January 4, 2026 | The Free Press

Why These Iranian Protests Are Different

The people in the streets realize that the ayatollah has no clothes and are seizing the moment.
January 4, 2026 | The Free Press

Why These Iranian Protests Are Different

The people in the streets realize that the ayatollah has no clothes and are seizing the moment.

Excerpt

It was always a matter of when, not if, the Iranian people would take to the streets again.

Since the regime’s defeat in the 12-day war against Israel and America in June, Iran has been a powder keg, subsumed with unresolved political crises, rising domestic dissent, deepening economic turmoil, and environmental crises ranging from drought to air pollution. The country has also witnessed mass arrests and an execution spree, while authorities have tried to feign a social opening that Iranian women have been using to push back on discriminatory public dress codes.

When unrest finally broke out in late December among Tehran’s traditional merchant, or “bazaar” class, its proximate cause was the sinking rial. Iran’s currency had just hit a record low of 1.43 million against a single U.S. dollar. Inflation was between about 40 and 50 percent—and a staggering 64 to 73 percent for foodstuffs, hitting families and small-business owners particularly hard.

Behnam Ben Taleblu is the senior director of the Iran Program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) think tank in Washington, D.C., where he is also a senior fellow. Follow him on X at @therealBehnamBT

Issues:

Issues:

Iran Iran Human Rights Iran Missiles Iran Politics and Economy Iran Sanctions

Topics:

Topics:

Iran Israel Washington Nuclear program of Iran