Thursday, June 11, 2026

How the antifragile fusion of Ghadir and Ashura shields the Islamic Republic

 By Garsha Vazirian

TEHRAN — Western intelligence agencies consistently miscalculate the endurance of the Islamic Republic of Iran because they rely on a fragile, linear epistemology.

Think tanks evaluate state strength through static parameters such as gross domestic product stability, treating volatility as a systemic failure. The Islamic Republic, however, operates on a doctrine of systemic antifragility.

A state built on this framework does not merely survive pressure but grows structurally optimized because of it. While a resilient system resists stress until it eventually cracks, an antifragile architecture treats war, sanctions, and assassinations as the kinetic fuel required to shed structural inefficiencies.

The 2026 campaign of aggression demonstrates this resilience. Washington and Tel Aviv have spent enormous capital applying linear pressure to a nonlinear system.

Every round of sanctions has forced a restructuring toward domestic industrial capacity. Every kinetic shock has inadvertently uncovered friction points, enabling planners to patch vulnerabilities and decentralize power nodes.

This antifragile architecture confounds an adversary that only understands linear warfare.

The metaphysical software of autonomy

This immunity stems from the Ghadir paradigm, the core software of Iranian governance.

Ghadir refers to the historic declaration at Ghadir Khumm in 632 CE, where Prophet Muhammad (S) designated Imam Ali (AS) as his successor and guardian, establishing Welayat/Wilayah (divine guardianship) as the foundational source of legitimate authority.

Bypassing the transactional and secular structures of the Westphalian order, Ghadir roots legitimacy in a vertical, non-negotiable divine mandate rather than popular vote, foreign recognition, or economic integration.

Because this authority is metaphysical and non-transactional, it remains entirely insulated from the sanctions, vetoes, or financial blackmail of global hegemons.

This model stands in absolute opposition to the nihilistic Western order, which exports a hyper-individualistic framework designed to dissolve the organic social fabric of independent nations.

It equally rejects the structural vassalism of the dependent secular Arab system. Regimes across the region operate under increasingly ineffective outsourced security architectures, commercializing religion while normalizing ties with the genocidal Israeli regime.

Instead of building genuine legitimacy, they have hollowed out their domestic institutions to serve foreign interests, creating a deep transactional brittleness. These client states have traded their sovereignty for a fragile shield, acting as mere shock absorbers for a declining American hegemony.

The Ashura engine and mosaic command geometry

Where Western military doctrine relies on decapitation strikes to induce paralysis, the Ashura doctrine renders such strategies obsolete.

Ashura commemorates the martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS) at Karbala in 680 CE, a stand against tyranny that transformed apparent defeat into an enduring symbol of resistance, sacrifice, and moral victory.

In Iranian and Shia strategic culture, this becomes a living operational principle: martyrdom does not weaken the system but accelerates it.

Martyrdom serves as a metabolic accelerator that eliminates bureaucratic inertia and converts collective grief into powerful mobilization.

Strategically, the military apparatus has shifted into the Mosaic defense doctrine, a state-scale guerrilla geometry of autonomous provincial commands.

This command web is hydrodynamic: if the adversary closes one valve, the pressure simply shifts to activate additional fronts. This dynamic has been on full display since the beginning of the 2026 war.

This unyielding structural endurance has forced profound admiration and concessions from prominent American scholars across entirely different schools of thought.

University of Chicago political scientist Robert Pape recently concluded that Iran’s sheer resilience under intense military fire, combined with its asymmetric leverage, has effectively elevated it into an emerging fourth center of global power.

Similarly, John Mearsheimer, the preeminent voice of offensive realism, has argued that the current conflict represents a stark strategic defeat for the United States, pointing out that Tehran now holds the structural cards in the region.

Perhaps most tellingly, even hawkish figures within the U.S. foreign policy establishment have begun to recognize the failure of their own doctrine.

Neoconservative strategist Robert Kagan has admitted that a total U.S. defeat in the Iran war is likely, warning that such a loss would inflict far more lasting damage to American global primacy than the retreats from Vietnam or Afghanistan.

The realist balance sheet of survival

This antifragile posture has been forged through the fire of a realist strategy paid for in blood and material sacrifice.

Under maximum pressure campaigns targeting military oil sales, Iran has systematically optimized its resistance economy. This decoupling insulated the state from Western financial contagion, shifting Iran from a vulnerable rentier model to an indigenously sustained defensive powerhouse.

Iranian strategists view the severe economic and kinetic costs incurred as the premium paid for sovereignty.

While the Western military base relies on corrupt, bloated, corporate-driven spending that falters under prolonged attrition, Iran produces scalable asymmetric matrices designed for chaotic environments.

The hybrid war meant to shatter Tehran has only sharpened its defenses, proving that the system grows stronger with every blow delivered.

As the Western “rules-based order” fragments under its own contradictions and the regional vassal regimes face a terminal crisis of legitimacy, the Islamic Republic emerges hardened and more capable, proving that a system built on Ghadir and Ashura draws renewed strength from the very chaos meant to destroy it.

'Cuba will fight if we must fight'

 By Mona Hojat Ansari

Cuban ambassador to Iran discusses US sanctions, potential war, and international inaction with the Tehran Times

TEHRAN – Cuba has faced a fate remarkably similar to Iran's in its encounters with the United States. Both nations are being punished simply for creating and preserving political and governing systems of their own choosing. Both have suffered heavy losses as a result of illegal U.S. sanctions and blockades. Now, it appears the two countries may once again face the same kind of U.S. behavior—this time on the battlefield.

After failing to topple the Iranian government in an illegal war that, in Donald Trump's own words, was supposed to last only a few days, concerns are mounting that Washington may launch another war, this time against Cuba. The goal would be to manufacture the image of victory it has failed to secure after more than 90 days of fighting in West Asia.

The Tehran Times sat down with Cuba's Ambassador to the Islamic Republic of Iran, Jorge Fernando Lefebre Nicolas, for an interview that was largely overshadowed by the long-standing U.S. sanctions against Cuba, as well as the looming threat of aggression against the Latin American island. The ambassador told the Tehran Times that if Cubans come under attack by the United States, they will do exactly what they have done since the 1960s: resist, and rally around their nation's flag.

Below is the full text of the interview, edited for clarity and conciseness:

Could you please give us a picture of what life in Cuba has become like for the people under the ever-tightening U.S. siege?

First, I want to thank the Tehran Times for giving me the opportunity to speak about these issues, which are among the most important of our time—what is happening now in Iran and Cuba. Both of our nations are under threat from the United States.

Everyone knows that for many years, ever since the beginning of our revolution in 1959, America has been targeting Cuba. They want to change Cuba’s political system and subjugate our population. They imposed a blockade, the first measures of which were issued in 1962. So, for more than 60 years, we have lived under U.S. sanctions. Today, those sanctions are worse than ever. In his first term in office, President Trump applied more than 200 sanctions on Cuba, making life extremely difficult for Cubans. Now, in his second term, he has continued along the same path. He has been in office for just one year, and he has already imposed nearly 20 to 30 additional sanctions.

But there are two sanctions that are the harshest. The first is related to Venezuela. After the U.S. administration effectively kidnapped the president of Venezuela—everyone knows Venezuela was a very close partner of Cuba and its oil supplier—the U.S. intervened in Venezuela. Then, the U.S. imposed a sanction threatening the entire world if any country sells oil to Cuba, even friendly nations. In other words, the U.S. will impose sanctions, punishments, and tariffs on any country that sells oil to Cuba. Can you imagine how a country can survive without any oil supply? This has been enforced for more than three months. Cuba has received no oil shipments except for one ship from Russia. Because of this, the situation in Cuba is extremely dire. Hospital generators are running out of fuel. Agriculture is paralyzed. Transportation across the country has ground to a halt. We are making every effort to keep the country alive and provide essential services, but it is true that this has created a terrible humanitarian situation in Cuba.

But the Trump administration was not satisfied with that. He applied another measure: sanctioning all countries and all companies that do business with Cuba. So, if you have a company in Cuba, or if you sell goods to Cuba, you will face sanctions in your own country. As a result, it has now become clear to the public that the blockade is not simply a matter of the United States against Cuba—it is no longer about just two countries, as the U.S. used to claim every year at the United Nations. The blockade now involves the entire world.

The Trump administration seems to be on a spree to create itself the image of a big victory through illegal acts. It abducted the Venezuelan president early this year, then seemingly emboldened by that illegal act, launched an all-out war against Iran to topple the government here. Are you worried that with his lack of success in bringing Iran to its knees, he would decide to launch a military aggression against Cuba?

The Iran war has been a complete political and strategic disaster for the United States. Because of that, the Trump administration now needs to make the world forget what happened in Iran—the humiliation that Iran has inflicted on the United States. So, he may try to divert the world's attention away from Iran and toward Cuba. The fact that he attacked Venezuela and found it relatively easy to intervene and kidnap its president may have made him think he can repeat that tactic anytime he wants.

'Cuba will fight if we must fight'

At this moment, we are living on the edge because of economic sanctions and military pressure. The dangerous situation is that they are constantly fabricating pretexts. Every day, they invent a new justification to create a scenario for military action against Cuba. They assume that Cuba is in a weak position after a year of hardships and economic sanctions. But the truth is, the present American government and the people who make it up are not very clever. They have always lacked ethics, but right now, they are also not very clever.

If they attack Cuba—and I hope they don't—but if they do, they will only find fierce resistance from the Cuban people alongside their army. In Cuba, it's more or less like what you have seen here in Iran during these recent days: people in the streets supporting their political model, their army, their government, and honoring their martyrs.

Cuba is the same as Iran. The population supports their government and their people. We are like one. When we have to face the United States, we stand together as one. We have been doing so for many years—the blockade has been in place since 1961. As long as there is even one Cuban alive, we will never give up. So, we will face them, and we will fight if we must fight. 

Do you think that international organizations like the United Nations have done enough to protect independent nations like Iran and Cuba against the unilateral actions of the U.S.?

No, I do not.

The United Nations was created in 1945 after the Second World War with the aim of protecting peace and preventing war from happening again. But today, we have witnessed an abandonment of international law. We have one country—one superpower—that dictates its own law. And we have a U.S. president who says, "I don't care about international law. I only care about my law." How has the United Nations permitted one country to say that, to launch attacks, and to threaten the rest of the world without doing anything?

For nearly 80 years, the United Nations played a role and fulfilled its responsibilities. It prevented many wars, intervened in conflicts, and used diplomacy to stop or end wars. But we no longer see that. What we see now is one country with the pretension of dominating the rest of the world, while the United Nations remains silent.

Look at what has happened in Gaza. That is a clear genocide. Nobody should doubt that killing women, children, and the elderly, destroying hospitals and schools—that is genocide. It is an attempt to erase an entire group of people, the Palestinians. Yet the international community's response to prevent this has been very poor. Then we see Israel sending its army into Lebanon, killing people, and occupying territory simply because it decides to do so for its own interests. But where is the United Nations? Where is the international position that once earned respect by stopping or preventing war?

It is a pity that the United Nations is not playing the role it should in today's war scenarios. We would like to see more action from the UN—more prevention, or at least a response to the actions committed by one country.

There are many inconsistencies these days. When the United States attacked nuclear facilities in Iran, the United Nations was silent. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) somehow supported the attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. But a few weeks ago, when there was an attack on a nuclear facility in the Emirates, the IAEA was the first to declare that such an attack cannot be permitted and that the perpetrator must be punished—because they believed the perpetrator was Iran. So why is attacking one facility bad, but attacking another acceptable? That double standard is something we cannot allow from an international body.

What is bad is bad for everyone. What is good is good for everyone. If you attack a nuclear facility, it is bad—whether in this country, that country, or another. It is always bad. The international community must play its role to prevent such acts, not take sides.

What message do you have for countries in Latin America and West Asia in light of U.S. crimes against Iran and Cuba?

My message is that everybody should learn from what is happening. We all have reasons to worry, because at any moment any country can become a target of the United States. Nobody escapes from American greed. Nobody escapes. The whole world is under threat. That is why countries have to prepare themselves and ask, “Who is next?” At the same time, we continue to believe in relations based on respect. We would like to be a good neighbor on the basis of respect for sovereignty and the independence of every country. But what is happening today shows that nations must stay alert and defend their sovereignty together.

Do you think that when it comes to Cuba, at least, there are other individual countries with significant power projection capabilities—such as Russia and China—that could have done more to help shield Cuba against potential U.S. aggression?

Well, Russia and China are very good friends of Cuba. They are supporting Cuba one hundred percent, especially in our current economic situation. But for many years, we have learned that the capacity to defend our country rests on us. We are the ones who must defend our nation. If others come to our defense, that would be welcome—but we know that the first responsibility is our own.

That said, Cuba has enormous solidarity and support from around the world. If you go on social media today, you will see many people in different countries—European nations, the United States, Latin American countries—taking to the streets, holding demonstrations, supporting Cuba, chanting "hands off Cuba," and calling for no attack on Cuba. And many humble people all over the world are signing documents saying that Cuba must be defended. For us, that is something that deserves our admiration—how our friends across the world are expressing their position and their support for Cuba.

But concerning the military defense of Cuba, we rely on our own efforts and our own capacity. We know that we do not want to involve anyone else in this. As you mentioned throughout this conversation, we have been talking about Venezuela, Iran, and how Cuba is now under threat. And our position remains the same: we will defend ourselves.

How do you evaluate the current level of diplomatic and strategic relations between Iran and Cuba?

We have had diplomatic relations since the very beginning of the Islamic Revolution in 1979, which now amounts to 47 years of ties. Over those decades, we have built very close diplomatic and economic links. We have supported each other's positions on the international stage, and we enjoy a genuinely good relationship.

Of course, it could be even better. As fellow countries that have lived under sanctions for many years, Iran has managed to develop an economic capacity—a way to circumvent sanctions and reduce their impact—and has built a strong industrial base to support its development. This is an experience we must learn from. Iran has shown that it is possible to grow and develop even under sanctions, and we believe we must work toward a stronger economic relationship between our two countries in the future.

Our ties go beyond politics. For more than twenty years, we have collaborated with Iranian biotechnological institutions, including the Pasteur Institute. Through this partnership, we have successfully transferred technology to produce life-saving vaccines. We have worked together on vaccines for hepatitis and COVID-19, and we are now developing vaccines for Lunt and pneumococcal diseases. These are clear examples of what we can achieve for the benefit and well-being of our people. Still, without sanctions, we could do even more.

Middle East power balance shifting after Iran war, says John Helmer

TEHRAN- As tensions between Iran and the United States continue to fluctuate between military signaling, sanctions pressure, and intermittent diplomatic messaging, questions remain over Washington’s strategy and the evolving balance of power in the Middle East. Following the 40-day war, analysts are debating whether recent developments reflect a structural shift or a temporary phase of managed escalation.

In this context, Tehran Times spoke with John Helmer, a veteran journalist and geopolitical analyst based in Moscow, to assess the implications of the conflict for U.S. policy toward Iran, the role of domestic political calculations in Washington, and shifting regional alignments. Helmer is the editor of Dances With Bears (https://johnhelmer.net/) and has covered Russian and international affairs for over three decades.

In this interview, Helmer examines coercive diplomacy, regional security dynamics, and the limits of U.S. strategy.

Below is the full text of the interview:

After the 40-day war, to what extent did events validate the view that Trump could not sustain a full-scale confrontation with Iran? What, in your assessment, did Washington and Tel Aviv misunderstand about Iran’s capabilities and response?

Trump is currently escalating on two fronts simultaneously: through military pressure and through sanctions. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has continued tightening financial, trade and maritime sanctions even as Washington is engaged in negotiations for de-escalation through the proposed memorandum of understanding and an extended ceasefire framework. In other words, escalation and armistice diplomacy are running in parallel.

In my view, this reflects White House political performance aimed at the  domestic voter and election financier audience, because Trump is already operating in campaign mode. With the summer driving season underway in the United States and Europe, rising fuel prices are directly affecting voters’ daily lives.

Trump faces a difficult political balance. He must maintain support within his Republican base, preserve alignment with Israel, and avoid triggering further inflation or economic anxiety that is shifting undecided and independent voters against him.  This makes his overall behavior relatively predictable in strategic terms, even if it looks  inconsistent from day to day.

More broadly, Trump is still convinced that military force can deliver political outcomes. In the case of Iran, that assumption has not held. Iranian resistance—supported by forces in Lebanon, Ansarallah in Yemen, and elements of the Iraqi resistance—has surprised Washington and its allies.

What was expected and planned was a short conflict involving rapid decapitation strikes, followed by internal chaos that could be leveraged politically. That scenario did not materialize.

Military failure carries a significant political cost for any U.S. president. Trump often describes opponents as “losers,” but he cannot afford to be seen in those terms himself. Because a strategic miscalculation has occurred, he now faces the challenge of managing its political consequences.

As for Israel, I am less certain in my assessment. I follow developments from Moscow and do not see evidence that the Netanyahu government—or the broader pro-Israel establishment—believes it has made a strategic error. On the contrary, Israeli leadership continues to project confidence and pursue escalation rather than reassessment.

There may be internal disagreements, but they are not yet reflected at the government level. Ultimately, the key political test remains electoral continuity, as Netanyahu remains in power.

At this stage, neither Trump nor Netanyahu will publicly acknowledge mistakes or find scapegoats for their battlefield defeats.

Some analysts argue that Netanyahu and the pro-Israel lobby played a decisive role in drawing Trump into the February 28 attack. After everything that unfolded during the following 40 days, do you think Trump’s post-war approach still prioritizes Israeli interests over American ones?

I don’t agree with those American and European analysts and podcast commentators who believe the Israeli dog wags the American tail.

To understand the present, we need to go back. Once the United States emerged from World War II— even as it was still concluding the war against Germany in the early 1940s—its strategy toward the Arab world and Iran was built on several core priorities.

The first was to push out the British and French colonial presence, and in replacing the old imperial powers, to secure US control over oil resources. This meant gaining Middle East oil concessions, pipelines, ports, and transport routes to make sure that energy would flow from the region to American markets and beyond – at the price the US dictated. These concessions were contested by the British in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Iran; the French in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia.

The second major pillar of U.S. strategy, which is often overlooked today, was the determination to confront and ultimately weaken the Soviet Union; that was Enemy No. 1. This began with war planning against Stalin, including the new atomic weapons, and evolved into a broader Cold War strategy in which the Middle East played a lynchpin  role. The region was envisioned as a strategic rear base for nuclear attack operations against Soviet targets.

In this context, the Arab governments, Iran,  and the nationalist and communist movements of the Middle East were to be contained or neutralized. This involved a wide range of methods: political pressure, covert operations, bribery, assassinations, and divide-and-rule tactics with the tribes, clans, religious communities. The CIA was emerging  from the war period as a powerful instrument of such covert activity with the ambition to expand its global reach. On this history, my late wife, Claudia Wright, and I co-authored a book titled The Jackals' Wedding: American Power, Arab Revolt . The title comes from an Iraqi Arab expression referring to alliances which last very briefly before the partners turn against each other. That’s the dynamic which the Americans, like the British and French, and the Turks before them, all exploited.  The book traces the evolution of these empires from the 1940s through to the Libyan revolution under Muammar Gaddafi, examining how regional alliances were shaped, broken, and reshaped under external pressure.

This is not a new story in the case of Iran, as the overthrow of the Mossadegh government in 1953 clearly demonstrates and you remember. A similar pattern has unfolded across the Arab world. From the 1940s onward – so almost a century now -- U.S. strategy has consistently prioritized anti-communism and anti-nationalism  to prevent the Arabs and Iranians from acquiring political and military independence plus control over their own oil resources.

The Zionist movement and the Jewish communities emerged to create the Israeli state within this broader framework of empire, not as its primary driver. Their early activism began during the Roosevelt and Truman administrations, when Jewish advisers close to the president played a role in shaping policy debates to favour Israel over the oil company and military preference for the Arabs. In some cases, this process could be described as state capture, where ideological alignment between U.S. strategic interests and Zionist objectives was actively constructed and propagandized.

However, I don’t see that the evidence supports the conclusion that Israeli interests determine U.S. policy. Whatever the positive and negative  relationships between American presidents and Israeli leaders—or between figures such as Trump and Netanyahu—the dominant factor remains American strategic priorities.

Today, what we are witnessing is a more complex configuration. Israeli and Jewish expansionism has taken on a more ideological and religious character, influenced in part by currents that predate modern Zionism, including movements such as Chabad, which is a clerical or theological expression of Jewish supremacy. Figures of the moment like Jared Kushner have been associated with this network of influence in close proximity to Donald Trump.

At the same time, the expansion of Israeli influence, the weakening of the Arab nationalist states, and the fragmentation of countries such as Syria, Iraq and Libya have led some observers to conclude that Israel is the leading actor and the United States the follower. I would argue that this interpretation reverses the reality of the interests at stake.  The U.S. remains the dominant power, though at times Israeli influence is more visible and assertive.

There is also a growing role of evangelical Christian support in shaping U.S. policy toward Israel with strong hostility toward Iran and Arabs. These ideological currents help pay for US election results; they reinforce existing strategic interests, but do not replace them.

Not yet.

So the key question today is what happens when U.S. and Israeli objectives run into serious resistance—particularly from Iran—without achieving their strategic goals and at a rising cost domestically.  Iran’s ability to respond and inflict damage in return for the war inflicted on it for fifty years – in parallel with the relative weakening of the Arab states and Palestinian movements -- has altered regional calculations in a way that has not been seen before; the damage to Israel’s military, economic and psychological security is  obvious; genocide as their method and morality understood as never before. 

This also raises important questions in the context of U.S. domestic politics and elections which require constant calculation of how to maintain power, manage alliances, win elections – and raise the money required.

For example, within the current Republican Party landscape, both Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are potential successors to the Trump presidency. Both are Roman Catholic and have expressed discomfort with some of the controversial positions and rhetoric associated with Donald Trump, including his treatment of Christian religious symbols and institutions like the Pope.

However, I do not believe Trump is likely to choose either of them as his successor. Instead, for the future safety of the fortune he is accumulating now, he will calculate that one of his sons, such as Donald Trump Jr. or Eric Trump, should become his political heir, and that that he can rely on the personal loyalty and name recognition to influence the Republican base to back this succession choice in two years’ time, for the 2028 presidential election. 

Such a development, and the suspicion of Trump’s dynastic ambition among competing Republicans, will reshape internal party dynamics and affect how U.S. warmaking with Israel in the Middle East is framed in the electoral contests of the next two years. In this context, some Republican figures seeking political distance from Trump’s current positions may attempt to shift blame for the US economic pain onto Israel.

So, for the first time, there is a possibility of a broad political backlash against Israel. However, the outcome is highly uncertain because the Democratic Party opposition to Trump continues to maintain strong support for Israel.

Ultimately, while tactical adjustments may occur in response to electoral pressures, the structural alignment of U.S. policy in the region remains largely unchallenged, unchanging.

In your view, has the Islamic Republic’s resilience and response to U.S. and Israeli attacks—including its retaliatory strikes on U.S. bases in Gulf countries—altered the balance of power in the Middle East? Or has this conflict primarily exposed existing vulnerabilities across all parties involved?

The balance of power in the Middle East has changed. Let’s take it step by step.

In the last generation, the Arab Gulf states—the House of Saud, the Nahyan and Maktoum families in the UAE, the Al Sabah in Kuwait, and the Al Khalifa in Bahrain—have never been as externally vulnerable as they are now. Iraq under Saddam Hussein once threatened along all its borders but his threat was short-lived and he failed decisively—in his wars against Iran, Kuwait, and finally against the United States.

However, today even the US air defences and military bases which the Gulf states once believed were invulnerable and guaranteed their  protection have proven to be vulnerable. Their broader economic and geopolitical strategies—the investment and logistic corridors linking India through the Arabian Peninsula to Europe—are also under pressure, effectively exposed to Iranian and Yemeni military reach.

As a result, the Gulf Arabs are not only competing with one another, but they are also increasingly forced to seek new security arrangements. The perceived failure of the United States and Israel to provide full protection has pushed leaders such as the UAE’s Mohamed bin Zayed toward new security understandings with India, potentially involving expanded Indian security cooperation. At the same time, Saudi Arabia has strengthened its ties with Pakistan for similar security assurances and force deployments. While such arrangements are not new in regional history, they reflect a renewed dependence on external military support.

That in turn is already threatening the prosperity-in-pace  models on which the sheikhdoms have been counting for the future.

So yes, the balance of power has shifted, and this is one of the key strategic outcomes. From an Iranian perspective—and for the broader axis of resistance—this represents a significant development, although how.  together, they may capitalize on it is another matter.

Second, there is also a clear erosion of American and Israeli credibility. Their influence has long rested on the perception that they can offer impregnable protection to regional allies and impose costs on those who resist or challenge. For the first time, however, that credibility has been weakened by their inability to guarantee the security of Gulf states from  Iranian and their allied capabilities.

That said, Israel does not yet interpret the situation in this way. Israeli strategy remains focused on expansionist goals, with assumptions of dominance in Syria and Lebanon. But if Hezbollah’s anticipated strategy north of the Litani River unfolds as planned and produces the kind of operational surprise seen in previous conflicts, then Israel’s ability to project military and economic power into Lebanon and Syria will be further constrained.

In that sense, the shift in the balance of power is already underway—the fight is on, the outcome uncertain, the consequences still unfolding.

 If another round of conflict occurs, how do you assess the likely response of Persian Gulf states? Would they continue to rely primarily on the United States and align with Western positions, deepen ties with Russia and China, or move further toward more autonomous regional arrangements with Iran?

That’s a big question, because Russia and China have not proven to be all that they claim they are—at least from the perspective of Iran.

The value of Russian and Chinese financial support, military technology, intelligence sharing, sanctions busting, and diplomatic backing has so far not translated into a decisive security benefit compared to the US and Israel combination.  We don’t need to go deeply into how effective the Sino-Russian combination has been for Iran specifically, except to say that so far its impact appears modest.

From my sources—mostly Russian, but also some remaining Arab contacts—I understand that Iran has increasingly reached a conclusion similar to others in the region: that it is on its own. It must therefore develop self-sufficient capacities for warfare and economic resilience.

This does not mean Iran is isolated. It maintains useful partnerships and workarounds—such as the overland rail and road routes through Turkmenistan and shipping access via the Caspian Sea—that help to  mitigate US and allied pressure. But the practical imperative remains: Iran must ensure its own survival under conditions of blockade, relying on partners who are not formal allies and who have their own wars to fight.

A similar logic appears to be shaping the thinking of Gulf Arabs. The behavior of the Emirati and Saudi leaders suggests they also increasingly see themselves as on their own. As a result, they are attempting to build alternative regional alignments.

Pakistan in this framework is not really a strategic ally but more a subordinate security provider—offering manpower and limited military support in exchange for economic assistance. India, by contrast, is a far more significant potential partner, a global power in the making, with whom long-term strategic relations might help stabilize ruling regimes in the Gulf.

However, India itself – through the actions of Prime Minister Modi and Foreign Minister Jaishankar -- has made serious strategic miscalculations, particularly in aligning with the United States and Israel in the war against Iran which began on February 28. As a result, India is now paying a severe diplomatic, geopolitical and economic price. Modi’s future, along with Jaishankar’s, are under domestic challenge. India’s reliability as a stable external pillar for Gulf security is not what it appeared to be before February 28.

So looking forward, it is difficult to see the Gulf states relying on either Pakistan or India to offset the strategic losses they have experienced due to their overconfidence in the U.S. and Israel.  Instead, they are likely to continue balancing between multiple powers—without any of them fully replacing the old security architecture.

Do you see Trump’s proposed new agreement with Iran as a durable long-term deal, or more of a tactical pause—possibly aimed at easing tensions and stabilizing oil markets ahead of major global events like the World Cup?

Let’s start with the so-called memorandum of understanding and look at its reported terms.

One version of the document has been circulated through what Axios has reported in Washington. Axios presents itself as an American media outlet, but it reflects Israeli channels that provide selective leaks. It is not reporting neutrally; it is propaganda.

According to that version, the agreement is described as a negotiation in phases. The idea is that negotiations would be staged rather than comprehensive from the outset. From an Iranian perspective, this in itself is a tactical advantage, because Tehran has consistently argued that it will not negotiate all issues simultaneously with a party it considers unreliable, and so confidence must be built step by step.

The first step or stage reportedly includes a temporary commitment that there would be no new military attacks during the truce period. However, from the Iranian point of view, confidence in this clause is already questionable given previous episodes of attacks during periods of negotiation and de-escalation.

A second element concerns the reopening of maritime routes for normal global shipping. In principle, this is something Iran could accept, but it would depend on clear preconditions, particularly regarding the broader security environment in the region and the withdrawal of the US fleet.

A third point involves Iran removing naval mines and contributing to restoring safe maritime navigation. This, too, is technically negotiable, but only if there is reciprocal action, including clarity on the reduction of US military pressure in the same maritime space. Otherwise, the obligations would be asymmetric.

Another central issue is the nuclear file, including the status of enriched uranium stockpiles, future enrichment limits, and the structure of Iran’s civilian nuclear program. Under the reported framework, these issues would be deferred to a later stage of negotiations, conditional on sufficient confidence-building during an initial 60-day period.

From the Iranian side, there is also the question of financial guarantees. One reported proposal suggests the release of frozen Iranian assets, potentially in the range of 12 to over 20 billion dollars, depending on how they are calculated. In Tehran’s view, these are assets that were unlawfully seized in different jurisdictions.

From this perspective, Iran’s position links economic guarantees with maritime arrangements. The logic is that opening strategic waterways such as the Strait would only be sustainable if financial commitments are placed on the table first. Otherwise, Iran would be expected to make concessions without reciprocity. Continuing sanctions against Iran would keep the Hormuz closed for Iran, open for everyone else.

Opening the Strait should in principle benefit both sides, enabling the flow of oil exports and commercial shipping. But in Iran’s view, this must be part of a balanced exchange rather than a unilateral concession.

I also think that much of the current negotiation framework is shaped by domestic election calculations in Washington. President Trump, in particular, is operating in a highly polarized political environment where he must avoid being perceived as weak or as having “lost” a strategic confrontation. That domestic pressure significantly shapes the structure and timing of any agreement.

Limited military actions in the maritime domain in recent days have more political than military significance. They are primarily designed for American voters, and to demonstrate toughness rather than to achieve decisive strategic outcomes against Iran.

From Iran’s perspective, the Strait remains a key strategic lever. It is not something Tehran can abandon without substantial reciprocal concessions. At the same time, there is room for phased arrangements, including toll mechanisms or revenue-sharing models similar to other international waterways, on condition that broader sanctions relief and asset releases are implemented.

There is therefore theoretical space for negotiation if both sides engage in good faith. However, domestic political constraints in Washington, as well as regional calculations involving Israel and other actors, continue to show inconsistency, deception, bad faith.

For now, I see the situation as open in principle but politically constrained in practice, plus unresolved conflict and fighting in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, and other regional flashpoints that influence  the negotiating environment.

 Do you think another attack could still occur during ongoing negotiations—similar to previous conflicts in June 2025 and February 2026—or are the parties more likely to pause, assess developments in the U.S. and Israel, and delay any further escalation?

Yes. With adversaries like Israel and the United States, and given their track record and what they keep repeating as their war aims,  Iran must always expect the possibility of an attack and be prepared for it.

At the same time, such preparedness also requires addressing internal challenges, particularly the economic pressures on the Iranian people which have been exacerbated during this confrontation. These domestic issues must be managed and stabilized as quickly as possible through government policy and confidence building. That’s easier said than done.

President Trump, for example, recently claimed during a cabinet meeting that Iran’s economy is under severe strain. I am quoting him here: he suggested that Iran is “clobbered,” that its economy is in turmoil, and that inflation is extremely high, with the value of its currency significantly weakened. He argued that Iran had miscalculated by expecting time to work in its favor, while he claimed to be unconcerned himself about the electoral pressures he is facing,  such as the midterm Congressional elections.

In his view, the combination of economic pressure, sanctions, and military force will compel Iran to reach an agreement on Trump’s terms.  This reflects a broader strategy of maximum pressure, which he has previously applied to other countries such as Venezuela and Cuba, and which he believes can be used to force concessions from Iran now. Incidentally, Trump and his advisers share the conviction of the European and British leaders that this strategy is also working against Russia in the Ukraine war.

So the key question for Iran is how much it can, in the short term, deter the resumption of a large-scale war  while at the same time managing the trade-offs involved in maintaining the necessary level of readiness to defend and repel if the war resumes.

In other words, Iran is being forced to balance military preparedness with economic survival. Any improvement in the domestic economic situation comes at a cost, because the U.S. strategy—at least as articulated by Trump—is based on the idea of squeezing Iran from within and without. Iran therefore has to respond not only to external military pressure but also to sustained economic pressure. It must find ways to counter both types of attack as effectively as it has developed its missile and drone capabilities against external threats.

This creates an unusually difficult strategic problem. Fighting a conflict of this nature while simultaneously protecting the economy under sanctions is a major challenge. It is not often discussed in public commentary or even in many policy discussions, yet it is arguably as difficult—if not more difficult—than the purely military dimension, such as concealing and protecting advanced missile and drone systems.

From this perspective, while military preparedness is essential, the prevailing assumption in Washington is that maintaining pressure on Iran’s economy will eventually force it to accept the US terms amounting to unilateral disarmament. The Iranian challenge, therefore, is to develop an effective counterstrategy to this economic pressure while sustaining its military deterrence posture.

Plainly, this comes at a high domestic cost. It is an emergency for the Iranian population.

 With the ceasefire fragile and Hormuz tensions high, what are the most dangerous flashpoints—and what realistic off-ramps exist?

Rather than speaking of ‘flashpoints,’ I would frame the issue in terms of ‘flash people’—that is, those key U.S. officials who are capable of escalating violence, obstructing agreements, and undermining negotiations. In this sense, what you might call the ‘genocide 10’ operate within a system that is structurally and ideologically oriented toward war.

Figures such as the CENTCOM leadership, the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington,  the Secretary of War, and intelligence officials like the CIA Director are embedded in institutional frameworks where effectiveness must be constantly demonstrated through military plans and operations.  Their budgets, their inter-agency influence, their career ambitions and their future fortunes are all tied to operational engagement and escalation.

From the broader strategic perspective—whether Iranian, Arab, Russian and Chinese —the challenge for now is identifying which elements within the U.S. system can be motivated or compelled to restrain escalation. The vulnerability of the Trump succession is becoming more obvious. Figures such as J.D. Vance or Marco Rubio, for example, may represent potential counterweights to Trump and the Jewish lobby within the system of American war everywhere at once.

https://www.amazon.com/Jackals-Wedding-American-Power-Revolt/dp/B09T5TQF97/ref=sr_1_1?crid=25H8OJRLLHT7T&keywords=John+Helmer,+The+Jackals%27+Wedding&qid=1645696376&s=books&sprefix=john+helmer,+the+jackals%27+wedding,stripbooks,271&sr=1-1

The language of threat: How Western discourse constructs Iran

 By Xavier Villar

MADRID - The most consequential political fictions are those that no longer need defending. They operate below the threshold of argument, embedded in vocabulary, presupposed in syntax, circulating with the self-evidence of shared common sense. The Western, and particularly American, discourse on Iran offers a remarkably clean example of this mechanism.

What presents itself as threat assessment is, on closer inspection, a sustained act of political construction: the production of Iran as an entity whose dangerousness precedes any specific accusation and survives any particular refutation. The mechanism has a specular logic: by representing Iran as dangerous and irrational, the United States simultaneously constitutes itself as the opposite pole, a rational and moderate subject speaking on behalf of what the discourse calls the «international community». This community is, of course, a selective construction whose members are not chosen by vote, but its repeated invocation serves a precise legitimising function: it converts American positions into positions of the civilised world, and Iranian positions into challenges to that order rather than political demands with their own history.
This is an argument about the discursive conditions under which Iranian foreign policy becomes legible, or more precisely, the conditions under which it is systematically rendered illegible as policy and re-encoded as pathology.

The vocabulary does the work

Teun van Dijk's concept of the ideological square identifies a pattern observable across political discourse: the systematic amplification of the adversary's negative attributes alongside the minimisation of one's own. The American lexical repertoire on Iran executes this pattern with unusual consistency. Iranian actions are «destabilising», «malicious», «irresponsible», «illicit». Expressions such as «Iran's dangerous and destabilising behaviour in the region», «Iran's persistent threat to security», «reckless and malicious conduct» constitute only a sample of the vocabulary deployed. The same actions, performed by allied states, attract no comparable register. The asymmetry is load-bearing and its effects are cumulative: each deployment reinforces the field of associations already in place, so that the vocabulary eventually requires no argument to support it because it has become the argument.

Two terms merit particular attention. «Adventurism» does something more precise than condemn. It forecloses the possibility of strategic rationality: the adventurer does not calculate, he lunges. Iranian foreign policy decisions, however explicable in terms of regional security interests, are pre-emptively removed from the domain of comprehensible political behaviour and assigned to a register of impulsive, ungovernable excess. A state whose actions are defined as adventurist cannot be negotiated with, only contained.

«Regime», applied with such regularity to the Iranian government that its ideological charge has become nearly invisible, operates through presupposition rather than assertion. It does not argue that the Iranian state lacks legitimacy; it assumes it, and invites the reader to assume it alongside. Washington's allies remain «governments» and «administrations». Iran is always the regime. The terminological asymmetry installs a political judgment in the vocabulary itself, which then requires no burden of demonstration.

What is not said functions with equal efficiency. The Iranian nuclear programme has been treated, across two decades of American political and media discourse, as self-evident evidence of weapons intent, a presupposition so thoroughly embedded that challenging it requires the dismantling of an entire epistemological architecture. This is the particular force of implicature in political discourse: the cost of interrupting a presupposition falls entirely on the one who interrupts it, not on the one who installed it. Consensus is defended by the asymmetry of labour, not by the weight of evidence. Iranian concerns are presented as unfounded; its complaints, as lacking legitimacy. The governed object need not be heard, only managed.

Accumulation as argument

The hyperbolic register in which Iran is routinely discussed, existential threat, global danger, uniquely destabilising force, is structural necessity rather than rhetorical accident. A proportionate threat invites proportionate responses, including diplomatic ones. The inflation of the threat pre-empts that possibility, producing a political landscape in which negotiation appears naive and containment appears reasonable before any specific policy debate has taken place. The argumentation that fills this landscape rests on three recurrent axes, terrorism, regional destabilisation, missile development, that function less as analytical categories than as accumulative repertoires of imputation. Their cumulative weight derives not from the quality of any individual claim but from the coordinated repetition of all three simultaneously, producing an image of comprehensive, multidimensional threat more convincing as a totality than any of its components would be in isolation.

The terrorism axis is structurally privileged within this architecture, for reasons that have less to do with Iran than with the transformation of American political discourse after September 2001. The label activates a pre-loaded field of association, illegitimacy, irrationality, existential danger, that requires no further specification. Its particular utility is taxonomic: Hezbollah and Ansarallah, organisations with distinct histories, distinct political contexts, and distinct relationships to their respective constituencies, are assimilated into a single threatening configuration, their differences dissolved in the solvent of the category. The analytical cost of this assimilation, the loss of any genuine understanding of why these movements exist, what they want, and how regional politics actually functions, registers within the discourse as no cost at all. The elimination of complexity is the point.

The actor who cannot speak

Edward Said demonstrated that the Orient produced by Western discourse was the construction of a governed object rather than the description of an existing reality. The Orient constructed by Occident does not act: it is acted upon. It does not speak: it is spoken. What orientalism attributes to its objects, irrationality, violence, backwardness, incapacity for self-governance, functions not as description but as normative repertoire: an inventory of traits that circulates with the appearance of evidence and operates with the efficiency of verdict. Four decades after the publication of Orientalism, that repertoire remains active in the discourse on Iran with a persistence that speaks less to Iranian reality than to the durability of Western discursive structures.

The cumulative effect of these devices is an image of Iran as a political actor disqualified from politics itself. Its concerns are unfounded, its grievances illegitimate, its government a regime, its strategic behaviour adventurism. The distinction between a «we», the United States and its allies, associated with rationality, reliability and a humanism presented as universal, and a «them» is articulated in essentialist terms, as though the traits attributed to each pole derived from ontological difference rather than from historical relations of power with identifiable dates and beneficiaries. The binary is self-sealing. An Iran with legitimate security concerns, a foreign policy shaped by its own history and geography, a government capable of rational calculation, finds no place within this discursive frame, not because the evidence is absent, but because the frame determines what can count as evidence in the first place. What is produced, in the end, is a political technology for managing the conversation about Iran: one that operates most effectively when it has become invisible, when the threat no longer needs to be demonstrated because it has become the ground on which all demonstration takes place.