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Iran on the Brink as Day Six of Protests Shakes Regime Stability

Iran has entered its sixth consecutive day of nationwide unrest, as what began as economic protests over the collapse of the rial has evolved into a full-scale political uprising now shaking the foundations of the Islamic Republic. Demonstrations have spread to at least 17 provinces and more than 30 cities, with protesters openly challenging Supreme…

Iran has entered its sixth consecutive day of nationwide unrest, as what began as economic protests over the collapse of the rial has evolved into a full-scale political uprising now shaking the foundations of the Islamic Republic. Demonstrations have spread to at least 17 provinces and more than 30 cities, with protesters openly challenging Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, while the regime responds with live fire, mass arrests, and internet blackouts. At least eight civilians are now confirmed dead, with dozens more detained.

Currency Collapse Ignites the Uprising

The current crisis erupted after Iran’s currency plunged to 1.42 million rials per U.S. dollar, a stunning 56% collapse in just six months, driving inflation above 40% and sending food prices soaring by more than 70% year-over-year. Shopkeepers in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar launched the first strikes, quickly joined by students, workers, and merchants nationwide.

A Tehran taxi driver told Al Jazeera, “Dairy prices are six times higher this year. Some goods are ten times higher.

Nationwide Protests Reach Regime Heartlands

By New Year’s Eve, protests had spread across Tehran, Shiraz, Mashhad, Kermanshah, Marvdasht, Arak, Azna, Kouhdasht, Lordegan, Qom, and Khuzestan. In Lordegan, state-linked Fars News acknowledged fatalities after security forces confronted crowds attacking government offices, banks, and religious centers. Independent rights groups report live ammunition was used in multiple cities.

Perhaps most striking: Qom, the ideological center of Iran’s clerical power, saw crowds chanting “The cleric must go.”

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Structural Crisis Exposed

This wave of unrest differs from previous cycles. Analysts describe a convergence of three systemic failures:

  • Economic collapse (currency freefall, sanctions, inflation)
  • Legitimacy erosion (open rejection of clerical authority, symbolic acts such as the toppling of former president Ebrahim Raisi’s statue)
  • Governance breakdown (conflicting responses between President Masoud Pezeshkian and the Revolutionary Guard)

The involvement of bazaar merchants, long a pillar of regime stability, signals a dangerous rupture in the regime’s core support base.

Regime Struggles to Contain Escalation

Pezeshkian has attempted damage control by replacing the central bank governor and pledging anti-corruption reforms, while simultaneously defending crackdowns. The IRGC and Basij continue heavy repression, with at least 44 arrests confirmed and communications networks severely restricted.

Despite these efforts, protests continue to expand geographically, weakening the regime’s ability to isolate unrest.

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Prophetic Context

Scripture warns of the collapse of oppressive powers:

“Woe to him who builds a city with bloodshed… the peoples toil for fire.”Habakkuk 2:12–13 (NASB 1995)
“For the Lord of hosts will have a day of reckoning against the proud and lofty.”Isaiah 2:12

Iran’s unraveling reflects a nation under judgment, where corruption, tyranny, and deception can no longer sustain the system.

Strategic Implications

Iran’s internal fracture carries enormous global consequences: destabilizing Middle East power balances, weakening Tehran’s proxy network (Hezbollah, Hamas, Houthis), and placing extraordinary pressure on energy markets and regional security. The regime now faces a decision between escalating repression or risking irreversible political rupture.

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Conclusion

The events of late 2025 are no longer episodic unrest. Iran has entered a phase of systemic crisis, where economic collapse, ideological failure, and political exhaustion collide. The streets are no longer merely protesting prices — they are rejecting the system itself.

History suggests such moments rarely reverse.


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