[Oe List ...] the new Iran?

Dharmalingam Vinasithamby dvinasithamby at yahoo.com
Wed Mar 11 15:36:59 PDT 2026


 It's interesting how "AI" has internalised the image of the "The Axis of Evil" pitted against the Western campaign of liberalisation to bring peace and democracy to the world. I read recently that AI is being trained to recognize anything that might limit or curb Zionism as undesirable. Are we also being guided to see AI as an impartial font of wisdom that views the world with great impartialilty? 

     On Wednesday, 11 March 2026 at 11:48:44 am MYT, W. J. via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:  
 
  Not yet, Jim. But you (or anyone) is welcome to follow that idea and let us know what you find.Marshall
    On Tuesday, March 10, 2026 at 08:00:41 PM PDT, James Wiegel via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:  
 
 Thanks.  By any chance, did you ask an equivalent question(s) about the US??
Jim Wiegel

“…the long work
of turning their lives
into a celebration
is not easy. Come and let us talk“. 

The Sunflowers. Mary Oliver


On Mar 10, 2026, at 10:12 AM, JAMES ADDINGTON via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:



 
  Thank you Marshall. I found this commentary to be thought provoking and compelling. A very interesting use of AI.   
  James Addington  
  On 03/10/2026 7:44 AM PDT W. J. via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:               Context: Being exhausted by the endless news reports on the war in Iran and the Middle East, and recalling our wisdom that "symbol is the key", I asked Artificial Intelligence for insights. Here is some of it.   Marshall         What evolutionary changes in Iran's symbolic life would have to be embraced in order for the nation to forgo revenge and make peace with "the Great Satan" in order to pursue full participation in a global economy instead of paying the price of incremental destruction of its existing infrastructure? What leadership elements are prepared to do this?                                                   To move from a cycle of "incremental destruction" to full global participation, Iran would likely need to undergo a profound evolutionary shift in its symbolic and ideological identity. This transition involves moving away from the "Revolutionary State" model toward a "Normal Nation-State" model.            1. Evolutionary Changes in Symbolic Life   For peace with "the Great Satan" (the U.S.) to be culturally and politically digestible, several core pillars of the 1979 Revolution would need to evolve:     
   -  
   - From "Martyrdom" to "Development": The central Shia motif of the Ashura (sacrifice and resistance against oppression) would need to be reinterpreted. Instead of viewing compromise as "humiliation," it would be framed as Maslahat (expediency for the survival of the community)—a concept already present in Iranian jurisprudence.
   - De-sacralization of Anti-Americanism: "Death to America" has functioned as a secular liturgy for 45 years. Forging peace requires separating Iranian national identity from its opposition to the West. This involves a return to Cyrus-style Persian Nationalism, which emphasizes Iran as a historic crossroads of trade and culture rather than a besieged fortress of the faith.
   - The "Japan Model" of Sovereignty: Embracing the idea that a nation can retain its unique cultural and religious soul while adopting Western economic and technological structures. This requires a symbolic admission that "Independence" (Istiglal) is best protected by economic power, not military isolation.
      2. Leadership Elements Prepared for Transition   While the current war has empowered hardliners, several factions have historically—or recently—shown an inclination toward this "Pragmatic Shift":     
   -  
   - The "New Technocrats": This group, often educated in the West or at elite Iranian universities (like Sharif University), views the current destruction of infrastructure as a "civilizational suicide." They prioritize the Digital Economy and energy modernization over ideological purity.
   - Pragmatic Conservatives: Figures within the traditional clerical establishment and the merchant class (Bazaaris) who value stability. They are represented by the school of the late Rafsanjani, believing that the "Survival of the System" (Nezam) is more important than any single slogan.
   - Disillusioned IRGC "Managers": Within the Revolutionary Guard, there is a divide between the ideological "True Believers" and the "Military-Industrialists" who control vast sectors of the economy. The latter may favor a "Chinese Model" where they maintain internal control but open the borders to global capital to save their business empires from collapse.
   - The "Silent" Reformists: Though currently marginalized, many former diplomats and officials (associated with the Khatami or Rouhani eras) remain ready to provide the intellectual framework for a "Grand Bargain" if the supreme leadership shifts.
      3. The Catalyst for Change   The primary driver for this evolution is often "The Siege Mentality" reaching a breaking point. When the cost of "Resistance" (sanctions + infrastructure strikes) exceeds the perceived cost of "Surrender," the leadership typically invokes "Drinking from the Poisoned Chalice"—a term used by Ayatollah Khomeini to justify ending the Iran-Iraq war.                 What about "drinking from the poisoned chalice" in order to preserve the Iranian vision of Islam?                                                   In Iranian political theology, the phrase "drinking from the poisoned chalice"(nosheedan-e jaam-e zahr) refers to a profound act of "Heroic Flexibility." It is the ultimate symbolic "off-ramp" that allows the leadership to retreat from a lost war while claiming moral and spiritual victory.    For the current leadership to use this to preserve their vision of Islam, they would likely frame the evolution through three specific symbolic shifts:           1. The Precedent of Imam Hassan   To forgo revenge against "the Great Satan," the regime would pivot its primary historical mirror from Imam Hussein (the martyr who fought to the death) to his brother, Imam Hassan.     
   - The Peace Treaty: In Shia history, Imam Hassan signed a treaty with his rival Muawiya to prevent the total annihilation of the Muslim community.
   - The Narrative: Peace is not "surrender"; it is a strategic sacrifice of pride to ensure the biological and spiritual survival of the Ummah (the Islamic community). By ending the "incremental destruction," the leadership "saves" Islam from being wiped out by superior Western technology.
      2. Safeguarding the "Nezam" (The System)   A core tenet of Khomeinism is that the preservation of the Islamic State is the "highest religious duty," outweighing even primary religious obligations like prayer or fasting if they conflict with the state's survival.     
   - Symbolic Evolution: "Resistance" would be redefined from military defiance to civilizational endurance.
   - The Argument: By participating in the global economy, Iran gains the wealth needed to build "Islamic science," "Islamic technology," and "Islamic infrastructure," thereby proving the superiority of their vision through success rather than suffering.
      3. The "Cyrus-Islamic" Synthesis   To make peace palatable to the public, leadership elements—particularly the technocratic wing of the IRGC—might blend Islamic identity with ancient Persian greatness.     
   - The Vision: Iran as a "Great Power" of the Silk Road.
   - The Shift: The U.S. is no longer an "existential devil" to be destroyed, but a "global hegemon" to be managed and out-competed economically. Peace becomes the tool that allows Iran to reclaim its historical seat at the table of nations.
      Leadership Elements Ready for the "Chalice"     
   - The "Silent" Clerical Elite: High-ranking Ayatollahs in Qom who fear that the war's destruction is turning the youth away from Islam entirely. They may advocate for peace to "save the faith" from the regime's military failures.
   - Pragmatic IRGC Commanders: Those who oversee the Khatam al-Anbiya (the IRGC's massive construction wing). They understand that without global parts, software, and capital, their industrial empire—and the state's backbone—will physically crumble.
   - Mojtaba Khamenei's "New Guard": If the new Supreme Leader seeks to consolidate power, he may use the "poisoned chalice" to end the war early, blaming the "old guard" for the conflict's failures while positioning himself as the "Savior of the Nation."
              Current economic data on Iran's infrastructure damage is forcing these leadership elements toward this "poisoned chalice" moment.   The cumulative damage from Operation Epic Fury and years of economic crisis has brought Iran to a critical structural threshold. Strategic strikes on the nation's energy, water, and security foundations are creating the physical conditions for a "poisoned chalice" decision.         1. Energy Sector Paralysis   The core of Iran's economy and its regime's survival—oil and gas—is under direct assault.     
   - Refinery Destruction: Israeli and U.S. strikes have hit multiple oil refineries and storage facilities, including sites in Tehran.
   - Production Collapse: Iran typically exports 1.6 million barrels per day, mostly to China. The combination of infrastructure damage and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has essentially halted these exports, draining the regime's primary source of hard currency.
   - Infrastructure Decay: Prior to the war, Iran was already "hemorrhaging" the value of four out of every five barrels exported due to sanctions-related maintenance backlogs and smuggling costs. 
   - 2. The Existential Water and Power Crisis
   - Beyond military targets, the war has intensified a pre-existing environmental collapse. 
  Desalination Strikes: Critical plants, such as the one on Qeshm Island providing water to 30 villages, have been reportedly attacked, threatening the basic survival of millions in arid regions.     
   - Tehran's Viability: After five years of extreme drought, reservoir levels were already at 10% capacity before the conflict. Public officials have warned that the capital may eventually need to be partially evacuated due to water and power shortages.
   - Cascading Outages: Many desalination plants are integrated with power stations; strikes on the electrical grid disrupt water production simultaneously. 
   - 3. Financial Exhaustion
   - War Costs: While the U.S. is spending nearly $900 million per day, the cost to Iran's economy is existential. The rial is in freefall, and grocery payment plans have become common as inflation skyrockets.
    
   - Security Degradation: U.S. officials claim that 90% of Iran's ballistic missile launch capability has been degraded since the war began on February 28.
                The "Chalice" Motivator   For pragmatists within the Revolutionary Guard and the technocratic elite, the choice is no longer about winning, but about stopping the physical erasure of the state. Total infrastructure collapse would leave nothing for any faction to govern, making a strategic "poisoned chalice" peace deal the only path to institutional survival.   
 
           How could Mojtaba Khamenei, the newly named Supreme Leader, frame this "poisoned chalice" moment to his supporters?               
 
  To frame this "poisoned chalice" moment, Mojtaba Khamenei would likely leverage his unique position as both the son of the late Supreme Leader and the head of a "New Guard" to pivot toward survival while maintaining ideological purity.       Based on Iranian political theology and the current state of Operation Epic Fury, here is how he would likely construct the narrative:                 1. The "Divine Mandate for Preservation"   Mojtaba would argue that the Nezam (The System) is a sacred trust, and its physical destruction by "The Great Satan" would be a victory for the enemies of Islam.       The Logic: "To allow the infrastructure of the faithful to be erased is to fail in our duty to God.   The Pivot: He would frame peace not as a white flag, but as a "Strategic Fast"—withdrawing from the conflict to rebuild the "fortress of Islam" from within.                          
   -  
      2. Invoking the "Peace of Imam Hassan"   As discussed, he would use the historical precedent of the second Shia Imam to sanctify the treaty.     
   - The Framing: He would tell his base (the Basij and IRGC) that just as Imam Hassan signed a treaty with Muawiya to prevent the massacre of the early Muslims, Mojtaba is signing this deal to prevent the "massacre of Iranian industry and life."
   - The Goal: This transforms "surrender" into a noble sacrifice of his own reputation for the sake of the people.
      3. The "Cyrus-Islamic" Renaissance   To appeal to the nationalist sentiments of the youth and the military, he might blend his father’s Islamism with a vision of Persian Greatness.     
   - The Narrative: "We have proven our courage in the 'Twelve-Day War' and 'Epic Fury.' Now, we must prove our wisdom."
   - The Economic Hook: He would promise that by ending the war, Iran will regain access to its frozen billions, rebuild its power grid, and become the high-tech hub of the Middle East. He would frame global trade as a new form of "Economic Jihad."
      4. Blaming the "Failed Old Guard"   To consolidate his own power, Mojtaba would subtly (or explicitly) blame the catastrophic losses of the war on the rigidity of the previous generation of commanders and clerics.     
   - The Scapegoat: By framing the "incremental destruction" as a result of the old guard's inability to adapt, he positions himself as the modernizer who can save the nation from their mistakes.
      Potential Risks for Mojtaba     
   - The "Hardline" Backlash: If the IRGC’s "True Believers" view the deal as a betrayal of his father’s legacy, he could face an internal coup.
   - The "Protest" Factor: If the "poisoned chalice" doesn't lead to immediate economic relief (lowering the price of bread and fuel), the domestic protests that began in late 2025 could reignite against him.
                 What does it mean politically, economically, and culturally to the new Iran to verifiably give up its capability to make a nuclear bomb?                                                           Verifiably giving up its nuclear weapons capability represents an existential transformation for the "new Iran," shifting it from a "Revolutionary State" to a "Normal Nation-State." This change has profound implications:      Political: From Pariah to Partner     
   - Regime Survival & Legitimacy: Renouncing nuclear ambitions is the ultimate "poisoned chalice" for the leadership. While it risks a hardline backlash, it secures long-term survival by removing the primary justification for U.S. and Israeli military strikes.
   - Regional Re-alignment: Verifiable compliance would likely trigger a domino effect of normalization with regional rivals like Saudi Arabia and the UAE, potentially integrating Iran into a collective Middle Eastern security framework.
   - Domestic Reform: Ending the "state of war" weakens the IRGC's grip on the internal security apparatus, potentially opening space for the secular democracy and fundamental political change demanded by the public. 
      Economic: The "Peace Dividend"     
   - Unfreezing the Future: Verifiable denuclearization would unlock approximately $2 billion in assets frozen in the U.S., plus tens of billions more in foreign bank accounts.
   - GDP Explosion: Analysts suggest that without sanctions, Iran’s economy could add $600 billion to $1 trillion to its GDP by 2040, transforming it into the largest untapped market in the Middle East.
   - Infrastructure Renaissance: Relief allows for the massive capital investment—estimated at $2.3 to $4 trillion—needed to fix the crumbling power grid and water systems currently suffering from "incremental destruction".
   - Global Trade Integration: Restoring banking ties and oil exports (historically 1.6M barrels/day) would stabilize the rial and end the "grocery payment plan" crisis for ordinary citizens. 
   - Cultural: Reclaiming the Persian Soul
   - Identity Shift: The national narrative would shift from "Resistance" (Muqawama) to "Prosperity." The symbolic "Death to America" liturgy would likely be replaced by a revived Persian Nationalism that emphasizes Iran's historic role as a global trade hub.
    
   - Ending the Brain Drain: Normalization would encourage the return of the vast Iranian diaspora and their technical expertise, which has been "hemorrhaging" for decades due to the nuclear-focused isolation.
   - Modernity vs. Ideology: The move represents a cultural admission that "Durable Power" rests in social cohesion and legitimacy rather than "centrifuge halls and missile tunnels".
               What would it mean, with what kind of shifts in its sense of identity and purpose, for the new Iran to stop identifying Israel as a mortal enemy?                                                                 For a "new   Iran  " to stop identifying   Israel   as a mortal enemy, it would require a fundamental dismantling of the 1979 revolutionary ideology and a return to a pre-revolutionary or "post-Islamist" national identity. This shift would be a civilizational "re-calibration" with the following political, economic, and cultural impacts:            1. Shift in National Identity: From "Ummah" to "Nation-State"     
   - De-centering the "Resistance Axis": The current regime defines itself as the vanguard of a global Islamic struggle against "Zionism". Abandoning this would mean Iran no longer views its purpose as "liberating" Jerusalem, but rather as a sovereign state focused on its own borders and citizens.
   - Revival of Pre-Islamic Nationalism: Identity would likely pivot back to Cyrus the Great's legacy of tolerance and regional partnership. Historically, Iran was the second Muslim-majority country to recognize Israel (1950), viewing it as a natural non-Arab ally in the "Alliance of the Periphery".
   - Secularization of Policy: A "new Iran" would likely adopt a secular-democratic framework where foreign policy is driven by national interest rather than theological mandates. Surveys already indicate that 84% of Iranians who oppose the mandatory hijab also prefer a secular state over a theocracy.
      2. Economic and Strategic Implications     
   - Integration into the "New Middle East": Neutralizing the Israel-Iran rivalry would remove the single greatest obstacle to regional economic integration. Iran could potentially join or partner with the Abraham Accords framework, transforming the "Shia Crescent" of conflict into a "Corridor of Commerce".
   - End of the Proxy Burden: Iran currently spends billions supporting groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis to "encircle" Israel. Ending this hostility would allow those funds to be redirected toward internal reconstruction of its failing water and power infrastructure.
   - Restoration of Bilateral Trade: Historically, Iran was Israel's major oil supplier, and the two shared joint projects in agriculture, medicine, and high-tech weaponry. Normalization would likely see a return of Israeli construction and tech firms to help modernize the Iranian economy.
      3. Cultural and Social Shifts     
   - Elimination of State-Sponsered Antisemitism: The "new Iran" would need to dismantle the massive state apparatus that currently generates roughly 61,000 antisemitic posts per month on official channels.
   - Diaspora Re-integration: Normalization would likely trigger a "reverse brain drain," as the millions of Iranians living in the West—many of whom maintain positive views of a multi-faith Middle East—bring their capital and expertise back to a peaceful homeland.
   - Psychological Normalcy: For the first time in nearly 50 years, Iranians would live without the constant state of "emergency" and threat of Israeli retaliation, allowing for a society focused on innovation and global travel rather than "martyrdom" and isolation.
            While the current radical core of the regime continues to favor escalation, the growing secular shift within the public suggests that the cultural foundation for this transition is already being laid by the Iranian people themselves.      
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Why Is Iran’s Secular Shift So Hard to Believe? - Middle East Transparent
 
Dina Nayeri
 
How two researchers got to the heart of a polling problem: the skewing effect of fear. Growing up in my househol...
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