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The Telegraph Opinion - It will take Iran decades to recover from this war - Colonel Richard Kemp - Thu, April 9, 2026 at 3:25 PM GMT+3

 The Telegraph

Opinion

It will take Iran decades to recover from this war

Colonel Richard Kemp

Thu, April 9, 2026 at 3:25 PM GMT+3

5 min read



The aftermath of a US-Israeli strike on a residential building in Tehran - Majid Saeedi/2026 Getty Images



Reeling under the most intense American and Israeli assaults, the Iranian regime has capitulated. In the face of Donald Trump’s threats, warning that the worst is yet to come, it has dropped its cast-iron demand that the Strait of Hormuz would not be reopened until the US committed to ending the war, cancelling sanctions and paying reparations.


That has been conveniently ignored by many Western commentators who would have portrayed the two-week ceasefire as a defeat for Trump, no matter how it was framed. It has also been quietly forgotten by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) leaders now calling the shots in Tehran, who would themselves have declared victory whatever the outcome.


It’s very telling that so many anti-Trumpers in the West, including some political leaders, seem to be playing the same tune as Iran’s dictators.


This ceasefire – even if it holds and the Iranians uncharacteristically stick to their word – is unlikely to be the end of the conflict. Trump will not accept Iran’s new list of demands, however watered down they may be. Since his first term, he has been playing hardball with the ayatollahs. He started by eliminating Qassim Soleimani, their top IRGC terrorist commander, cancelled Barack Obama’s deeply flawed nuclear deal and returned to the maximum-pressure sanctions regime.


Last June he backed Israel’s defensive war on Iran and then reinforced it with devastating strikes against its nuclear facilities. Finally we came to the all-out joint offensive with Israel that started a few weeks ago. Despite decades of repeated threats and lethal attacks against the US and its allies, including British and American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, Trump was the first American president with the steel to directly attack Iran.


For a regime that prioritises its toxic ideology far above the good of the country, it is highly unlikely that the IRGC will go along with Trump’s red lines either. These include ending their nuclear project, ceasing their ballistic missile programme, terminating their ring of terrorist proxies and surrendering stockpiles of highly enriched uranium.


None of that seems to add up to a permanent end of hostilities. But if the war is not actually resumed, Iran will be a different country from that of just six weeks ago, as Prime Minister Netanyahu recently affirmed. It has never been so weak. What remained of its air defence system after the twelve-day war last June has been shattered. In the face of thousands of American and Israeli combat sorties, Iran only managed to down two US planes, the crews of which were rescued a few days ago.


Iran’s political and military leadership has been decimated. That includes the supreme leader and several tiers below him, the head of the IRGC, the chief of the armed forces, defence minister, chief of intelligence and the heads of the nuclear weapons development organisation. Many national and local IRGC and police headquarters and bases have been blown apart as well as those of the Basij militia, responsible for repressing Iranian citizens.


Iranian command structure 


The navy and air forces have been largely wiped out, as has much of the country’s defence industry. Vast numbers of rockets, drones, launch sites, storage and manufacturing facilities have been destroyed. Most of the missiles and drones fired by Iran during the war were intercepted. Although it is still able to launch attack projectiles, its armoury, built up over many years, is severely depleted.


Much damage was inflicted on Iran’s nuclear programme last June, and further destruction has been sustained in this campaign, including the underground enrichment plant at Natanz and the installation at Bushehr. Iran still retains stocks of highly enriched uranium but it is unlikely to still be capable of transforming this material into viable nuclear weapons, and Trump has suggested Iran is willing to hand it over. We shall see about that.


Commercial and economic damage has been devastating, as have attacks on bridges and other vital military infrastructure. Israeli strikes on the South Pars/Asaluyeh area disabled facilities accounting for 85 per cent of Iran’s petrochemical exports, according to Israel’s defence minister. US attacks on Kharg Island were targeted at military installations not the energy sites themselves, nevertheless this has left Iran’s most important oil export centre vulnerable.


By its own ill-judged actions, Iran has turned itself into an international pariah by lashing out at its neighbours. The Gulf Cooperation Council states – including Saudi Arabia, Oman and Kuwait, previously wary of Iranian aggression – have had their fears violently confirmed and can now be counted among Tehran’s enemies. That includes Qatar, which was perhaps Iran’s best friend in the region until the IRGC launched multiple attacks against it. Likewise, the UAE, which was also attacked, will likely no longer continue to enable Tehran to bypass sanctions.

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Fearful of further uprisings among its own people during the war, the IRGC intensified its campaign of brutal repression and murder. The deterrent effect of these Gestapo tactics has been obvious, but they will not be forgotten among a catalogue of savagery against ordinary Iranians. An internet blackout throughout the campaign intentionally prevented Iranian citizens from comprehending the full extent to which their overlords have been weakened. When they come to understand that, and begin to feel the long-term pain of an economy that may now be beyond recovery, the regime experience even more turbulence than at the beginning of the year.


Whether or not this war restarts, and whether or not the regime continues to hold, much of the damage that has been done so far to Iran’s offensive capabilities can only be fully repaired over decades. Trump is already putting in place measures intended to deter Chinese and Russian support. Meanwhile, Tehran will talk of victory, but in reality their country is no longer a serious regional threat.


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