
The Foreign Affairs Interview Iran’s Tenacious Regime and the Future of the Gulf
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Mar 12, 2026 Sanam Vakil, Chatham House Gulf politics director, and Afshon Ostovar, Naval Postgraduate School Iran analyst, unpack Iran’s resilience and regional fallout. They discuss Iran’s succession dynamics and IRGC influence. They explore Gulf states’ vulnerabilities, shifting Gulf–U.S. ties, and risks of wider instability.
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Insurgencies Could Distract Not Dismantle Iran
- Ethnic insurgencies could fragment Iran locally but are unlikely to overthrow the state; they would nevertheless provoke prolonged counterinsurgency fighting.
- Ostovar notes Kurds, Baluch, Azeris share Iranian cultural ties, so autonomy demands are likelier than full secession.
Gulf States Suffer Frontline Costs And Strategic Anxiety
- Gulf states lobbied to avoid this war yet now bear major economic and security costs and fear being left with a wounded Iran after U.S. withdrawal.
- Sanam Vakil emphasizes Gulf resilience in air defense but warns of depleted interceptors and long-term economic ripple effects.
Iran Seeks Guarantees By Spreading Costs To Gulf
- Iran's aim is to spread war costs regionally to pressure Gulf states and the U.S. for guarantees, but Gulf-Iran ties will remain broken post-war.
- Vakil warns normalization gains between UAE/Saudi and Iran are unlikely to recover after sustained strikes on Gulf infrastructure.


