Case in Point
Yet in parallel the war has triggered a nationalist surge and narrowed the gap between ruler and ruled. No one has responded to calls from Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, or Reza Pahlavi, the royalist pretender, for a popular uprising. Early admiration for Israel's military prowess has turned to outrage as its targets have widened and the death toll has mounted.
Scorn for the IRGC's haplessness has turned to pride at the speed with which it has reconstituted. Iranians who fled the capital are coming back. Those who once championed Israel are now handing over suspected Israeli agents to the police. Female political prisoners, the mothers of executed protesters and exiled Iranian pop stars have all issued calls to rally to Iran's defence. "It's backfired on Bibi," says a former official turned dissident, using the nickname of Mr Netanyahu.
The shift at the top could dramatically alter decision-making in Iran. Hardliners have always been against talks with America. They remember Muammar Qaddafi, the Libyan dictator, who surrendered weapons of mass destruction in exchange for a lifting of sanctions, and Saddam Hussein, who granted UN monitors unfettered access to Iraq. Both were toppled by Western interventions. Now even moderates feel burned: the last round of talks with America, set for June 15th, fooled them into lowering their guard just as Israel attacked.
A growing caucus advocates dashing for a bomb. In the run-up to the American attack, Iran removed stockpiles of enriched uranium, and perhaps centrifuges from the targeted sites, claims an insider. Satellite imagery from June 20th shows a queue of trucks at Fordow's gate. Some are suggesting detonating a nuclear device to prove Iran's capability. Others advocate dropping a warhead coated in weapons-grade uranium on Tel Aviv. "Sure as anything they will be going for a nuke. It's absolutely disastrous," laments a Gulf mediator.
Fierce Hardliners Are Grabbing Power in Iran
Last edited by Ryuu96 - on 24 June 2025






