Foreign Affairs
Related: About this forumU.S. intelligence says Iran's regime is consolidating power
Despite more than two weeks of relentless airstrikes, U.S. intelligence assessments say, Irans regime likely will remain in place for now, weakened but more hard-line, with the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps security forces exerting greater control.
The United States and Israel have significantly degraded Irans missile capability and navy, removed the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and wiped out scores of top military and intelligence leaders. But the wars costs are mounting at least $12 billion so far and 13 U.S. troops killed. Irans viselike grip on the Strait of Hormuz has slowed shipping traffic to a trickle, creating a historic oil disruption.
Western officials and analysts who study Iran said they see little near-term prospect of a regime change end to the 47-year-old Islamic republic or the rise of a more democratic government. The latter is a goal cited by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and sometimes by President Donald Trump, who has said hell know the war is over when I feel it in my bones.
U.S. intelligence assessments issued since the war began predict Irans regime will remain intact and possibly even emboldened, believing it stood up to Trump and survived, according to two people familiar with the assessments, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the issues sensitivity. U.S. Arab allies in the Persian Gulf, meanwhile, are angered and alarmed at being the targets of retaliatory barrages of Iranian ballistic missiles and drones.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/16/iran-regime-intelligence-irgc-war/
BootinUp
(51,234 posts)littlemissmartypants
(33,025 posts)I sure hope nobody decides to take a blunt object to those bones.
RockRaven
(19,228 posts)and your ignorant son in law, and an incompetent toady?
(that is Netanyahu, Kushner, and Witkoff respectively)
"Nobody could have seem this development coming!"
Nobody except everyone who actually studies that country professionally.
stopdiggin
(15,374 posts)was smoking the really good stuff - in quantities.
A hardening of position - and corresponding solidification of power - were the absolutely predictable ...
And - any marginally credible analyst or middle-east observer would have told you that in advance. Had anybody bothered to listen. Yes, there are lots of people unhappy with the Iran government - today, yesterday, even last year. But ... Bombing the crap out of them doesn't provide any impetus ... And most probably sets back any potential internal movement - by years if not decades.