中东战争

Iran could collapse from the periphery, not the centre

As the state weakens, minority groups in the borderlands could chip away at the country’s territorial integrity

The writer is a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute

Since Saturday, US and Israeli air strikes have eliminated many of Iran’s top leaders, jolting the power centre in Tehran. But the next shock may come from the country’s border provinces, home to diverse and historically restive ethnic groups.

Iran is a Persian majority nation. But it is also a multi-ethnic country comprised of sizeable Azeri and Kurdish populations, along with Lurs, Arabs, Baluchis and Turkmen in borderlands that sit astride trade routes, smuggling corridors and energy infrastructure. The regime has long exploited fears of Iran breaking apart to mobilise loyalty, suppress dissent and resist external meddling. It will try again, but this time the centre’s ability to hold its peripheries may be significantly weakened. Reports that the CIA is aiding Kurdish armed groups to drum up resistance against the Iranian regime have sharpened Tehran’s fears. Kurdish fighters lack the numbers to overthrow the regime, but backing them could be a pretext for creating an enclave that serves as a US and Israeli staging ground against Tehran. 

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