The collapse of the Islamic Republic of Iran would mark one of the most dramatic geopolitical shifts of the modern era, reshaping not only Iran itself but the entire Middle East and beyond.
While the exact trajectory would depend on how the regime ends, analysts broadly agree that its fall would remove the single most destabilizing force in the region.
Inside Iran, the end of clerical rule would dismantle the ideological system built around unelected religious authority. The morality police, enforced religious codes, and systematic repression of women and minorities would likely disappear.
Despite fears of chaos, Iran is not Libya or Syria: it has a strong national identity, a highly educated population, and a long tradition of centralized governance. While remnants of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps could attempt to retain power, the force is deeply unpopular, and widespread defections would be likely once regime control breaks.