Iran’s regime is failing at home. Prepare for it to export its revolution abroad
From our UK edition
The mullahs are learning – again – that one can beat a crowd, but not indefinitely beat a people. A state founded on permanent emergency eventually discovers that emergency is its only language, and coercion cannot persuade forever. The protests convulsing Iran, met with familiar brutality, are not just street politics. They are a referendum on clerical rule, the terror apparatus sustaining it, and the international indulgence keeping it alive. Britain’s complacency in the face of Tehran's terror isn’t naïve; it’s strategic self-harm Britain’s response to foreign despotism is tepid: 'urge restraint,' 'call for calm,' 'monitor closely.