Western diplomats wary of predicting end days for Iran’s regime

Failure to foresee fall of shah in 1979 was collective disaster for western diplomacy, but academic experts see little indication of mass defections nowWhen asked to predict whether fissures were appearing at the top of the multilayered Iranian state that may imply Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s...

<p>Failure to foresee fall of shah in 1979 was collective disaster for western diplomacy, but academic experts see little indication of mass defections now</p><p>When asked to predict whether fissures were appearing at the top of the multilayered Iranian state that may imply Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s days in power were finally ending, western diplomats adopt a haunted demeanour, perhaps recalling of one of western diplomacy’s greatest collective disasters.</p><p>Before <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/news/blog/2009/feb/03/iranian-revolution-archive">the fall of the shah in January 1979</a>, insouciant diplomats based in Tehran were sending cables to their capitals offering total reassurance that Mohammad Reza Pavlahi’s hold on power was utterly secure. In September 1978, the US Defence Intelligence Agency, for instance, reported that “the shah is expected to remain actively in power over the next 10 years”. A state department report suggested “the Shah would not have to stand down until 1985 at the earliest”.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/14/western-diplomats-wary-of-predicting-end-days-for-irans-regime">Continue reading...</a>
Read the full article at: The Guardian World →
📧 Email 🐦 Twitter 💼 LinkedIn