The latest
Iran’s leadership may have weathered months of confrontation with the United States, but its next battle is likely to be domestic.
Hardliners believe Iran emerged from the conflict resilient and are pushing for a tougher stance in future talks with Washington. At the same time, millions of Iranians are looking for lower inflation, more jobs, and a path out of years of economic hardship.
Officials and analysts cited by Reuters said public expectations have risen sharply amid prospects of sanctions relief and access to frozen assets. Those expectations could quickly become a liability if living conditions fail to improve.
Details
• Iran enters the post-war period burdened by high inflation, a weakened currency, unemployment, and extensive damage to infrastructure and industry.
• Analysts say any long-term sanctions relief will likely depend on a broader agreement with Washington over Iran’s nuclear program, a goal that remains politically difficult.
• Western and Iranian assessments suggest the Revolutionary Guard has emerged stronger from the conflict, reinforcing calls to rebuild military capabilities despite economic pressures.
• Hardline factions, including influential figures in parliament and conservative media, remain skeptical of engagement with the United States and argue Tehran conceded too much after the war.
• Iran experts warn that once the war fades from public attention, citizens will refocus on prices, wages, corruption, and unemployment—the same issues that fueled previous waves of protests.
• Research institutions and economic studies indicate that years of sanctions and isolation have left deep scars on growth, investment, and household incomes, making a rapid recovery unlikely even if external pressure eases.
What to watch
The key question is no longer whether the war is ending, but whether Iran can convert the end of fighting into meaningful economic improvements for ordinary citizens.
If new resources are directed primarily toward military rebuilding and security institutions, hardliners may be satisfied. But if living standards remain stagnant, public frustration could return to the forefront, creating a challenge that war merely postponed rather than resolved.