The Foreign Affairs Interview

How Strong Are Iran’s Strongmen?

87 snips
Mar 19, 2026
Stephen Kotkin, historian and Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, offers a concise take on authoritarianism and regime durability. He breaks down repression, cash flows, elite loyalties, narratives, and international factors. He applies these lenses to Iran, compares cases like Venezuela and the Soviet Union, and discusses military, economic, and political levers to unbalance authoritarian rulers.
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INSIGHT

Cashflow Is The Regime Lifeline Beyond Economic Growth

  • Authoritarian regimes depend on cash flow even without social bargains or sustained growth.
  • Cash can come from hydrocarbons, state exports, hacking, counterfeiting, or other illicit sources that sustain patronage networks.
INSIGHT

Control Over Life Chances Shapes Compliance

  • Control over life chances lets regimes shape behavior by controlling jobs, schooling, housing, and mobility.
  • The more life chances the state controls, the harder outsiders can intervene politically through private-sector or societal channels.
INSIGHT

Legitimacy Comes From Recycled Civilizational Narratives

  • Authoritarian narratives combine a glorious past, internal and external enemies, and the regime as sole restorative force.
  • These expanding enemy categories let regimes recycle propaganda rather than only censor information.
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