
Chairman of Academy for Strategic, Defence Studies receives Iranian delegation
Muscat -- Maj. Gen Hamid Ahmed Sakroon, Chairman of the Academy for Strategic and Defence Studies received in his office at Bait Al Falaj Camp today a delegation from the Supreme National Defense University of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The two sides discussed several matters of mutual interest, notably in academic fields.
The meeting was attended by Commodore Khalid Amir Al Salti, Director General of Studies and Academic Affairs and the Military Attaché at the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Muscat.
Iranian Military Delegation Visits NDC
A delegation from the Supreme National Defense University of the Islamic Republic of Iran today visited the National Defense College (NDC) at Bait Al Falaj Camp.
The guests were greeted upon their arrival at the college by Brigadier Mansoor Ali Al Amri, Acting Commandant of the NDC.
Members of the visiting delegation were briefed on the college's facilities and its strategic curricula, which focuses on preparing national competencies capable of taking strategic decisions at various levels.
They also toured the NDC's departments and various halls.
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They survived and thrived by leveraging strategic alliances, fortifying key positions and innovating militarily, ultimately defining Persian culture as a unifying force against external pressures. The cement of cohesion External pressure often acts as a powerful unifying force in Iran, strengthening nationalist sentiment and rallying diverse populations against a perceived common aggressor. Sanctions are consistently framed domestically as an attack on the nation itself, not merely the government. While significant internal social and economic discontent exists, overt external threats consistently trigger a rallying effect. The massive national outpouring of grief and unity following the series assassinations of generals, ministers and the former president, with millions filling the streets, exemplified this dynamic. Continued pressure reinforces a deep-seated narrative of Iran as a besieged civilisation standing firm, a legacy stretching back to symbols like the defiant stand at the Battle of Thermopylae (480 BC) and the national mobilisation during the gruelling Iran-Iraq War. Costs and challenges This trajectory is not without severe costs or contradictions. Iran's regional interventions, while enhancing its leverage in some arenas, have also incurred disastrous consequences. Actions perceived as overreach or sectarian have demonstrably harmed Iran's standing among significant segments of the Muslim and Arab world, creating resentment and fuelling regional instability. In Syria alone, half a million lives were lost and fifteen million people became refugees. This damage to its broader Islamic and Arab reputation is a serious strategic liability that cannot be ignored. Furthermore, brain drain and sanctions inflict deep suffering on ordinary Iranians, and the focus on security can come at the expense of domestic freedoms and development. Strength through resilience Despite these significant challenges, Iran demonstrates a system adapting and hardening under pressure. It is building a more diverse economic base out of necessity, maintaining formidable asymmetric deterrence and harnessing a potent narrative of national resistance deeply connected to its historical identity. Like the mythical Phoenix rising from ashes, Iran draws strength from adversity. Its ancient civilisation has weathered invasions, empires and revolutions. The current pressures, while intense, are forging a nation that is increasingly self-reliant, strategically embedded through complex networks and often internally galvanised against external foes. To assume this pressure will break Iran is to misunderstand its deep historical roots and its proven, pragmatic resilience. The outcome is more likely to be a nation tempered, adapted, and ultimately, stronger.


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