Revolutions rarely stay local. When the streets of Iran erupt, the aftershocks don’t stop at police cordons
Revolutions rarely stay local. When the streets of Iran erupt, the aftershocks don’t stop at police cordons or censored newsfeeds—they move through bank accounts, air routes, and permissive jurisdictions thousands of miles away.
The protests currently raging in Iran are not just a domestic crisis. They are a stress test of a survival system that links Tehran to Caracas, intersects with China, and now collides with Washington’s most disruptive signal in years: the U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro.
For Israel, this system is not abstract. It is the architecture of the threats pointed at it.