Washington Should Prepare for a Summer of Unrest in Iran

Peloni:  Trump’s continued policy of trying to push the Iranian regime back to the negotiating table continues to affect the general public more directly than the butchers who serve as their overseers.   The solution to this tragedy is to end the attempt to offer Iran an offramp for their relentless abuses on their neighbors, but to arm the very people that Trump promised he would eventually help the Iranian people back on February 28 when the war broke out.  In truth, the Iranian people should be offered a role in the overthrow of the tyrants holding dominion over them, and Trump has the means to help them do exactly this, while simultaneously fulfilling two thus far unfulfilled promises at once.

Janatan Sayeh

Iranian miners strike following three months without pay.  Screengrab via Social Media.

The United States has reimposed its naval blockade against Iranian ports while striking the Islamic Republic’s military assets for a full consecutive week, all in response to Tehran’s repeated violations of the two countries Memorandum of Understanding. President Donald Trump also threatened to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges “unless they [the regime] get to the table and negotiate.” Regime media claimed on July 17 that the United States had already struck some of this infrastructure.

Washington is right to maximize leverage by increasing domestic unrest inside Iran. But civilian infrastructure is the wrong target. Iran’s population is already confronting converging economic, electricity, and environmental crises. The greatest leverage against the regime is not a weakened Iranian society, but an empowered one that poses an existential threat to the Islamic Republic.

That means degrading the regime’s repression apparatus that kills, jails, and tortures dissidents.

Iran’s Economy Further Deteriorates

Monthly inflation averaged 7.1 percent in the first half of 2026, nearly double the 3.6 percent average during the previous nine months. By June, annual inflation had reached 62 percent, point-to-point inflation 88.6 percent, and food inflation more than 134 percent. The Iranian rial fell to a new record low on the unofficial market, with the U.S. dollar trading at roughly 1.9 million rials.

Around two-thirds of Iran’s 66 million working-age people are unemployed, leaving the rate at 37 percent compared to the global employment average of 58 percent. Net job creation fell from 298,000 to just 34,000 in one year, 800,000 people left the labor force, and the recent conflict reportedly eliminated another million jobs.

A leaked, alleged internal regime report found that over 90 percent of Iranians want political change, with 63.6 percent conveying anger towards the regime. For comparison, this exceeds the highest level ever recorded by Gallup in any country. The report also found that 81 percent of Iranians struggle to afford food.

Iran’s Climate Crisis Accelerates During Summer

Authorities have accelerated Iran’s overlapping environmental crises through corrupt industrial projects that enrich insiders while disrupting natural water flows and depleting groundwater. The result is worsening water scarcity, land subsidence, dust storms, and climate-driven internal migration.

Iran’s renewable water resources have fallen 75 percent in recent years, compared to a global average decline of 61 percent. About 35 million people face water shortages. Rainfall is below normal in 11 provinces, with some facing “water bankruptcy.” Several cities go for days without running water.

Rolling Blackouts Have Resumed Nationwide

 Electricity outages, lasting up to 5 hours a day and sometimes overnight, also shut off running water because apartment buildings rely on electric pumps. They also disrupt internet access, damage appliances from voltage fluctuations, and spoil refrigerated food. Meanwhile, factories now face blackouts several days a week, further reducing output and contributing to job losses.

Even regime media acknowledges that this recurring crisis stems from decades of underinvestment in new power plants, failure to diversify electricity generation through renewables despite Iran’s vast solar potential, and poor coordination between the electricity and gas sectors. Authorities also blame the recent conflict, saying it cut available generating capacity by 4,200 MW, about 4 percent of reported installed capacity.

Right Strategy, Wrong Target

In addition to striking the regime’s military assets, Washington should learn from effective operations in the early stages of the war by targeting bases belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Basij, Law Enforcement Command, and Revolutionary Courts that imprison and sentence dissidents.

The campaign should be paired with a media effort aimed at ordinary Iranians to undermine the regime’s image of omnipotence, following Israel’s example when it  published footage of hyperlocal strikes on security checkpoints across the country. The approach generated anti-regime momentum on the ground, with ordinary Iranians aiding the campaign by sharing intelligence on the locations of regime personnel through social media.


 

Janatan Sayeh is a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where he focuses on Iranian domestic affairs and the Islamic Republic’s regional malign influence. For more analysis from the author and FDD, please subscribe HERE. Follow Janatan on X @JanatanSayeh. Follow FDD on X @FDD and @FDD_Iran. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

July 18, 2026 | Comments »

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