
Fierce hardliners are grabbing power in Iran
ON JUNE 23rd Iran's regime ignored President Donald Trump's warnings and attacked American military bases in Qatar and Iraq. Missiles could be seen over skyscrapers in Doha, Qatar's capital. While the damage and casualties appear minimal, the war has reached the Gulf, whose glimmering cities offer an alternative vision of the Middle East and whose energy the world needs. The strikes outside Iran come alongside a sudden, ominous power shift inside it. Military hardliners are grabbing power from clerics. That could mean they try to extricate themselves from the war now in order to fight another day. But in the medium term it could signal that the regime becomes more extreme, not more pragmatic, under the pressure of a devastating military campaign. PREMIUM This handout picture released by the office of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shows him speaking to members of Iran's air force in Tehran on February 7, 2025. (AFP)
One reason for this shift is that Iran's elite fears it is in a struggle to preserve the country's political system. Mr Trump has signalled he might approve the overthrow of the clerical-military order. 'Why wouldn't there be a regime change,' he asked on June 22nd. Strikes against non-nuclear targets have galvanised elements of an outraged Iranian public behind the regime. But most important of all, there has been a shift in who holds power at the top as a result of the war. The military men have gained ascendance over the religious clerics for the first time since Iran's revolution in 1979. And they are not moderate.
Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is 86, and for years there has been speculation about succession, although who might gain the upper hand has been far from clear. The war is changing that, turbo-charging a power shift to the regime's military arm, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). In the first days of the fighting Mr Khamenei, ageing and isolated for his own safety, disappeared from the scene like the Shias' hidden Imam. He delegated decision-making to a new council, or shura, dominated by the IRGC. 'The country is in effect under martial law,' says an observer.
As the IRGC gains control its elite is being transformed at speed by Israel's assassinations. Gone are the veteran commanders who for years pursued 'strategic patience', limiting their fire when their totemic leader, Qassem Soleimani, was assassinated in 2020, and holding it when Israel battered their proxies, Hamas and Hizbullah, in 2024. Now a new generation, impatient and more dogmatic, has taken their place and is bent on redeeming national pride. 'The maximalist position has been strengthened,' says an academic close to the reformist camp. He claims the decision-makers in place before the war were debating whether to ditch their anti-Israel stance. But 'everyone is now a hardliner'.
Compounding the generational shift is a newfound cohesion in a military-industrial complex renowned for paranoia and scheming. A year ago the regime was rocked by infighting. Businessmen, military professionals and ideologues battled for supremacy inside the IRGC. Hardliners chased pragmatists from state institutions. Rival factions blamed each other for the death of the country's president in a mysterious helicopter crash in 2024. Now they appear to be coalescing against a common foreign enemy.
How much public support does this emerging new power configuration enjoy? Many Iranians rue the billions of dollars their generals squandered on two decades of pointless proxy wars and even now some in Iran are describing the Israeli-American strikes as chemotherapy to remove cancerous cells. Increasingly, Israeli bombardments seem designed to tap into this seam of dissent and destabilise the country. Recent targets in Tehran include the police headquarters and the entrance to Evin, Iran's jail for its most prominent political prisoners.
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.
More could be to come. Within hours of America's strike, Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, warned of 'everlasting consequences'. Iran's parliament has voted to close the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which 30% of maritime oil supplies flow (its vote is not binding). It is also considering a bill requiring Iran to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and cut co-operation with the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency.
The big question is whether the regime now pauses or pursues something worse. Some had sought to downplay the fallout from America's bunker-busting strikes on Fordow and two other sites, perhaps to buy time and a greater margin of manoeuvre in firing back. While Donald Trump celebrated the 'monumental' obliteration of Iran's main nuclear sites, Iran's leaders initially pointed to the absence of radiation and questioned their efficacy. America's bombs were only twice as big as those used by Israel to hit the bunker of Hizbullah's leader in Beirut last year, and Fordow's chambers lay 25 times deeper than that.
But without a trusted mediator and no obvious off-ramp the more sober-minded appear to have been pushed aside. Many generals are eager to maintain their strikes on Israel which, they argue, have punctured its aura of invincibility. Israel's destruction of half their missile launchers has slowed the rate, they admit. But more advanced systems, perhaps launched from the sea, are to come, says Mohsen Rezaei, a former IRGC commander.
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.
The shift from religious to military authority has some advantages. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the original leader of Iran's revolution, warned against allowing the IRGC into politics, fearful they might dispense with his theocracy. With the clerics confined to their seminaries, there might be an easing of the regime's religious strictures. In recent days state television has shown women with hair poking out from their headscarves. But the prospect of Iran being ruled by its new shura indefinitely has other consequences, not least an even more militarised state hellbent on defiance and reprisals, and more ruthless in tamping down internal dissent. The outside world has often assumed that Iran's regime exhibits reckless risk-taking and belligerence because it has been run by religious men. The danger is the military men are worse.
Sign up to the Middle East Dispatch, a weekly newsletter that keeps you in the loop on a fascinating, complex and consequential part of the world.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Business Standard
13 minutes ago
- Business Standard
A look at Al Udeid Air Base, US military site in Qatar that Iran attacked
The US has military sites spread across the region, including in Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Syria and the United Arab Emirates AP Washington Iran retaliated Monday for the US attacks on its nuclear sites by targeting Al Udeid Air Base, a sprawling desert facility in Qatar that serves as a main regional military hub for American forces. A US defence official says no casualties have been reported. As of this month, the US military had about 40,000 service members in the Middle East, according to a US official. Many of them are on ships at sea as part of a bolstering of forces as the conflict escalated between Israel and Iran, according to the Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations research and policy centre. Bases in the Middle East have been on heightened alert and taking additional security precautions in anticipation of potential strikes from Iran, while the Pentagon has shifted military aircraft and warships into and around the region during the conflict. The US has military sites spread across the region, including in Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Syria and the United Arab Emirates. Here's a look at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar: Al Udeid hosts thousands of service members The sprawling facility hosts thousands of US service members and served as a major staging ground for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. At the height of both, Al Udeid housed some 10,000 US troops, and that number dropped to about 8,000 as of 2022. The forward headquarters of the US military's Central Command, Al Udeid is built on a flat stretch of desert about 20 miles (30 km) southwest of Qatar's capital, Doha. Over two decades, the gas-rich Gulf country has spent some $8 billion in developing the base, once considered so sensitive that American military officers would say only that it was somewhere in southwest Asia. Trump has visited Al Udeid Trump visited the air base during a trip to the region last month. It was the first time a sitting US president had travelled to the installation in more than 20 years. Al Udeid cleared its tarmacs Last week, ahead of the US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, Al Udeid saw many of the transport planes, fighter jets and drones typically on its tarmac dispersed. In a June 18 satellite photo taken by Planet Labs PBC and analysed by The Associated Press, the air base's tarmac had emptied. The US military has not acknowledged the change, which came after ships off the US Navy's 5th Fleet base in Bahrain also had dispersed. That's typically a military strategy to ensure your fighting ships and planes aren't destroyed in case of an attack. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
13 minutes ago
- Business Standard
US lifts 'shelter in place' warning for Americans in Qatar after ceasefire
The embassy in Doha, which had also instructed official personnel to stay inside, revoked the guidance in a statement issued late Monday afternoon Washington time AP Washington The State Department has lifted the shelter in place warning to Americans in Qatar that it issued earlier Monday ahead of Iranian missile launches at a US military base there in retaliation for weekend US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. The embassy in Doha, which had also instructed official personnel to stay inside, revoked the guidance in a statement issued late Monday afternoon Washington time after nearly all of the missiles were intercepted and Iran signalled there would be no more. It noted that Qatari airspace, which had been closed earlier, remained closed and that the security situation in the country could change rapidly. Russia, China and Pakistan seek UN resolution condemning US strikes on Iran and calling for ceasefire The draft Security Council resolution, circulated to its 15 members for comments and obtained by The Associated Press, is almost certain to be vetoed by the United States in its present form. It could be changed in negotiations. It condemns in the strongest terms the attacks against peaceful nuclear sites and facilities in Iran under safeguard by the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. The draft also calls for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in the Israel-Iran conflict, urgent protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure, and a diplomatic solution to Iran's nuclear issue that guarantees its exclusively peaceful nature in exchange for the lifting of unilateral and multilateral sanctions against Iran. Israel search and rescue teams prepare for another night of potential missiles from Iran. In a makeshift base on the outskirts of Tel Aviv, more than a hundred reservists have been working around the clock trying to find survivors and dig people out of the rubble after missile strike. Soldiers said after Iran's strike on the US base in Qatar they're on high alert. We're very focused we think there's going to be a response from Iran, we don't know what to responses will be, said Matan Schneider the company's second in command for the search and rescue team.


Scroll.in
20 minutes ago
- Scroll.in
2,295 Indians evacuated from Iran so far, says MEA
Two-thousand two-hundred and ninety-five Indians have been evacuated from Iran amid the conflict in West Asia, the Ministry of External Affairs said on Tuesday. Two-hundred and ninety-two Indian citizens arrived in New Delhi on board a special flight from the Iranian city of Mashhad at 3.30 am on Tuesday as part of Operation Sindhu, said ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal. Another flight with 290 Indians and one Sri Lankan citizen had arrived in New Delhi from Mashhad at 7.15 pm on Monday. The first evacuation flight arrived in New Delhi on Thursday. This was followed by a series of special flights. The second batch of 443 Indians were evacuated from Israel on Monday through the country's borders with Jordan and Egypt, PTI reported. They were to take flights to India from Jordan and Egypt arranged by the external affairs ministry in coordination with Indian missions in the two countries. The first batch of 160 persons had left Israel for Jordan on Sunday and were to board a flight to India on Monday, according to the news agency. #WATCH | Operation Sindhu | 292 Indian nationals were evacuated from Iran on a special flight that arrived in New Delhi from Mashhad at 3:30 am today. 2295 Indian nationals have now been brought home from Iran, tweets MEA Official Spokesperson, Randhir Jaiswal. — ANI (@ANI) June 24, 2025 The latest round of the conflict between Israel and Iran started on June 13 when the Israeli military struck what it claimed were nuclear targets, and also other sites, in Iran with the aim of stalling Tehran's nuclear programme. Iran retaliated with missile attacks on Israel. On Sunday, the United States joined Israel's war against Iran. US President Donald Trump had said that the country carried out a 'very successful attack' on Iranian nuclear sites of Fordo, Natanz and Esfahan. The continued attacks had led to concerns of a wider conflict in the region. On Monday, Trump claimed that Iran and Israel had agreed to a 'complete and total' ceasefire after 10 days of hostilities. Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi initially said that there had been no agreement on a ceasefire. However, he added minutes later that the Iranian military operation 'continued until the very last minute ', till 4 am local time.