Soviet

1.6K posts

Soviet

Soviet

@22bastion

مرگ بر اسرائیل و مرگ بر آمریکا

Katılım Eylül 2025
106 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
Soviet
Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @gonglei89 Balkanisation/collapse/occupation of the country by foreigners, which would mean rape & murder for Iranians. In other words the stakes are too high for the government to just tolerate violent and aggressive protests (especially when they turn into riots as they did in Jan)
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @gonglei89 The government can be brutal when it comes to protests and I can't say I blame them. The government is in a life or death battle with the US and Israel, who actively seek its downfall, has suffered under economic sanctions for 47 years and its collapse could result in either the
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Lei Gong
Lei Gong@gonglei89·
You know it just occurred to me that being so desperate for rescue from a mess that you made that you try to blackmail your geopolitical rival into bailing you out is next levels of hilarity in the annals of world history.
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Aidan Simardone
Aidan Simardone@AidanSimardone·
Why is Iran so beautiful? The country has faced decades of sanctions and Western interference, yet looks far better than every American city
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Soviet@22bastion·
@briangobosox If Trump walks away what's to stop Iran from bombing the GCC and Israel into submission, officially establishing the toll booth (de facto sanctions relief) and thereby becoming the regional hegemon? How can Trump afford to leave without solving the nuclear question?
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Brian McCarthy
Brian McCarthy@briangobosox·
TL;DR: Iran needs to monetize its leverage now, b/c if Trump walks away from the table, that leverage evaporates.
Trita Parsi search. ..@tparsi

Why the Iran ceasefire may have shifted the dynamics back in Trump's favor Diplomacy between Washington and Tehran has not yet unraveled, despite JD Vance’s theatrical departure from last week’s talks in Islamabad. Trump now signals that the two sides could reconvene within days in the Pakistani capital. Whether negotiators return to the table or continue their exchanges through quieter, remote channels before the ceasefire lapses, one reality appears to have shifted: Trump has clawed back a measure of momentum—and with it, leverage—over Iran, largely by virtue of the ceasefire. Here’s why. Trump entered this moment politically cornered and strategically constrained. Surging gasoline prices were inflicting acute domestic pain, eroding his standing at home. More critically, he faced a barren escalation ladder. Each conceivable move—strikes on Iran’s oil infrastructure, attacks on civilian targets, the seizure of Persian Gulf islands, or covert operations to capture enriched uranium—carried the near-certainty of forceful Iranian retaliation. Such responses would not merely match his escalation but compound it, deepening his economic exposure, amplifying political risk, and entangling him further in a perilous and unwinnable strategic bind. Nor could he simply extricate the United States from the conflict on his own terms. Absent an understanding with Tehran, Iran retained both the capacity and the incentive to continue targeting Israel and vulnerable U.S. assets across the Gulf. Trump needed Iran’s permission to get out of the war. The ceasefire, however, has subtly altered that equation. Trump may no longer need a formal nod from Tehran to step back. If he disengages now—without a comprehensive agreement—Iran will almost certainly maintain its grip over the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic setback for Washington. Yet Tehran is unlikely to resume direct military operations against U.S. targets in the Persian Gulf. To do so, in the absence of renewed American strikes, would cast Iran as the aggressor, inviting severe and potentially coordinated repercussions—not only from Washington but from wary global powers such as Russia and China. Moreover, the balance of needs has tilted. Iran now appears to need an agreement more than the United States does. Trump has already secured his central objective—the escape from a war he was ill-advised to begin—while Iran, despite accruing leverage through its command of the Strait, remains far from realizing its broader ambitions: meaningful sanctions relief, a definitive and enduring end to hostilities, and perhaps even the contours of a more stable, constructive relationship with Washington. Tehran’s decision to dispatch its largest, most senior, and most expansive delegation to Islamabad for direct talks with the American vice president reflected a striking confidence—that it occupied its strongest negotiating position vis-à-vis the United States since 1979. Yet to convert that moment of perceived ascendancy into little more than a cessation of U.S. bombardment would fall short of its aspirations. Even if Washington were to acquiesce to Iran’s control of the Strait, such an outcome would pale against the far more consequential gains Tehran believes are within reach. Instead, Iran needs to translate this leverage not only into a durable end to the war, but ideally, into a new peace: One that delivers sweeping sanctions relief and inaugurates a more stable, mutually defined economic and political relationship with Washington. Such an arrangement would serve as a bulwark against renewed conflict. The economic imperative is especially stark: sanctions relief is indispensable to reconstruct a country now burdened with damage running into the hundreds of billions of dollars. As I have argued before, sanctions relief is not merely an economic demand—it is a strategic necessity. Without it, Iran risks a condition of chronic erosion, a slow but steady weakening that would leave it exposed. That vulnerability, in turn, could invite further attacks. It was, after all, the misperception of Iranian weakness that helped open the window for initial strikes. But Trump does not, in any fundamental sense, require any of this. The United States can endure without a formal agreement with Iran and without the benefits of an economic relationship with Tehran. To be sure, a negotiated settlement would better serve long-term American interests: the nuclear constraints Trump seeks can only be credibly secured at the negotiating table. Abruptly abandoning diplomacy while leaving Iran in undisputed control of the Strait would also unsettle key regional allies. Yet these are strategic preferences, not immediate necessities. Trump’s calculus is far more transactional and far less patient. He can point to the damage already inflicted on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and conventional forces, proclaim a hollow victory, and disengage. He has already emphasized that the United States no longer depends on Persian Gulf oil, insulating it from the direct economic consequences of Iran’s toll regime. As a result, the burden shifts outward: the Strait becomes a problem for European and Asian powers—countries that Trump has noted declined to rally to his side when he sought their help in prying the waterway from Tehran’s grip. The window now open offers Tehran a chance to convert battlefield leverage into lasting strategic gain. To let it close would mean forfeiting not just incremental progress, but the possibility of reshaping its economic and geopolitical position. By contrast, the United States, having already secured a tenuous exit ramp through the ceasefire, has less at stake in the short term. Walking away, therefore, is politically and strategically easier for Trump than for his Iranian counterparts. Both can live with diplomatic failure, but Tehran has more gains to lose. How Tehran chooses to navigate this narrowing corridor—whether it presses its advantage or overplays its hand—will be interesting to see.

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Soviet@22bastion·
@yfbknzh747 @sarahraviani I don't even know where to begin with these lies/exaggerations/stereotypes/generalisations lol you are clearly mentally ill and have an incredibly warped view of what Iran is like. I wish you success in the future
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🔆🦁🇮🇷@yfbknzh747·
@22bastion @sarahraviani I’m pretty sure they do because even when women are covered they catcall them in the streets and look at everything through a sexual lens. Old men see 9 year old girls as women. Only educated people don’t do that and most of the educated people are not Muslim.
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Soviet@22bastion·
@yfbknzh747 @AidanSimardone If you send me proof that Ahmadinejad sent 800 billion to Israel I will film a video of myself eating my shoe and send it to you. You have 2 hours.
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🔆🦁🇮🇷@yfbknzh747·
@22bastion @AidanSimardone Do sanctions impact pollution and poor water management too? And why did Ahmadinejad send 800 billion to Israel during his presidency? If sanctions are the problem why are you regime filths living lavish luxurious lifestyles? Did it prevent you from building schools in Sistan?
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Soviet@22bastion·
@BrettBurmanPA @policytensor Trump leaving without a deal would piss Israel off even more - no resolution of the Iranian nuclear question, left to fend for themselves vs Iran, interceptor stockpiles low etc. Israel needs a deal
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Brett Burman
Brett Burman@BrettBurmanPA·
@policytensor Does the US *need* a deal? I’m starting to wonder - it’ll piss off scores of allies to walk away, but that’s never been something that really bothers Trump re Europe and he could assume he can placate the GCC elsewhere.
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Soviet@22bastion·
@briangobosox @sergeiparmenov Lol forget 'overly discounting' - it's your analysis that's completely disregarding the fact that Iran can tolerate a closure of the SoH to a much greater degree than any of the GCC states. Time is on Iran's side and Iran knows it
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Brian McCarthy
Brian McCarthy@briangobosox·
@sergeiparmenov It’s not about that anymore. It’s about control of the strait, and US security partners are fully on board with denying that to Iran. I feel like your analysis overly discounts the pain that Iran is experiencing.
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Also how big of part is it nowadays I don’t think big enough to be an Islamic republic I wouldn’t be confident that the majority of the country is Muslim
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🇮🇷 نیکا | nika
🇮🇷 نیکا | nika@faryadeentezar·
it genuinely boils my blood when these motherfuckers share these videos as “see, islamic republic good” propaganda without knowing ANYTHING about how many years of civil disobedience it took for iranians to get to this point
Jack Posobiec@JackPosobiec

Cafe in Tehran

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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar Just the word 'Iran' has more history than every country on the planet. We don't need anything else, we shouldn't care about how foreigners perceive us and I don't see the harm in being called an Islamic Republic anyway, Islam is ultimately a part of our culture and history
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Tbh I know it’s not a big deal I don’t even like the idea of being called an Islamic republic I feel it reduces us to to some hollow history less state like Pakistan that clings onto significance via the religion when we’re one of the richest nations worth my of our own name
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar I agree, but I don't see it as a ginormous issue. I imagine the government will come around to that sort of thing at some point
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar You shouldn't think of every supporter of the government as being religious. I'm personally not very religious. There is a strong secular basis for supporting the government, opposing cultural erasure in Iran, opposing American arrogance and the child-killing Israelis etc
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar I’m surprised fond of pre Islamic Iran usually Muslims aren’t they don’t think they coexist I just don’t think religion is as core to being Iranian consveratism, sharaf, Toraf is, it’s the reason Iranians and Iraqis aren’t the same when they share a religion our culture is ancien
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar Eh you're talking about very specific instances of people saying a few negative words about pre-Islamic figures. Obviously it's stupid but it's not state policy, and Khalkhali's brazenness was a very rare exception. There have recently been billboards with Arash and Ardashir etc
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Well nowadays they only insult it eg Cyrus was a tyrant the arachamenids were a delusion not worthy of pride etc, although khalkali tried in 79 to destroy Persepolis - are u personally Muslim or are u just worried about Iranian culture erasure
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar The IR doesn't lean into pre-Islamic culture enough, yes, I agree. It harms their legitimacy domestically and is fundamentally a misguided policy. In any case it's not like they're blowing up pre-Islamic sites or banning non-Islamic names
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Also surely u acknowledge that the IR has erased pre Islamic Iran so they only accept Islamic culture not Iranian culture is that not culture erasing
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar Present day conditions are entirely different. If a secular government comes into place I'm absolutely certain that conservatism will vanish, not least because secular Iranians abroad have a seething hatred for religion and will do everything they can to wipe it out in Iran
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Also I think u don’t give actual Iranians credit they’ve always been conservative even under the shah which as u say was western they still remained conservative, I don’t think u give them enough credit
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar How does the government force people to live in Iran? What restrictions are in place? What can they and can they not do? Please explain
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar But is that not better than what it currently is where people are forced to live how they may not want surely those who want to remain rigid in the non western way practice that and those who want to be western writhin reason do that why is that inherently bad if they act modest
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar Secularism results in loose morals, people living non-Iranian ways of life, dressing like non-Iranians and aspiring to be like non-Iranians (Americans) as much as possible. You mentioned Turkey - they're a great example of this process except Iranian secularism would be worse
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Soviet@22bastion·
@khaleejehCyrus @faryadeentezar What I acknowledge is that if a secular government comes into power tomorrow, the process of Iranian social and cultural erosion going on right now would accelerate and eventually result in the erasure of Iran. Preventing this is more important to me than GDP and social liberties
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Mostashar 🇮🇷
Mostashar 🇮🇷@khaleejehCyrus·
@22bastion @faryadeentezar Social liberties, GDP, simply freedom of choice Iran should be secular sowmthing like turkey no one is asking for Onlyfans surely u can acknowledge not everyone is Muslim simply a non sharia system where dancing isn’t prohibited and women aren’t second class
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