Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal
🇮🇷 What happens to Iran after the war ends?
Most likely on day one after the guns go quiet, Tehran will declare it as a victory, based on the fact the regime wasn't completely destroyed by the U.S and Israel.
But the real test is the day after the day after, because what exactly is left?
Before this war, Iran was already limping.
The World Bank had projected Iran's economy would contract under tighter sanctions and falling oil exports, while food-price inflation rose above 70% in 2025. In January, the rial had fallen to a record 1.5 million to the dollar on the open market. That was before a month of bombs, blackouts, displacement, and lost livelihoods.
Iran on day two looks like a country with a shredded balance sheet, a broken currency, damaged military infrastructure, battered businesses, scared investors, displaced civilians, and an economy still trapped under sanctions with no credible reconstruction plan.
An end to the war doesn't magically restore electricity grids, supply chains, consumer confidence, port activity, insurance access, foreign reserves, or industrial output. And it definitely doesn't stabilize a currency that was already in free fall.
The war’s damage to energy infrastructure could disrupt supply for months or even years. Iran, with sanctions, capital shortages, and limited external financing, is hardly positioned for a rapid comeback.
Reparations are not impossible in theory, but there is no visible mechanism or coalition prepared to fund Iran’s recovery at the scale needed.
So what does Iran look like on day two? Poorer, more brittle, more militarized, and more dependent on repression at home and symbolism abroad.