling empire of common sense involves Her Majesty’s spooks, some chaps from Tehran, and a New York primary that apparently doubles as a casting call for villains in a Tom Clancy novel. According to sources so deep they’re practically in the Mariana Trench, UK intelligence has confirmed that officers linked to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard were rounded up in a sweep of the Big Apple’s ballot boxes. Because nothing says ‘democratic process’ like a bunch of chaps in ill-fitting suits counting votes while MI6 peers over their shoulders like disapproving aunts at a wedding.
Let’s get this straight. The Iranians, who can barely keep their own power grid from collapsing, have allegedly infiltrated the New York primary system. I suppose we should be flattered. After all, if you’re going to rig an election, why not pick the one where the candidates have the charisma of a wet paper bag and the policy platforms of a confused teenager? But no, this is serious. According to the spooks, the Iranian officers were ‘linked’ to the sweep, which is spy-speak for ‘we saw a guy with a beard looking at a ballot box and assumed the worst’.
And let us not forget the primary in question. This is New York, where the ballots are likely printed on the same paper as the Daily News, and the voting machines are held together with chewing gum and the ghost of Tammany Hall. But now we’re supposed to believe that the ayatollahs have been whispering in the ears of the Electoral College? I’ve heard of deep state, but this is a deep ridiculous.
Now, I’m not saying the Iranians are angels. They have a habit of hanging people from cranes and shouting about death to America. But let’s be honest, if they wanted to rig a US election, wouldn’t they start with somewhere with actual power, like the Iowa caucuses or the Florida recount? Instead, they’ve chosen the primary of a state that can’t even decide if it wants to be a sanctuary city or a parking lot for garbage trucks.
The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity (because who wants to be associated with this farce?), claim the sweep was based on ‘intelligence that indicated potential interference’. But what does that actually mean? That someone from Iran sent a WhatsApp message to a campaign volunteer? That a donkey in a Tehran bazaar sneezed in the direction of a phone? In the world of intelligence, ‘potential’ means ‘we have no evidence, but we need to justify our budget’.
And here’s the kicker: the UK is involved. Because nothing says ‘special relationship’ like British spies rummaging through New York voting booths while pretending not to notice that the American president was elected by a combination of Russian bots and a flawed Electoral College system. It’s like watching a man in a bowler hat tell you how to bake a cake while his own kitchen is on fire.
But the real satire here is the sheer audacity of the claim. We live in a world where a man who once said ‘fire and fury’ on Twitter is treated as a strategic genius, where a country can invade Iraq on a lie and then be shocked that someone else might try the same trick. And now, the Iranians are the bogeyman. Because if we can’t blame the Russians anymore, we need a new villain. And what better than a country whose main exports are oil, carpets, and propaganda?
So pour yourself a gin, dear reader, and consider the absurdity. The UK, a nation that can’t even decide if it wants to be in Europe, is now the arbiter of American electoral integrity. The Iranians, who couldn’t organise a coup in a sock drawer, are suddenly mastermind hackers. And the whole thing is being reported with a straight face by journalists who probably haven’t seen a factual event since the last time they checked their horoscope.
In the end, this is just another chapter in the ongoing tragedy of modern politics, where everyone is a spy, every election is a conspiracy, and every sane person is either drunk or dead. As for me, I’ll be in the pub, toasting the special relationship with a double gin and a side of reality. Cheers, old boy.










