Iranians Are Waiting for the Regime to Fall
Many Iranians are expressing relief about the bombings – as long as they bring regime change.

Mahtab Qolizadeh's avatar

 Contrary to earlier expectations, the military and political power structure of the Islamic Republic has managed to hold together after two weeks of war. The regime has succeeded in maintaining its repression of the populace even as it has weathered constant bombardment.

Even though the Islamic Republic lost its supreme leader on the first day of attacks by the United States and Israel, it has managed to influence global oil prices by closing the Strait of Hormuz. It has chosen a new leader, launched missiles and drones at Israel and countries in the Gulf, and maintained domestic supply chains for fuel and essential goods. It has also managed to prevent large-scale public demonstrations.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Basij militias quickly established extensive checkpoints and constant patrols. They make a point of prominently displaying their weapons. Riding heavy motorcycles, they make loud noise intended to intimidate the public. Officials and commanders of the Revolutionary Guards appear on state television and explicitly threaten citizens, warning that they will face severe consequences if they take to the streets.

In the very first hours after the attacks began, the authorities pushed the internet to the brink of total shutdown. According to NetBlocks, only about one percent of Iran’s population currently has access to the internet. Government officials have effectively implemented a form of domestic hostage-taking by severing people’s connections with the outside world – and with each another.

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The reaction of a significant portion of people inside Iran, however, has been even more surprising than the resilience of the regime. Many Iranians are expressing satisfaction – even relief – about the bombings. Despite the problems with connectivity, this reporter has managed to establish contact with at least sixty different citizens, and all of them – both those who fear the bombings and those who do not – said they see military intervention as the only way for the country to rid itself of the Islamic Republic.

Numerous independent accounts from Tehran suggest that more residents have decided to shelter in place rather than fleeing to presumably safer locations, as many of them did during the twelve-day war last year. Through experience, Iranians have learned that military sites, rather than civilian buildings, are the main targets of the strikes. Many of those who have stayed home told me that are waiting for a public call from Reza Pahlavi, the son of the former Shah, to take to the streets for a final round of protests aimed at overthrowing the Islamic Republic.

Mohammad-Hossein, a fifty-year-old computer engineer living in western Tehran, said in a voice message: “We have stayed in Tehran and rarely leave the house except for essential shopping. The only thing we are waiting for is the moment when the Crown Prince [Pahlavi] calls on people to protest so that we can go into the streets.” He said that people are afraid of the government’s threats against the populace. “And you may not believe this, but the sound of the bombs is not frightening to us.

Seeing the Islamic Republic’s forces in the streets every day is far more frightening than the bombs.”

“The people want the regime to surrender”

Tahmineh is a twenty-year-old woman. In a voice message, she says: “I believe this war is entirely moral. We are paying the price of freedom. No country in the world has gained freedom cheaply. We will pay that price as well, and afterwards we will build a country better than what we have now, because we know that freedom gives us the chance to grow.”

She draws a comparison between the casualties incurred during the current conflict and the number of protesters killed by the government in January’s mass demonstrations. “Right now just over a thousand people have been killed, most of them military personnel, representatives of the apparatus of repression. In contrast, at least 32,000 citizens were killed during the protests. They had no weapons. There was no violence. They simply went into the streets to chant slogans.”

Tahmineh adds: “The people want the Islamic Republic to surrender.”

Fear of the war ending without regime change

“For us, the sound of fighter jets is frightening, but when the sky falls silent, it is even more frightening.” This is what Sareh, a specialist physician, told me. According to her:

“If the United States and Israel end this war without regime change, it would be a total defeat for us. We have already lost our past. Our youth has been spent in war and protest. And if the mullahs remain, poverty and repression will be our future.”

Other citizens have repeated that point: They do not want the United States to leave Iran without regime change.

With each passing day of the war, this question is becoming more urgent among citizens. The twelve-day war with Israel taught Iranians that the United States and Israel do not deliberately target civilians. But it also taught them something else: That these countries might leave Iran abruptly, abandoning them.

During the previous twelve-day war, just when Iranian citizens hoped that Israel’s next target might be Ali Khamenei, Iran’s dictator, a ceasefire was suddenly declared. That episode has now become an obsessive fear for many Iranians: What if they abandon us again?

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Internet in Iran: A luxury commodity

These days, open internet access and an unfiltered connection to the global network have effectively become a luxury commodity in Iran. New forms of business have emerged, and many Telegram and WhatsApp channels have begun selling configs, VPNs, and proxies. People are willing to pay exorbitant sums for just a few hours of internet access in order to read the news. Many of these offers, however, may be fraudulent. Numerous citizens have told me that they paid large sums for VPNs only to discover they had been scammed.

At the same time, the price of circumvention tools has risen sharply. A new type of service known as a “Starlink VPN” has appeared. I was able to contact one of the vendors offering this product. He claimed that his company has its own Starlink dish that can offer associated VPN services. But another IT specialist in Tehran told me that this is not true. Even though customers are paying huge sums for access to the global internet (sometimes as much as one-third of a worker’s minimum wage), in reality they are simply being routed to domestic data centers that have their own connections to the outside world.

The absent father and son

In Shiite belief, the Twelfth Imam disappears from view and will return at the end of time alongside his followers. This is a deeply held religious belief among conservative Shiites. Now, the Islamic Republic appears to have introduced an absent figure as its third supreme leader.

Mojtaba Khamenei, a figure largely unseen in public, is widely believed to have been with his father, Ali Khamenei, during the initial strike. According to some rumors, he is now being kept in a coma in a hospital in Tehran. Iran’s state television has claimed that he was wounded in the attack. Persian-language social media has been flooded with jokes about Mojtaba Khamenei’s absence. Others speculate that the Islamic Republic’s propaganda apparatus is deliberately keeping him out of sight so that he can later be suddenly introduced and presented as a charismatic leader.

Mojtaba Khamenei has not yet appeared in public, and his father, Ali Khamenei, has still not been buried. Both remain absent and unseen.


The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Middle East Broadcasting Networks.

Mahtab Qolizadeh

Mahtab Qolizadeh is an Iranian journalist in exile currently working for Iran International and various western publications. She was arrested by the Iranian government in 2021.


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