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Iran Insights

How the erosion of livelihoods pushed Iran to the brink

How the erosion of livelihoods pushed Iran to the brink

Iran’s January protests were the predictable result of years of ignored economic and social warning signs, according to one of the country’s most prominent economists, who says the state failed to recognize how close society had come to the brink.

Tehran talks soft abroad, tough at home

Tehran talks soft abroad, tough at home

Tehran appears to be speaking in two voices about diplomacy with Washington: one calibrated for foreign capitals, the other aimed inward, shaped by fear, factionalism, and propaganda.

Iran power centers signal doubt just as talks with the US begin

As Iranian and US negotiators met in Oman on Friday to discuss the framework for renewed talks, Friday prayer leaders across Iran used their sermons to dismiss the process, expressing near-uniform pessimism about the prospects for diplomacy.

State-organized Shiite celebrations ignite anger amid mass mourning in Iran

State-backed celebrations of Shiite Imam Mahdi’s birthday this week have angered many Iranians mourning tens of thousands killed in recent protests, highlighting a widening divide over grief, faith and public displays of joy.

Talks on the brink: why Iran-US negotiations inspire little confidence

Talks on the brink: why Iran-US negotiations inspire little confidence

As Iran and the United States reshuffle the format and venue of their talks amid military threats, deep mistrust, and hardline red lines, skepticism over a breakthrough appears widespread.

How Iran’s infighting consistently derails diplomacy

How Iran’s infighting consistently derails diplomacy

As hopes for talks with the United States flicker and fade, Iran’s chronic factional infighting once again appears to have torpedoed a diplomatic opening—even before it properly began.

Alarm grows over detention of doctors who treated Iran protesters

Alarm grows over detention of doctors who treated Iran protesters

Rights groups and activists are sounding the alarm over what they describe as a widening campaign of pressure, arrests and intimidation against Iranian doctors and nurses who treated injured protesters.

Mockery of protest victims on state TV sparks fury in Iran

Mockery of protest victims on state TV sparks fury in Iran

A mocking segment aired on Iran’s state television about the bodies of protesters killed in January has sparked public outrage and renewed calls, including from Islamic Republic loyalists, for the removal of the head of the national broadcaster.

Disconnected and afraid: Iran’s internet blackouts leave lasting scars

Disconnected and afraid: Iran’s internet blackouts leave lasting scars

When Iran cuts off internet access, millions are plunged into more than digital silence. Mental health experts say the blackouts intensify anxiety, isolation, and trauma in a society already under extreme strain.

Tehran braces for war while testing the limits of diplomacy

Tehran braces for war while testing the limits of diplomacy

Tehran appears to have taken the US military buildup near Iran seriously, but shows no sign of softening its rhetoric or accepting Washington’s terms while it explores limited diplomatic channels.

How Tehran tried to control the story after January’s bloodshed

How Tehran tried to control the story after January’s bloodshed

Tehran’s violent mid-January crackdown was accompanied by a quieter but sweeping campaign to silence the press and control information about the killings.

After 20-day outage, Iran internet flickers back but restrictions persist

After 20-day outage, Iran internet flickers back but restrictions persist

Iran’s internet, throttled for 20 days amid the mass killing of protesters, began to partially resume on Wednesday, according to monitoring groups and users inside the country, who said access remains heavily restricted and unstable.

Volunteers abroad deploy tech to pierce Iran's internet iron curtain

Volunteers abroad deploy tech to pierce Iran's internet iron curtain

As Iran’s authorities continue sealing off global internet access, thousands of Iranian volunteers abroad are helping users inside the country slip through what few narrow digital cracks remain.

'A moment like no other': US-based think tank urges Trump to sap Iran

'A moment like no other': US-based think tank urges Trump to sap Iran

After unprecedented mass killings of protestors whose full scope lies concealed behind Iran's internet iron curtain, the Washington-based pro-Israel think tank JINSA urges Donald Trump to seize the moment to destroy the mutual foe of Israel and the United States.

Iranian official rhetoric girds for war as US fleet nears

Iranian official rhetoric girds for war as US fleet nears

Tehran’s increasingly combative official statements suggest its leaders may be taking US military deployments more seriously than Washington’s signals of diplomacy.

Tehran quelled street protests but economic troubles persist

Tehran quelled street protests but economic troubles persist

Tehran may have crushed street unrest with brute force, but it has no comparable solution for an economy gripped by surging inflation and collapsing incomes.

Tehran ignored warnings of unrest, chose force over reform

Tehran ignored warnings of unrest, chose force over reform

The protests that erupted across Iran in January 2026 may have appeared sudden to outside observers but inside the country, they were anything but.

How '800 executions canceled' fits Tehran’s playbook

How '800 executions canceled' fits Tehran’s playbook

The thank-you note from US President Donald Trump to Iran’s leadership for halting what he described as planned mass executions reveals much about his politics, but more about the rulers in Tehran who have canonised deception as a political instrument.

Is the Trump-Khamenei feud nearing endgame?

Is the Trump-Khamenei feud nearing endgame?

The public rancor between US President Donald Trump and Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has gotten increasingly personal, suggesting that a standoff once mediated through proxies and carefully coded threats may be approaching a finale.

Iran after the crackdown: serenity on screens, grief on the streets

Iran after the crackdown: serenity on screens, grief on the streets

After the January 8-9 mass killing of protestors in Iran, state media broadcasts fresh snow falls and other serene scenes bearing little resemblance to the agony of many Iranians reeling from the historic violence.

Eyewitness lives to tell tale of 'next-level brave' Iran protests

Eyewitness lives to tell tale of 'next-level brave' Iran protests

After returning from Iran to Canada, Mona Bolouri said the unity and size of protests she witnessed firsthand convinced her that the Islamic Republic was doomed after she left the country a day before a deadly crackdown.

Brutal protest crackdown marks Tehran's death throes, ex-CIA chief says

Brutal protest crackdown marks Tehran's death throes, ex-CIA chief says

The Islamic Republic's resort to the deadliest crackdown on protestors in its history signals endgame for the theocracy, retired US Army General and ex-CIA director David Petraeus told Iran International Insight, the channel's town hall held in Washington DC.