Saturday, February 28, 2026

UN News - Global perspective Human stories - Security Council meeting in emergency session over Iran - 28 February 2026

 UN News

Global perspective Human stories

Security Council meeting in emergency session over Iran

[UN News photo]


The UN Security Council is due to meet top of the hour in emergency session in the aftermath of major airstrikes across Iran by the United States and Israel. In retaliation, Tehran has launched its own attacks throughout the Middle East, with reports of strikes in Dubai, Doha, Bahrain and Kuwait – threatening to plunge the region into a broader conflict. US President Donald Trump has urged Iranians to “take over” the Government. UN chief António Guterres condemned the escalation, saying it undermines international peace and security. He’s due to brief ambassadors in New York. Follow our live coverage below. UN News app users can follow here and full meetings coverage can be found daily, here.


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28 February 2026 Peace and Security

The UN Security Council is due to meet top of the hour in emergency session in the aftermath of major airstrikes across Iran by the United States and Israel. In retaliation, Tehran has launched its own attacks throughout the Middle East, with reports of strikes in Dubai, Doha, Bahrain and Kuwait – threatening to plunge the region into a broader conflict. US President Donald Trump has urged Iranians to “take over” the Government. UN chief António Guterres condemned the escalation, saying it undermines international peace and security. He’ll be briefing ambassadors in New York. Follow our live coverage below. UN News app users can follow here and full meetings coverage can be found daily, here.


Today at UN Headquarters


Welcome to our live coverage in New York where the Security Council is due to hold an emergency meeting on the growing crisis in the Middle East following US and Israeli strikes on Iran early on Saturday.


Production team: Katherine Stephan, Matt Wells, Conor Lennon, Dan Dickinson, Ana Carmo


Today 12:12 AM

Secretary-General warns of 'grave threat', following Iran strikes


Addressing the Council, Secretary-General António Guterres, focused his remarks on principles, facts and “the way out”.


Quoting from the UN Charter, he said: “All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.”


International law and international humanitarian law must always be respected, he stressed.


This is  why he condemned the massive military strikes by the United States and Israel against Iran – and the subsequent attacks by Iran, violating the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.


“We are witnessing a grave threat to international peace and security,” he warned. 


“Let me be clear: There is no viable alternative to the peace settlement of international disputes."


Today 12:08 AM

Middle East WHO chief urges 'immediate restraint and de-escalation'

 

Hanan Balkhy, head of the World Health Organization Eastern Mediterranean region, has expressed his "deep alarm" at the escalation of hostilities in a social media post, and a reminder that the protection of health workers is obligatory under international law.


HananBalkhyحنان بلخي

@HananBalkhy

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The rapid escalation of hostilities in the Middle East is deeply alarming. Our Region is already fragile, shaped by years of conflict, displacement, and underfunded health systems.


Further violence will not only claim lives directly. It will push already strained health systems Show more

3:15 PM · Feb 28, 2026

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Today 12:07 AM

Meeting called to order


Ambassador James Kariuki of the United Kingdom, and Council President for February, calls the meeting to order and as members take their seats around the iconic horseshoe-shaped table.


Feb 28, 2026  11:31 PM

Top UN officials react to strikes


Tedros Ghebreyesus, Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO) “I am deeply concerned about the current situation in the Middle East. My heart is with the civilians caught in the crossfire.”

Volker Türk, High Commissioner of Human Rights “As always, in any armed conflict, it is civilians who end up paying the ultimate price.”

Annalena Baerbock, President of the General Assembly “The UN Charter is clear: all Member States must settle their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered.”

International Atomic Energy Agency “The IAEA is closely monitoring developments in the Middle East, and urges restraint to avoid any nuclear safety risks to people in the region.” 


UN Human Rights

@UNHumanRights

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UN Human Rights Chief @volker_turk deplores military strikes across #Iran by Israel & USA, & retaliatory strikes by Iran.

As always, in any armed conflict, it is civilians who end up paying the ultimate price.

https://ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2026/02/turk-deplores-strikes-against-iran-and-retaliation


Feb 28, 2026  07:31 PM

Security Council emergency meeting: Iran


Today at 4:00 p.m., the Security Council will convene an emergency meeting following attacks on Iran by the United States and Israel.


The meeting - reportedly requested by France, Bahrain and Colombia - will be convened under the agenda item "situation in the Middle East" and chaired by the United Kingdom, which holds the monthly Council Presidency


UN Secretary-General António Guterres condemned today’s military escalation in the Middle East, stressing: “The use of force by the United States and Israel against Iran, and the subsequent retaliation by Iran across the region, undermine international peace and security.”


He is calling for an immediate ceasefire and de-escalation.


“Failing to do so risks a wider regional conflict, with grave consequences for civilians and regional stability,” he warned. For reaction so far from across the UN system, see our earlier news update here.































Richard Haass - Februarry 28, 2026 - AN unnecessary War of choice - (13 points )

 

T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı : 8 Şubat 2026, Bölgemizdeki Son Gelişmeler Hk.

 T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı :

8 Şubat 2026, Bölgemizdeki Son Gelişmeler Hk.


İsrail ve ABD’nin İran’a saldırmasıyla başlayan ve İran’ın üçüncü ülkeleri hedef almasıyla devam eden gelişmeler, bölgemizin geleceğini ve küresel istikrarı riske atacak niteliktedir.


Uluslararası hukuka aykırı ve masum sivillerin hayatını tehdit eden her türlü eylemden derin kaygı duyuyor, şiddetin tırmanmasına neden olabilecek kışkırtmaları kınıyoruz. Tarafları saldırılara bir an önce son vermeye davet ediyoruz.


Bölgemizdeki meselelerin barışçıl yollarla çözülmesi gerektiğini bir kez daha vurguluyoruz. Türkiye, arabuluculuk konusunda gerekli desteği vermeye hazırdır.


İlgili ülkelerde yaşayan vatandaşlarımızın güvenlikleri önceliğimiz olup bu hususta gerekli tüm tedbirler alınmaktadır.


Foreign Affairs - Iran’s Divided Opposition - Only a Unified Movement Can Threaten the Regime - Sanam Vakil and Alex Vatanka - February 13, 2026

 Foreign Affairs

Iran’s Divided Opposition

Only a Unified Movement Can Threaten the Regime

Sanam Vakil and Alex Vatanka

February 13, 2026



A mural featuring Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Tehran, February 2026

Majid Asgaripour / West Asia News Agency / Reuters


SANAM VAKIL is Director of Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa Program.

ALEX VATANKA is a Senior Fellow at the Middle East Institute.

 

Whenever Iran is shaken by nationwide protests, as it was just last month, analysts and activists are consumed by the same two questions: Will the country’s regime finally fall, and what will come next if it does? Answers abound. Some analysts think that the country’s leadership is surprisingly secure and that the regime can withstand more demonstrations. Some believe it will collapse, only to be followed by another dictatorship under the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the most politically powerful branch of the country’s armed forces. Others are more optimistic, arguing that the entire system will go down and that an external opposition figure, perhaps the former Iranian crown prince Reza Pahlavi, will help the country transition to a democratic government or that Pahlavi will set up a constitutional monarchy. Those more optimistic still think that Iran might have a negotiated transition toward democracy, with regime figures offloading power to opposition ones.


Iran does seem poised on the brink of great change. The regime is exhausted, and Iranians are infuriated by decades of economic mismanagement. Its supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, is an 86-year-old cancer survivor. If upcoming talks in Oman between Tehran and Washington fail to break the nuclear impasse and address Iran’s other destabilizing activities, the Trump administration might also resort to attacking the country. But current speculation about Iran’s day after (including among U.S. officials debating what course of action to take) glosses over the factor that will determine whether Iranians will have a better future: the state of the country’s opposition movement. That movement, unfortunately, is deeply fractured. Its members are divided into many factions—college students, ethnic minorities, diasporic monarchists, to name just a few—that are frequently at odds. For example, opposition activists routinely accuse one another of secretly collaborating with the Iranian regime or with foreign governments. As a result of this fractiousness, they have struggled to capitalize on the Islamic Republic’s weakness.


If they want to take down the regime, Iran’s opposition groups must learn to work together. They need to adopt a basic, shared program that rests on principles everyone agrees on and postpone debates on everything else. They must come up with a plan to manage the country in the immediate aftermath of the regime’s collapse. Finally, they must be more inclusive, rather than constantly trying to freeze one another out. Otherwise, the Islamic Republic will persist not because it commands popular support but because there is no alternative.


NO LOVE LOST


Unlike some authoritarian states, such as Belarus or Venezuela, Iran’s opposition does not have a unifying infrastructure or a clear leader. Instead, it is best thought of as an archipelago of political islands divided by geography, generation, ideology, and exposure to repression. These groups include neighborhood associations, student cells, women’s rights circles, ethnic movements, and labor organizations. They have all participated in the waves of protests that have rocked Iran since 2009. But between intense state repression and reciprocal mistrust, they have struggled to coordinate their actions.


Consider, for example, the country’s labor groups. These organizations, made up of teachers, pensioners, transportation employees, and other kinds of workers, represent perhaps the most structured oppositional force in the country. They routinely articulate Iranians’ grievances about inflation, inequality, corruption, privatization, and other economic issues. These groups also share most Iranians’ anger over the ideological, aggressive, and militant foreign policy that the regime has pursued for decades, which has led to Iran’s isolation and impoverishment. And they have deep roots in Iran’s working and lower-middle classes. But the government has limited their activities and prevented them from coordinating with student groups and women’s groups, and with human rights councils.


Iran also has opposition networks composed of ethnic minorities—including Kurdish, Baluchi, Ahwazi Arab, and Azerbaijani groups—that have substantial organizational capacity. Their leaders call for not only the end of clerical rule but also the recognition of minority linguistic and cultural rights, the decentralization of power, and meaningful autonomy. But these organizations are usually wary of partnering. The former fear that the latter will replace the Islamic Republic with another Persian-dominated, exclusive, and centralized government, whereas and the latter fear that the former will empower secessionist movements or invite foreign meddling along Iran’s porous and conflict-prone borders.


Opposition activists accuse one another of collaborating with the government.


The specter (and reality) of foreign interference in Iran remains a source of substantial discord. Almost every major Iranian opposition faction has accused some rival of being influenced by foreign countries—be it the Gulf monarchies, Israel, Russia, Turkey, or the United States. These suspicions are not entirely unfounded. Regional and global powers do meddle in Iranian politics, and opposition groups have courted outside support. But these claims are easily overstated, and they make coalition-building extraordinarily difficult.


There are opposition actors that have tried to bridge these divides and offer everyone some direction. Civil society and rights-based groups made up of lawyers, journalists, feminists, environmentalists, and religious minorities, for example, have worked to connect street activists with opposition figures in more elite circles. They have drafted joint manifestoes calling for political pluralism, secular governance, gender equality, the rule of law, and a peaceful, democratic transition. They have provided legal and logistical support to various opposition organizations. But these figures are often the first to be jailed, and they are typically the last to be included in opposition organizing. This exclusion is counterproductive for everyone involved. It means civil society groups cannot directly mobilize mass protests while leaving protest organizers without valuable institutional support, legal expertise, or channels for negotiation.


Then there are figures who currently belong to or once belonged to the government’s internal, mostly tolerated opposition. This cohort of hybrid insiders includes former President Hassan Rouhani, who has called for constitutional reforms and a less repressive reading of religious strictures, and former President Mohammad Khatami, who has called for fundamental reform of the current system. It also features former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi, who helped lead Iran’s 2009 Green Movement protests, and Mostafa Tajzadeh, a former adviser to Khatami who has limited residual legitimacy among disillusioned loyalists and midranking officials even though he has demanded explicitly a transition to democracy. In fact, many technocrats from Khatami’s tenure as president from 1997 to 2005 are still part of the state machinery, including the government of President Massoud Pezeshkian. But Rouhani, Khatami, Mousavi, Tajzadeh, and their peers all face a dual constraint. On the one hand, the state has severely restricted their ability to organize to prevent them from challenging the regime’s power. (Tajzadeh, for example, is currently in jail, and Mousavi has been under house arrest since 2009.) But on the other hand, younger protesters see them as compromised by their earlier participation in the system of the Islamic Republic. As a result, they cannot mobilize a broad base of Iranians against the government.


POWER STRUGGLE


The Iranian regime does have critics that it cannot easily repress: those in the diaspora. They are plentiful, and they have real power. Diaspora leaders, for example, command enormous financial resources, access to Western policymakers, and meaningful popular backing within Iran thanks to their media power. Satellite channels, YouTube programs, and social media accounts run by these figures help shape public opinion inside Iran, coordinate the country’s protests, and provide platforms for activists whom the regime would otherwise silence.


But the Iranian diaspora, much like the opposition inside Iran, is prone to infighting. Its members publicly feud in personal, conspiratorial tones; hawks, for example, routinely accuse expatriates who are opposed to attacking the country of being agents of the regime. The doves, meanwhile, often allege that hawks are warmongers. Such battles erode trust among activists and ordinary citizens inside Iran, feeding a perception that Iranian leaders in the diaspora are more interested in gaining renown than in actually taking down the government.


The monarchists provide a case in point. They are the most visible diaspora brand, given Pahlavi’s name recognition, and they feature a constellation of parties and influencers who argue that restoring the monarchy under his leadership is the best way to move on from Iran’s current system. Pahlavi’s core support historically lies among parts of Iran’s older, urban middle class, yet it has grown in recent years as the Islamic Republic’s failures have mounted. But his movement relies heavily on online backers and satellite television and has only a thin organized presence inside Iran. What is more, advocates of the crown prince have alienated other opposition figures by repeatedly attacking them. Pahlavi’s support from Israel risks reinforcing regime narratives about the opposition being foreign-backed. Analysts have expressed concern that Pahlavi might prove to be like Ahmed Chalabi, the prominent Iraqi exile who successfully campaigned for the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and promised he could lead the country—but then proved unable to shepherd Iraq into a post–Saddam Hussein future. And for ethnic minorities and many Iranian republicans, the Pahlavi name evokes fear of renewed centralization and unaccountable power. They do not want to replace the current Iranian dictatorship with a new one.


The Iranian diaspora is prone to infighting.


Other diasporic opposition groups are even more divisive. The Mujahideen-e-Khalq, a former militant organization that operates primarily in exile and is led by Maryam Rajavi, is perhaps the country’s most structured opposition force. But it is extremely controversial because of its alliance with Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s and credible allegations by former members and human rights monitors of cult-like internal discipline. It has the support of many prominent Western politicians, including the former U.S. secretary of state Mike Pompeo. Yet most Iranians view it with deep suspicion if not outright hostility.


Some diasporic activists, like their counterparts in Iran, have tried to bridge these divides. In February 2023, for example, eight Iranian exiles formed the Mahsa Charter to unite republican, monarchist, and other voices around shared principles of democracy, secular governance, gender equality, and an inclusive transition process. Its founders tried to sidestep the matter of who would lead their coalition. But April 2023, their efforts collapsed as a result of deep ideological differences and strategic disagreements.


Even if Iran’s diaspora groups could bridge their differences, they would need to unify with the country’s domestic opposition to truly affect change in the country. And that will, if anything, be a more difficult task. The diaspora, after all, is distant from Iran by definition. It is particularly removed from the daily economic struggles that Iranians have to endure and from the further chaos and deprivation Iranians would face in the event of widespread U.S. and Israeli attacks. Many activists in Iran therefore see the diaspora’s push for escalation as reckless. Calls for maximalist measures sound different when issued from Berlin or Los Angeles than they do when issued from Karaj or Kermanshah.


COME TOGETHER


To be fair, no group, inside or outside Iran, can bring about a transition by itself. To succeed, this diverse opposition ecosystem will need to form a coalition—a process that would begin with the adoption of a narrow common platform. This should be achievable. For all their differences, opponents of the Islamic Republic agree that clerical supremacy over political and public life should end, that the state must guarantee basic civil and political freedoms, that Iran’s territorial integrity needs to be protected, and that Iran should embrace a time-bound, internationally observed transition from the current regime. Opposition leaders and their followers can therefore rally around these four principles rather than arguing over whether Iran should be a monarchy or a republic, whether it should decentralize power, and what direction its foreign policy should take. Such questions are best left to a future elected constituent assembly, which could better reflect the views of all Iranians.


A common platform, of course, is just the first part of coming together. Iran’s various opposition groups must also build institutional connections to one another. To survive the state’s heavy-handed crackdowns and surveillance, internal groups should coordinate through networks that are decentralized and thus harder to stamp out. They should create joint, community organizations that provide social services and advocate around local economic and social issues, which could make these groups more popular among ordinary Iranians. The diaspora, for its part, will need to forge a functional coordination mechanism for its own members. This should not be a government in exile, but rather a forum for discussion with transparent rules, systems for settling disputes, and maybe even rotating leadership. Diasporic groups should also invest in secure communications that can help them coordinate with internal actors. But they will have to earn the trust of Iran’s internal dissidents and adopt realistic expectations. They must accept that those who pay the price inside Iran should have disproportionate influence over strategic choices.


Iran’s opposition cannot operate purely at the theoretical level. Its members will need to agree on some kind of tangible program for what happens immediately after the regime falls to avoid state collapse. But it should be nonideological and technocratic, focused on stabilizing the country’s currency, keeping basic services running, and preventing looting and violence. The opposition should have a clear timeline for elections and for holding a constitutional convention. Without such planning, fear of chaos will continue to be the regime’s strongest weapon. Many insiders who might otherwise defect will stay on to avoid civil war, cycles of revenge, and territorial fragmentation.


Each opposition group brings formidable capabilities to the table.

Finally, any transition framework must be explicitly inclusive. During the 1979 revolution, a diverse coalition of secularists, leftists, nationalists, and Islamists united to topple the monarchy. But the movement was then hijacked by an ambitious and organized clerical establishment that purged its opponents and consolidated power. A future transition led by a group that marginalizes minorities, secular activists, and religious or rival political traditions would risk replicating that cycle under a different banner.


Building a successful and inclusive movement will be extraordinarily difficult. In addition to state repression and mutual suspicion, Iran’s opposition is haunted by the country’s long, traumatic past. The 1979 revolution, the purges of the 1980s, and the crushed demonstrations of the years since have all left deep scars.


Yet there is reason to hope these groups can succeed. Each one, after all, brings formidable capabilities to the table. The country’s civil society activists, such as the imprisoned Tajzadeh and Narges Mohammadi (now a Nobel peace laureate), may not have great institutional reach, but their writings and statements provide essential practical and moral guidance. Labor leaders and student organizers have repeatedly shown that they can turn out thousands of people. Ethnic movements, especially among Iran’s Kurdish and Baluchi peoples, possess decades of mobilization experience. Local networks in cities such as Ahvaz, Mashhad, Sanandaj, and Zahedan can provide social trust that Iranians often lack. And reformists at the regime’s fringes, including some dissenting clerics and technocrats, can challenge the Islamic Republic from within and help steer any transfer of power through the turbulence. The United States, meanwhile, might be able to help by assessing the opposition’s strengths, liabilities, internal fragmentations, and organizational needs and then giving it the tools and the support needed to evolve into a coherent actor.


But whatever Washington does, these groups need to start working together, and quickly. The Islamic Republic has reached a dead end. It refuses to meet popular social demands and is incapable of fixing the country’s many economic problems. It will thus have little choice but to rely ever more heavily on fear to keep itself in power, making further protests inevitable. The question, then, is not whether Iran will have new crises. It is whether the opposition will be ready when those crises come.


Topics & Regions: Iran Politics & Society Political Development Public Opinion Security Strategy & Conflict











FP - Analysis - 6 Questions About Operation Epic Fury - The United States and Israel have set a high bar for success in their war on Iran. - The United States and Israel have set a high bar for success in their war on Iran.

 Analysis

6 Questions About Operation Epic Fury

The United States and Israel have set a high bar for success in their war on Iran.

By , a professor in Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service 
and the director of the warfare, irregular threats, and terrorism program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Men are seen from behind as they stand on the roof of a building looking toward the horizon as plumes of gray smoke rise into the partly cloudy sky over the city skyline, made up of mid-rise buildings.
Men are seen from behind as they stand on the roof of a building looking toward the horizon as plumes of gray smoke rise into the partly cloudy sky over the city skyline, made up of mid-rise buildings.
People watch as smoke rises after an explosion in Tehran on Feb. 28. AP

As the United States and Israel began to bomb Iran as part of Operation Epic Fury on Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump declared a wide range of ambitious objectives that his administration would accomplish. Trump noted that “for 47 years, the Iranian regime has chanted ‘Death to America’ and waged an unending campaign of bloodshed and mass murder, targeting the United States, our troops, and the innocent people in many, many countries.” He then condemned Iran for killing tens of thousands of its own protesting citizens and funding “terrorist militias that have soaked the earth with blood and guts.” He also argued (with far less evidence to back him) that Iran is rebuilding its nuclear program, developing long-range missiles that “could soon reach the American homeland.”

Trump promised to end all of these dangers, claiming that the United States would destroy Iran’s missile program and navy, end its support for terrorist proxies, and “ensure that Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon.” Perhaps most consequentially, and most dangerously, the president told the Iranian people, “When we are finished, take over your government. … This is the moment for action.”

By presenting the entire laundry list of U.S. grievances against Iran, Trump has set the bar very high while avoiding the most difficult tasks of a wartime leader—choosing among competing objectives, allocating resources accordingly, and pursuing these objectives through diplomacy as well as force. Given the president’s unwillingness to lay out a clear vision for what the United States seeks, how can we judge the operation short of the complete collapse of the Iranian regime and its transformation into a pro-U.S. democracy? Below are six questions to ask in determining whether Epic Fury is a success or failure.


Who will win the endurance contest?

Epic Fury is off to a dramatic start. The United States and Israel have already tried to kill Iranian leaders and hit a wide range of military assets belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as well as Iran’s missile program and navy. Yet the United States will find it difficult to sustain large-scale operations at a rapid pace. Despite the size of the U.S. buildup, it is still small compared with the forces assembled for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and seems more appropriate for a multiday bombing campaign than a long war. Before the strikes began, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned that the United States did not have enough air and missile defense munitions and systems and that a lack of full regional allied support would hinder operations.

Iran, for its part, simply has to survive. That is no small feat, as Iran will lose facilities, military assets, and senior military leaders and clerics—perhaps including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei himself. But the United States has not assembled a ground force. So if the Iranian regime loses half of its leaders and military assets, it can conceivably remain standing.


What does destruction mean?

When Trump talks about destroying Iran’s navy, missile programs, and nuclear infrastructure, it is not always clear what this means in practice. In some cases, such as Iran’s already weak navy, more ships at the bottom of the Persian Gulf is a clear indicator of success.

For other U.S. goals, making judgments is trickier. Trump, of course, had repeatedly claimed that Iran’s nuclear program was “obliterated” by U.S. and Israeli strikes in June 2025, raising the obvious question of why it needs to be attacked again. The reality is that the program consists of many elements, including stockpiles of enriched uranium, centrifuges and other equipment, and the nuclear knowledge of Iran’s scientists, which is why Israel has repeatedly targeted them. The United States and Israel already destroyed much of this in their 2025 operation, and airstrikes, by themselves, will at best lead to small advances.

Judging Iran’s support for its proxy groups, such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen, is particularly tricky. Iran sees these groups as part of its deterrent against U.S. and Israeli pressure, and Israel’s decimation of Hezbollah in 2024 was a major blow to Tehran. Iran also has a strong ideological bond with some groups, including Hezbollah but also some Shiite militias in Iraq. In extremis, Iran might agree to stop backing these groups, but its financial support in particular will be hard to track given its extensive illicit financing networks. Once pressure has ended, Iran might simply resume support if the regime does not change.


Can Iran strike back?

Iran is not completely defenseless, and it has already attacked Israel and U.S. partners in the Persian Gulf. When the United States and Israel attacked Iran last year, Tehran responded with missile and drone strikes against Israel—but only a token response against a U.S. target, telegraphing its strike to avoid escalation. U.S. bases and diplomatic facilities in the region are also likely targets by Iran or Iranian-backed groups, such as Kataib Hezbollah in Iraq, which Israel has already reportedly targeted. Iran may be cautious at first this time around, too, but the worse things get, the more likely it is to expand its target set beyond military facilities.

Many of these proxies are in a tight spot, caught between populations exhausted by war, their own fears about being targeted extensively by the United States and Israel, and their financial and military ties to Iran. Perhaps Iran’s most important partner, Hezbollah, is weak after years of conflict with Israel and not eager for another round. Some of these groups, however, may respond to Iranian calls to act, which are particularly likely if the regime feels it is near collapse.

Tehran also has operatives and networks throughout the world that might launch terrorist attacks: In the past, Iran has attacked and plotted against Israeli and Jewish facilities in Latin AmericaSoutheast Asia, and Europe—as well as in the United States. Another extreme measure for Iran would be to attack shipping in the Gulf, using naval mines or small-boat attacks to go after tankers and otherwise trying to disrupt the global oil supply.

Attacks that kill large numbers of Americans or allies, especially civilians, are risky for Iran, as are attempts to disrupt the oil supply. On the one hand, such operations allow the regime to show Iranians that it is striking back. Given lukewarm support for the war in the United States, Tehran may believe it can compel the United States to stop. On the other hand, such a strike is likely to lead, in the short term at least, to more support in the United States for the war, justifying continued military operations. Past attempts to disrupt the oil supply led to more U.S. military operations.


Can the Iranian people rise up?

Years of tyranny, corruption, economic mismanagement, and repression have made the regime unpopular among most Iranians. Polls showed weak support for the regime even before its brutal repression of protesters in January, which led its limited legitimacy to plummet further.

Trump’s call for the Iranian people to rise up wrongly assumes that overthrowing the regime would be easy after military strikes. The opposition, however, is not armed or organized, and the regime has shown, repeatedly, that it will kill its way to survival. This war is not a surprise to anyone, especially Iranian leaders, and they are probably prepared for unrest. In addition, the regime is not universally hated—it is not a one-person dictatorship—and if Khamenei and other top officials are killed, there are many more to take their places.

The result could be a bloodbath where the bad guys win. There are other instances when the United States called for people to resist their government but then stood by while the regime gunned down demonstrators in the streets, including Hungary in 1956 and Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War. Trump may not care about raising hopes and then dashing them, but this will make the Iranian people even more cynical about the United States.

Who takes over if regime change works?

For the Iranian people and for the United States, “What comes next?” is a vital question. Even if the regime falls, it is not clear who or what will take its place. Marc Lynch warns that a democratic republic is the least likely outcome should the clerical regime collapse: State fracture or, especially, a takeover by the IRGC is far more likely.

A failed state in Iran would lead to far more death in the country, refugee flows, and other problems. The recent histories of Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen are painful reminders of the horrors that civil wars unleash. An IRGC takeover would head off civil war but, in practice, would simply mean that Iran exchanged a dictator in a turban for a dictator in a military uniform. Although much would depend on any new leadership’s pragmatism, the IRGC in general sees the United States and Israel as enemies and believes Iran should support proxy groups—the very problems that Trump seeks to end.


Will the American people support the war?

The United States began this war without a clear casus belli—Trump’s speech was a long-standing litany of grievances, not an argument for an imminent threat—and there was no effort to secure congressional support. Indeed, until the operation began, the administration did not address the American people, and comments by senior leaders failed to make a clear case for war. Whether most Americans will support this war remains unclear.

Trump is already unpopular, and past operations, such as the Venezuela raid and the 2025 strikes on Iran, did little to change that. If Epic Fury appears to be succeeding, the American people may be willing to back continued strikes. Years of conflict in the region may have inured them to the costs and risks of using force. However, if Iran successfully inflicts casualties on the United States, or if over time the operations seem to be accomplishing little (or if U.S. operations kill large numbers of innocent people in errant strikes), there may be no support for continuing a fight with unclear objectives. Trump himself is notorious for his willingness to backpedal while declaring victory. Epic Fury may end with death and destruction in Iran but little change in the long term.

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverageRead more here.