Summary
This Throughline episode examines the December 2025 protests in Iran triggered by economic collapse and decades of authoritarian rule. Through interviews with experts and a firsthand account from an Iranian graduate student, the episode explores the conditions that sparked the uprising, how these protests differ from past movements, and potential outcomes including possible regime collapse.
Insights
- Iran's economic crisis stems from a combination of US sanctions, government mismanagement, and corruption within the Revolutionary Guard Corps, creating conditions where even middle-class professionals cannot afford basic necessities
- These protests represent a fundamental shift from reform-focused movements to demands for regime change, with Gen Z and youth leading demonstrations despite knowing they face lethal force
- The Revolutionary Guard Corps faces a strategic dilemma: it has lost prestige through foreign policy failures in Syria, Lebanon, and the 12-day war with Israel, while simultaneously needing to suppress domestic unrest
- Social media and internet access have enabled younger Iranians to reject the regime's Islamic narrative and embrace pre-Islamic Persian nationalism symbolized by the lion and sun flag
- The US faces a credibility problem: Trump's threats of military support without follow-through could repeat Cold War mistakes of encouraging uprisings without protection, further alienating Iranian protesters
Trends
Generational divide in authoritarian regimes: Gen Z rejection of state ideology despite regime control of security forcesEconomic sanctions creating unintended consequences: driving corruption and black market economies while concentrating wealth among regime-connected elitesNationalist symbolism replacing religious ideology: protesters adopting pre-Islamic Persian symbols as anti-regime markersRegional power vacuum: Iran's proxy forces weakened in Syria, Lebanon, and Iraq, reducing regime's ability to project powerDigital activism enabling coordination: internet shutdowns and communication blackouts indicate regime fear of organized oppositionPotential regime transition models: Venezuela-style leadership change without systemic reform as possible compromise scenarioYouth-led uprising sustainability: repeated protest cycles suggest structural economic issues will trigger future unrest regardless of current suppressionIsraeli-Iranian escalation: Israel potentially supporting ethnic minorities and fomenting civil conflict within IranSanctions relief as regime survival strategy: Islamic Republic may seek negotiated settlement with Trump administration to address economic collapse
Topics
Iran Economic Crisis and Currency CollapseIranian Protest Movements and Civil UnrestRevolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Structure and PowerUS Sanctions on Iran and Economic ImpactIran-Israel Military Conflict and Regional DynamicsGen Z Activism in Authoritarian RegimesIslamic Republic Government Structure and Supreme Leader AuthorityWomen's Rights and Hijab Enforcement in IranReza Pahlavi and Monarchist Opposition MovementIranian Diaspora and Exile PoliticsCorruption and Black Market Oil SalesInternet Shutdowns and Digital RepressionPre-Islamic Persian NationalismTrump Administration Iran PolicyRegime Collapse Indicators and Revolutionary Theory
Companies
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
Parallel military and economic enterprise controlling construction, telecommunications, banking, mining, and oil smug...
Chinese State Oil Buyers
Primary international buyer of Iranian oil due to sanctions, able to negotiate prices below global market rates
People
Ali Alfonay
Senior fellow at Arab Gulf States Institute; Iranian-born political scientist analyzing economic collapse and regime ...
Holly Daghress
Senior fellow at Washington Institute; curator of Iran newsletter 'The Iranists'; expert on Gen Z activism and protes...
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Supreme Leader of Iran for 37 years; unelected head of parallel government with final authority on domestic and forei...
Reza Pahlavi
Crown Prince in exile; son of deposed Shah; positioned as potential transitional leader by some Iranian protesters
Mahsa (Jina) Amini
Young woman whose death in police custody in 2022 sparked Women Life Freedom movement protesting hijab enforcement
Donald Trump
US President; threatened military response to Iranian crackdowns; considering sanctions relief negotiations with regime
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
Former Shah of Iran; installed by CIA in 1953; overthrown in 1979 Islamic Revolution; grandfather of current Crown Pr...
Mohammad Mosaddegh
Democratically elected Iranian Prime Minister overthrown by CIA-backed coup in 1953
Quotes
"The city felt like fire under ashes."
K (Iranian graduate student)•Early in episode
"This government, actually, they say we are from God. And if you say we are against you, we don't want to think like you. You're labeled as someone who is at war with God."
K•Mid-episode
"The Islamic Republic is incapable of attending to the economic problems of the Iranian state unless Iran manages to do something about the corruption, the rampant corruption which is making the country as such poor."
Ali Alfonay•Part 1
"I think the level of brutality they've committed and the under the communications shut down the massacre that we keep talking about. I don't think the Islamic Republic can come back from that."
Holly Daghress•Part 3
"The Iranian people have been living under a dictatorship they don't want for 47 years. And they have the same needs and wants as in people everywhere, including Americans."
Holly Daghress•Conclusion
Full Transcript
Support for NPR comes from NPR member stations and Eric and Wendy Schmidt through the Schmidt Family Foundation, working toward a healthy, resilient, secure world for all. On the web at theSchmitt.org. There was nothing like it was three years ago, you know. The people's attitude, the people's words, I could clearly sense that no one is truly satisfied anymore. The city felt like fire under ashes. Fire under ashes. This is the voice of an Iranian graduate student currently living in studying in the U.S. She asked that we refer to her as K. Back in early December, during her university's holiday break, she and her husband went back to Iran to visit family. They planned to stay a month. This was her first time back in three years. She says Iran kind of felt like a tender box when she got there. Not only because of economic problem or economic crisis, but also because of the suffocating atmosphere and the lack of civil freedoms. We will not be sharing her name because she asked to remain anonymous in order to protect her family in Iran. When I went to supermarket or hospital bank, I've seen a conversation, I've heard a conversation that people talk about Iranian currency and why it's really low and it's getting worse and what's going to happen, they didn't see any future upon them. Over the last several years, Iran's economy has been struggling. Sanctions from the U.S. and its allies, mismanagement from the government, they both played a major role in the downturn. But things got way worse in late December of 2025. When the real Iran's currency basically collapsed, one U.S. dollar became worth over one million reels. This meant the buying power of Iranians was down by nearly half since 2022. My friends are like, nurse and even though she has to work hard like long shifts with her husband, and they have to sell their golds to be able to live in even a smaller apartment in downtown, but they have to because they had no choice. Gold is something Mary couples usually receive as a gift at their weddings in Iran. It's like something you use one day to help your children or for your own retirement or to buy a house. This kind of story is very common. Many Iranians have had to resort to selling family heirlooms, working multiple jobs, and even selling their own organs just to pay for rent or food. They told me we can't see any future upon us with this economic situation. The economic pain triggered anger towards the government. And on December 28th, 2025, within days of the currency collapse, protests began in Tehran, Iran's capital. In the downtown of the Tehran, there is a big bizarre like we call Tehran Bazaar. The Tehran Bazaar is Iran's biggest market. It's an important central hub for all kinds of commerce, and the merchants who have shops there were very angry about the collapse of Iran's currency. They took to the streets and began protesting. And spread to small towns. They even reached the quiet suburbs where K was staying. People from every background like old, young kids, are neighbors, all of them, even with their kids were outside. The message was really clear. Down to the government, we don't want this government. They were calling this to homicominee. Death to hominee. Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Hamine has been in power for 37 years. Calling for his death publicly is a very dangerous thing to do in Iran. This type of things to say narrative to say in Iran, it was really like you have to pay like a high price. Can I clarify? You're saying that saying death to hominee for you growing up was seen as something you couldn't do because you could be killed for it. Yeah, exactly. This government, actually, they say we are from God. And if you say we are against you, we don't want to think like you. You're labeled as someone who is at war with God. And they accuse you of acting against national security and then execute you. I couldn't even myself believe that people shouting and calling this, even myself, even me and my family, we were shouting this in a house rules and even our neighbors. We were like you're afraid. But it would be a mistake to see this level of anger and fearlessness from protesters as only a response to economic issues. Iran is a theocracy. There is no separation of mosque and state. Every detail of one's life is subject to religious law and decree. This caused the massive protests in 2022 when Mahsa, Gina Amini, a young woman died in police custody after being arrested for allegedly not following Islamic laws around modest clothing or hijab. There was like really a police dedicated to hijab that if you don't wear good clothes or if you don't wear a hijab, they will follow you in the street. I happened to me. I was with my father and one of the police came to me and they warned me, cover your hair. And this is not appropriate clothes that you wear here. My father, he said, I'm with her. I'm her father. You're not allowed to tell her anything. And what are you doing? And it was like the argue between my father and the police and they were like, it's not of your business. Your daughter has to wear a hijab and if you argue more than this, I will arrest most of you. Can you imagine? I was terrified. So this fear is everywhere. It's chasing you. The latest round of protests went on for days and by early January, the security forces of the government began cracking down hard. They started to suppress and kill people. I've seen them with my own eyes, riot police and special forces. They were armed to the peace, all of the body covered. They were carrying a military grade weapons. They were stopping cars on the roads and setting up checkpoints. They were scary. Did you have any points to hear? Did you all hear gunfire? I've heard that. I've heard some gunshotting and it was really scary. K and her husband were set to come back to the US on January 10th, but her flight was cancelled. In response to the protests, the Iranian government cut off the internet and blocked outgoing calls for the entire country. Plains were grounded too. We were both suffice, we were confused what's going to happen if they can't find a flight what's going to happen to our life, both suffice. After two days of going back and forth to the airport, they were finally able to secure a ticket. They made it out of Iran. They are back in the US now, carrying on with their lives, but always with an eye towards what's happening in their homeland. We are 90 million people that we are fighting for our life and the streets and I, myself and the Iranian, it is a later responsibility to be their voice, just because of my sisters and all my sisters around their country. Since the protests started in the last days of 2025, the Iranian government has used the security forces to stop the unrest. The violence has worked. The streets of Iran are mostly quiet, but the cost paid by demonstrators lingers. The Iranian government says at least 5,000 people have been killed since the protests started. US-based human rights activist news agency reports more than 25,000 people have been arrested. MPR has not been able to independently confirm these numbers. How did this happen? On January 14th, I called up two experts on modern Iran, Ali Al-Fone and Ali Daghres, to ask them three central questions. What were the conditions that brought about the current uprising in Iran? How are these protests different from past ones? And how should the United States and its allies respond? We try to answer those questions on this episode of Thurline from NPR. This is Joe from Portland, Oregon, and you're listening to Thurline on NPR. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart, get Wise. Download the Wise app today or visit Wise.com, TZNC's apply. Part 1. Origins To start this episode, we need to go over how this current Iranian government, the Islamic Republic, came to power. Okay, so before 1979, Iran was a monarchy ruled by a US backshaw or king, named Muhammad Reza Pahlavi. He was installed by the US in 1953 after a CIA back coup against the democratically elected government of Muhammad Mossat. He stayed in power until 1979 when he was overthrown after a massive protest movement erupted against his autocratic rule. Iran's Muslim clerics emerged as the ruling force in the country, and Iran became a theocratic republic. In other words, it is ruled by Islamic law or Sharia, but it also has a president, legislature, and Supreme Court. On paper, it doesn't look much different for many other countries. But there is also a parallel government in Iran, led by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Hamine. He is unelected and has the final word on everything in domestic and foreign policy. There's also a parallel security force called the Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC. This began as a small paramilitary force, but has ballooned into a massive military, with its own army, navy, and air forces, which answer to the Supreme Leader. The Revolutionary guards are the sword that enforces the regime's rule. But they've also expanded to become one of the largest players in Iran's economy, controlling significant parts of the construction, telecommunications, banking, mining, and import export industries. Since 1999, the Islamic Republic has seen unrest from its population regularly, a repeating cycle of protest and repression. But each of these cycles has been unique. In 1999, it was a student-led protest movement focused on freedom of expression. In 2009's Green Revolution, the protest happened in response to what was perceived to be a stolen election. There was smaller scale protests in the years after, until the next major one in 2022. The Women Life Freedom Movement started after Masa Gina Amini died in the hands of authorities after she was arrested for allegedly not observing Islamic dress codes. Fast forward to today's protests, sparked by economic crisis. For years, Iran has been under sanctions by the U.S. and its allies on its two biggest exports, oil, and gas. It has some of the largest reserves of each in the world. Iran also has a solid manufacturing base. It's one of the biggest exporters of agricultural products in Asia. On paper, it should be a wealthy country. Yet, according to a report from the Iranian government, 30 percent of Iranians live in extreme poverty. This is Ali Alfonay. He's a senior fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, DC. This impure means that a regular school teacher is no longer even capable of purchasing a new pair of shoes once a year. For a relatively long time now, it has been very difficult to purchase meat for the kids. People who can't afford to purchase meat, they are too ashamed of, for example, having a barbecue in their backyard because they do not know how well or poorly the neighbor is doing and the smell of food would be a problem for the kids of the neighbor. So this is the kind of disaster that Iran has been in the class. Then average school teacher, the fireman, the nurse, even doctors, the professional middle class has been experiencing for the past year. Now it is almost difficult. It really truly is hard to distinguish between the middle class and the poor. There is no longer any difference. You might remember Ali Alfonay from our episode called Soleimani's Iran. He is an Iranian-born political scientist and an expert on the country's leadership. Ali says that these economic problems have been exacerbated by the fact that the pain is not being felt by everyone. Iran's middle class and also the poor who can afford to have a mobile phone and I have access to the internet, they can watch YouTube channels. They see on TikTok the rich kids of Tehran who can afford ten dollar cup of coffee at the luxury shopping malls in northern Tehran. And even worse on TikTok, they can see the sun of a former ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Venezuela, the light of a Cuban cigar with a hundred dollar bill. Now this creates resentment, this creates anger and frustration and this makes people just go to the street and demand asking of a regime which really is caring for its own but is not caring for the large middle class and the poor. So would you say that the response from the regime to this economic crisis has been insufficient? This Islamic Republic is incapable of attending to the economic problems of the Iranian state unless Iran manages to do something about the corruption, the rampant corruption which is making the country as such poor and poor but a very small part of Iranians who are engaged in sanctioned busting and engaged in smuggling Iran's oil and selling it in the black market internationally but nevertheless managed to fill their pockets unless Iran attends the issue of corruption at home and also reaches an agreement with the US, the Islamic Republic is not capable of solving Iran's economic problems. One question that the American audience might ask is what impact the tightening sanctions have had on this economic crisis for Iran? These are American sanctions on Iranian oil and other products I'm referring to. The Islamic Republic's main export has been oil and to some extent smaller stand gas and this money is not reaching the Iranian state as much as before due to several reasons. One of them is the US sanctions which has made it very difficult for foreign buyers of Iran's oil to purchase oil simply because there are no banking links between Iranian banks and the international banking system. So even if there is a buyer, an international buyer, they cannot transfer the money through international banking system. The transfer either needs to take place through Chinese or Russian banks and then connect to Iran. This has left only one serious buyer in the international market for Iran's oil and that's China. They can negotiate the price of Iranian oil even lower than it is in the global oil markets. What makes things even worse, you have the smugglers. A new class of Iranian merchants usually connected with the revolutionary guard who have their own shipping companies and they are transferring and selling Iran's oil to the market to the Chinese buyers and they pocket huge sums of money in commission for their services. Corruption, mismanagement, sanctions, they've made Iran virtually unlivable for most of its population. But there is another major element in these protests we wanted to understand. Social issues. After the woman life freedom protests in 2022, the Islamic Republic seemed to loosen restrictions on women's clothing. Yet that did very little to quell the resentment and anger on the streets. The women's clothing is not the only country for a while. But at the same time, no longer enforcing the hijab legislation also taught the Iranians a lesson and it is that if you fight for a specific cause, the regime will make a retreat from its previous positions. They say that the government is not listening to our voice when we talk with them normally so we have to take our protest to the streets. This is because of the woman life freedom movement that Iranians have recognized that they need to take matters into their own hands and this is just a continuation of that pushing back against authority. This is Holly Daghress. I'm a senior fellow at the Washington Institute. I am also the curator of the popular newsletter on all things Iran, the Iranists on Substock. I'm Iranian-American and I spent my formative years in Iran. Holly went to high school in Tehran, Iran's capital and witnessed first hand how much the desire of young people for more social freedom has fueled uprisings in the country. I would say arguably that it was Iranian Gen Z that started this trend with the 2022 woman life freedom uprising. Everybody talks about this being a girl and women led movement, but I would say it's a Gen Z one. And what you're seeing play out in Iran since December 28th was I would argue it was youth led. And a lot of the videos coming out of the country seem to suggest that these are young people and we've had at least over a dozen under the age of 18 that have been killed by security forces. It's been extraordinary watching over and over again Iranians risking their lives knowing for well they'll be met with bullets and batons and that's what we're seeing play out in the past few weeks. Coming up, how the current protests in Iran are different from ones in the past. You're listening to Thurlain from NPR. So him and I'm calling from London United Kingdom. You're listening to Thurlain from NPR. Thank you so much for such a brilliant show and for helping me to understand the world that we're currently in have a day. Thank you so much. Keep up the good work. Bye. Part Two. New Resistance. For a very long time, the words Iran and protests have been paired regularly in the news. Iran has been here before but there are some key differences this time around. Many of the past protests have focused on reforming the country, bringing about incremental changes on voting, freedom of expression, women's rights. But this time around protesters appear to be demanding the end of the Islamic Republic entirely. The number of people going to the streets does not even amount to 5% of Iran's total population but the people who go to the streets they truly mean what they are saying and the 5% opposing the regime they do want to bring down the regime. But unfortunately for them, the regime is better armed and is better organized. The opposition on the other hand has no effectively the she has no effective organization has no real funding and has no unifying vision for Iran after the collapse of the Islamic Republic. I think it's important to talk a little bit about the former Crown Prince Razapahlavi's role in these protests. Razapahlavi is the son of Mohammad Razapahlavi, the Iranian Shah or King who is deposed in the 1979 revolution that brought the Islamic Republic into power. For most of the last 47 years, Razapahlavi has been living in exile in the US. I remember Iranians used to be like Saman Shah at the time of the Shah when they wanted to talk about when things were better and that I think that nostalgia has only grown because of the access to information. There's documentaries about pre-revolutionary Iran. There's also all these nice pictures and photos that go viral and now with AI. There's also these like AI versions of what they're seeing. That's why you've also been seeing these, I would say, pro-Pahlavi chance. You've heard this is the last battle, Pahlavi will return. Referring to the Crown Prince and long lived the Shah. Javed Shah. And then Razapahlavi's Shah, Razapahlavi's Shah, may your soul be blessed referring to his grandfather, the founder of the dynasty. And there's a real sense at least among some Iranians that he should be a transitional leader or that he is just a symbol of the anti-thesis of the Islamic Republic. This is one of the many messages Razapahlavi has directed towards the Iranian people in the last few weeks. Dear people of Iran, my brave compatriots, you have over the last two weeks shaking the Islamic Republic at its foundations. He made a call and said that Iranians, regardless of your political chance that you want to use, you should be out on the rooftops or in the streets making those chance. And I saw activists and celebrities in Iran endorse this call for change in Iran that he pushed for it. Razapahlavi has said he wants to be a transitional leader of the Islamic Republic falls, helping the country towards a referendum on what the future government should look like. He's also cozyed up to the Islamic Republic's biggest enemies like Israel and the United States. With all of that, Ali Al-Fone is not convinced that Razapahlavi can actually deliver on his promises. I'm still not seeing Mr Razapahlavi as an effective leader of the revolution, but I do see him as a symbolic figurehead. And I also do believe that many Iranians, when looking at him, they think of an almost mythical era when there was no air pollution in Tehran. The grocery was inexpensive and taxi drivers were really polite. That nostalgia is something that endures Mr Razapahlavi to many, many Iranians. But is he an effective leader of the revolution? I'm not entirely sure. Perhaps he will emerge as a leader in the coming years. There's something that I've noticed about these protests that seem to be different from the ones in the past. And it's centered around sort of what we can tell at least from the symbolism. And one is the flag that many people are flying. Can you talk about what the lion and sun flag is basically and how it differs from Iran's official flag and what that means? I know that some associate the lion and sun flag with the monarchy, but it's actually a flag that's been around for a very long time. There's been various, there's been different variations of it throughout history. The sun and lion is a symbol that's been around since ancient Persia. It's a symbol that represents a couple of key concepts that have been important to Iranian people throughout its history. The lion represents strength, kinship, protection, basically a stand-in for great heroes. The sun symbolizes light, life, wisdom, and divinity representing God. It was used on the Iranian national flag for generations. And it was only after the 79 revolution was the lion and sun replaced with an Allah, which is God in it. But a big picture why it's being utilized, it's for several reasons, it's because it runs counter to the Islamic Republic. It's seen as a symbol of patriotism. I think the clerical establishment has recognized it. They've dabbled with nationalism here and there. It really surprised me how hard they leaned into the Shahnauma or the Book of Kings, which is the epic of the Iranian people written by the poet Faradouc. That's a change, right? To me it shows that there's this underlying deep desire for a nationalistic pre-Islamic cultural identity to re-emerge in Iran. I think what happened was that they realized that Iranians weren't going to take the Islamic version of events. They'd shoved it down their throat for so long that they had thrown it up and they weren't going to take it anymore. And so the regime has spent time and energy for years trying to invest in this pre-Islamic identity to kind of bring the people back on their side, tapping into nationalism, tapping into ancient Persian mythology, and as it's clear from these anti-regime protests, it didn't work. The regime's response to these protests, like they have in the past, has been extremely violent. The numbers we receive even on the conservative side are shocking. If you could describe their strategy in these response traditionally, like why they respond in this way, what are they thinking? Their logic is that now we are facing the regime is facing, not just peaceful protesters, but also an armed opposition and possibly an ethnic armed insurgency. Kurdish armed groups based in Iraq have said that they are conducting operations to protect protesters in Iran, where there is also a Kurdish minority. Therefore, the regime can take liberties and engage in excessive response against the protests. That is how they legitimize extreme use of force, how this type of things, how can a regime lielit this kind of history that is again up to the leaders of the Islamic Republic and it is a tragedy unfolding in front of us, truly, truly. I have only one word for it, tragedy. There's another element that makes these protests different. The fact that the Islamic Republic has suffered devastating losses in its foreign policy during the last few years, for decades the Revolutionary Guard or IRGC have carefully built proxy military forces in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen. These military forces were created to project the Islamic Republic's power in the Middle East, but over the last few years Iran's proxy forces have fallen in Lebanon and Syria, dealing them a great blow. On top of all that, in 2025, the United States and Israel attacked Iran's nuclear and missile production facilities and Israel assassinated many of its leaders. This conflict was dubbed the 12-day war by President Trump. The Revolutionary Guard has lost prestige due to its continued debauchles in the region. First we saw Israel's near destruction of Lebanese Hasbawah in 2024. Then we saw the collapse of the Assad regime and of course there was the 12-day war with the capitation of half of the IRGC's leadership. But nevertheless, due to its decentralized structure and organization, the IRGC managed to continue its operations. It is capable of suppressing the protesters. I mean, your description makes it sound like the IRGC's kind of backed into a corner more or less. What options do they have at this point? The Stomker Republic needs an economic solution and the economic solution for Iran's Ilzken can be found in Washington, in other words, what the Stomker Republic needs is an agreement with President Trump. President Trump has, on the other hand, at times indicated that he would be open to a Venezuela-style agreement with the Stomker Republic. What happened in Venezuela? In Venezuela there was a change of leadership but not necessarily a change of the regime. The same, I believe, could be applied to the Stomker Republic. Who knows what happened to Aitoli Hommani, who is currently 86 years old? He may pass away, perhaps under mysterious circumstances. And the leadership of the Stomker Republic could perhaps make an agreement with President Trump. There is no need for them to tie their own destinies to the destiny of Aitoli Hommani. Why should they not survive if the Venezuela regime can serve? Okay, but are you saying that Aitoli Hommani, the Supreme Leader, could be betrayed by the revolutionary guard who was supposed to take orders from him? I think for a lot of us who've been watching Iran for a long time, that's almost unthinkable. Roman emperors were at time kept captive by their own Praetorian Guard. Ottoman sultans at times were kept captive and were hostages in the hands of their Yenisali Guard. Nowadays, it is the revolutionary guard, which at times pursues its own interests. It is an enterprise of more than 150,000 active U.T. soldiers and officers. It is an economic enterprise with billion dollars worth of investments inside of Iran. And it is a cultural entity. It is a political party. It is so many things. And all of these bureaucracies, they would want to survive and they are not interested in tying their own destinies to the destiny of an Aitoli Hommani. They think about the future, not about the past. One of the confusing elements for Americans and non-Iranians or people outside of Iran is that we're hearing so much about Gen Z and about how much of the country is turning away from the vision of the Islamic Republic. But at the same time, someone is doing the shooting and the security forces. Who is actually the ones taking up the guns and shooting these protesters despite the fact that the regime has essentially more or less failed the entire country regardless of their ideological beliefs, economics affect everyone. So where are they finding this base of support? I think that's a very important question. You have to remember there's still a 30% rule. 30% rule of thumb is that an authority in regime can survive. That was the New Yorker's Robin Wright that said that. And I think there's something to it. And so that's probably a safe number to say how much regime supports left of this country. That's significant though. It is and it isn't because yes, it's enough to send to hand a gun over to someone and shoot protesters. But it beats it's very it's dwindling. It's dwindling time after time, year after year. And you know, the more Iranian see and learn the more they know, this actually played out in this movie that was nominated last year at the Oscars to the seat of the sacred fig. This movie was basically the microcosm of Iranian society. It was this conservative family, but these genzi young siblings that are pushing back against the parents and their brainwashing. And it was very much like a symbol of the fight between the youth and the clerical establishment. And I think that thanks to social media and the internet and satellite dishes, young people are increasingly seeing and peeling away from maybe the conservative household or pro-regime household they live in. It doesn't mean that everybody feels that way. I mean, there's always going to be those die hard believers. But I think that's what brought us to this moment that that number so small today. Coming up, how will the US respond to the protests? And where does Iran go from here? Hi, this is Justin Whitlow from Western North Carolina. And you are listening to Three Line. I want to say that the show is an absolutely wonderful show. I appreciate your deep dive into really interesting stories and the work that you do. Thank you so much. Part three. Fire under ashes. Since the taping of these interviews on January 14th, 2026, the protests in Iran have mostly been ended by the Islamic Republic. The death toll is in the thousands and continuing to rise. President Donald Trump has expressed support for the Iranian protesters and has threatened the Iranian government. On January 9th, he warned the Islamic Republic to not kill demonstrators, saying, I tell the Iranian leaders, you better not start shooting because we'll start shooting too. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Hamine responded by calling President Trump a criminal. And the US military has sent an aircraft carrier to the Middle East, bringing up more questions about how the US intends to engage. Military action is probably not the first priority of President Trump. But should he engage in such an endeavor, his options will also be relatively limited because he presumably would not want to kill the protesters. He only wants to kill and neutralize or weaken the revolutionary god. Perhaps by attacking their bases, but I'm sure that the revolutionary god will also have its countermeasures to protect itself. I'm reminded of 2009 in that President Obama made some hints or encouragement to the Iranian protesters then and then ended up with a nuclear deal. President Trump has made even more severe threats. If he doesn't fulfill those threats, what might that do to the future of protest movement? In the 1950s and 60s, whenever there were popular operasings against communist dictatorships in Hungary, in Czechoslovakia and Poland, ready for Europe would send and transmit messages to the people saying that the US government was supporting them. So these people took arms and they fought against the Soviet occupation army and they lost because there was no US intervention to protect them. I am afraid that by sending messages and by encouraging the protesters, but not necessarily using military means to protect those protesters, President Trump is committing the same mistake as his predecessors during the Cold War. And again, these two will make Iranans even more cynical about the future. Yeah. Okay, so we've covered the US. Let's switch gears for a second and talk about Israel. Israel and Iran's conflict is ongoing and it's really ratcheted up since October 7th for obvious reasons. We've covered on this show. Would you say that this is an opening of a new chapter where Israel is more on the offensive vis-a-vis Iran and within Iran and what does that spell for the future of this protest? The Islamic Republic has been meddling in the internal affairs of Israel and has also tried to mobilize Israel's neighbors against it. Israel is not doing exactly the same thing with Iran. Trying to steer the ethnic minorities in the petty interference against the central government in Iran, so it's a tit for tit. But unfortunately for Iran, Israel is this almost impenetrable fortress and Iran is not. The borders are wide open. The government of Israel fundamentally believes it is capable of overthrowing the government in Iran, but they perhaps also believe it is possible to ferment a civil war in Iran and partition of Iran may be one of the objectives of some Israeli planners. And should the opposition win? Should the Islamic Republic collapse and let's say, Mr. Razapal, let me take over power in Iran, I'm actually not sure that it would satisfy the government of Israel. We have seen that the government of Israel was not happy with Mr. Shahra taking power in Syria despite Mr. Shahra's best efforts to normalize relations with Israel and Israel is still continuing to undermine Syria. So I'm not saying why Israel should treat Iran in a kind of way that it has treated Syria. We're on here January 14th taping this. The regime has obviously used extreme violence to try to put this protest on as they have and pass protest cycles. Is there anything different about this set of protests you're seeing right now that will lead you believe that we might see a different outcome because in the past it's been protest, violence and of protest. Wait a few more years and another protest will start. Is there anything different you're seeing here? I mean, I think the level of brutality they've committed and the under the communications shut down the massacre that we keep talking about. I don't think the Islamic Republic can come back from that. And it's not just me saying it. We've just before the massacre happened, we had Carnegie's Kareem Sadgeh-Poor and Jack Goldstone and expert on revolutions and uprightings co-author peace in the Atlantic. And they said that this winter for the first time since 1979, the Islamic Republic had checked all boxes for collapse. I think it really tells you the direction of where things are going. And after the massacre, they've they've crossed their line that I don't think any Iranian could see past anymore. As of January 14th, I, Ali Al-Fanad, believe that the Islamic Republic manages to contain and effectively suppress protests for a time. But then these protests will flare up again because Iran's economic pose remain unresolved. And therefore, the Islamic Republic has to reach an agreement with President Trump and receive sanction relief. So I do believe that this regime it's demise and collapse is neither imminent nor inevitable. The regime will fight for its survival. And one of those ways is a negotiated solution with President Trump. People, you know, I make this assumption, but how much do you think this is about democracy versus just getting better of the regime? Are those things too, like hand in hand? Well, I get the sense that this is for a call for a transition. And transition, you have to, in order to have a transition, arguably you should have free and fair elections. The Iranians could decide they want a monarchy tomorrow, but that needs to be decided in an election. So it's, yeah, I mean, I guess democracy is one word to use, but choice seems like the other. To it. That they have not had one up to now. Absolutely not. And I think this is when you say you don't want the regime. It means you want something positive. What's the opposite of the Islamic Republic? I would think of an authoritarian regime. I would think it's democracy. But again, these things will be decided in a free and fair elections in a free Iran. And that's what we should be aspiring for a free Iran. What is the most important thing for the American audience to know about what's happening in Iran right now? I would say that the Iranian people have been living under a dictatorship they don't want for 47 years. And they have the same needs and wants as in people everywhere, including Americans. And they are probably the most pro-American in the Middle East. And we should be paying attention to them because we are a country that believes in freedom and democracy. And that's exactly what Iranians are aspiring to. That's it for this week's show. I'm Rondab D'dfattah. I'm Ramteen Arablui. And you've been listening to Thru Line from NPR. This episode was produced by me and me and Lauren Swoo. Julie Kayne. Anya Steinberg. Kasey Meiner. Gristina Kim. Devon Kadiama. Irene Naguchi. Kiyana Mochatem. Thomas Koltrain. Fact checking was done by Andrea Lopez Cruzado. Also, thank you to Johannes Dergi, Beth Donovan, Tommy Evans, Aurezou Resvani, Tony Kavin and James Hider. This episode was mixed by Jimmy Keely. Music for this episode was composed by Ramteen. And finally, if you have an idea or like something you heard on the show, please write us at Thru Line at mpr.org and make sure to rate us and leave us a comment on Apple or Spotify. It helps other people find this show. Thanks for listening. This message comes from Wise, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple tabs. Be smart, get Wise. Download the Wise app today or visit Wise.com. TZNC's apply.