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Iran Conflict 2026
27MAY

Three internet tiers, one negotiating line

3 min read
15:33UTC

Euronews documented Iran's wartime internet on 20 May as a three-tier system: free for senior officials, 40,000 tomans per GB for licensed professionals, 500,000 tomans for the public.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The three-tier internet is the structural reason Iran's negotiating posture and its domestic mood run on different information.

Euronews documented Iran's wartime internet on Wednesday 20 May as a three-tier system 1. The top tier, branded 'White Internet', is reserved for senior officials and select journalists at no charge with full unfiltered access. 'Internet Pro' is sold to licensed professionals, doctors, lawyers, academics and businesses, at 40,000 tomans per gigabyte (roughly €0.20), with curated access to about ten international platforms. The general public pays commercial VPN providers around 500,000 tomans per gigabyte (roughly €2.50), 12.5 times the professional rate, for unreliable connections.

Cumulative economic cost of the wartime internet restriction has exceeded $1 billion by Day 82, Euronews reported, building on the early-blackout daily run-rate of $30-35 million Iran's central bank acknowledged in March. The internet blackout cleared the 2,000-hour cumulative milestone on or around 19 May, on the trajectory previously documented in The National's NetBlocks-based reporting .

An Iranian doctor pays €0.20 per gigabyte on Internet Pro to look up a clinical paper; the unemployed school-leaver across the street pays €2.50 on a commercial VPN to read the same article. ATM networks and hospital systems route through a 1 per cent loyalist tier that doubles as IRGC command-and-control infrastructure. The architecture creates three audiences for any settlement Tehran might sign: an official cadre with global information access; a licensed professional class with curated access; and 88 million citizens whose information set is whatever survives the VPN throttling.

The gap matters because Tehran's negotiating posture, routed through Esmaeil Baghaei's 20 May press briefings and Pakistan's mediating channel, invokes the population as the constituency for any settlement. Baghaei's 20 May 'corrective points' briefing is unreadable to the 88 million Iranians the briefing is meant to represent. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf declared on 17 May that Iran's '70-day resistance' had accelerated a 'transformation unseen in a century', a domestic-mobilisation message audible to the cadre that does not pay 500,000 tomans per gigabyte to hear it. The three tiers preserve the regime's external coherence at the cost of the domestic legibility a settlement would eventually require.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has not simply switched off the internet during the war. It has created three different levels of access, depending on who you are. Senior officials and approved journalists get the full, unfiltered internet for free. Doctors, lawyers, and approved businesses can buy access to a limited set of international platforms at €0.20 per gigabyte. For everyone else, the only option is a virtual private network service that costs 12.5 times more. The practical result is that Iran's foreign ministry officials are negotiating with Washington and giving press briefings using a completely unrestricted internet connection. Meanwhile, most Iranian people cannot access news websites to read about those same negotiations. This creates a stark information gap inside the country: the government speaks to the world on a clean line, while the population it claims to represent cannot see what is being decided on their behalf.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's tiered internet architecture emerged from institutional lessons drawn from the November 2019 Mahsa Amini-era protests, when a blanket shutdown costing an estimated $1.5 billion in three days failed to prevent protest coordination while generating significant international condemnation.

The 2026 tiered model explicitly preserves economic productivity for licensed professionals while eliminating mass coordination capacity a more surgical application of connectivity restriction than 2019's blunt instrument.

The structural enabler is Iran's National Information Network (NIN), a domestic intranet built over a decade specifically to allow government-controlled connectivity independent of the international internet. The tiered system routes 'White Internet' traffic through NIN's direct international pipes while funnelling professional and public access through increasingly constrained gateways.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The tiered architecture creates a structural information asymmetry: Iran's negotiators operate with full global information access while the domestic population whose legitimacy they invoke cannot access international reporting on the negotiations.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The cumulative $1 billion economic cost, compounding with Hormuz revenue losses and sanctions pressure, narrows Iran's fiscal space for sustaining the war and could force earlier negotiating concessions than the public posture suggests.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Risk

    The tiered system's architecture, once operational at this scale, will be harder to dismantle post-war than a simple blanket shutdown; it represents a permanent infrastructure for state-tiered information control that outlasts the immediate conflict.

    Long term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #104 · Three days to Hengli

Euronews· 21 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Qatar
Qatar
Qatar holds approximately $12 billion in frozen Iranian assets that Tehran named as the precondition for any Hormuz reopening sequence; with Oman sidelined and no agreed HEU custodian, the asset-routing architecture that any deal requires has no operational channel and no neutral financial intermediary to run it through.
Hengaw and Iranian civilian population
Hengaw and Iranian civilian population
Iranians face an internet capped at 40 per cent by hardware their president cannot dismantle, field killings that leave no court record, and judicial executions running in parallel; Hengaw, based in Norway, is the primary remaining monitor of a repression system the IRGC is deliberately moving beyond auditable records. The real toll is higher than any single monitor's count.
China
China
China supplied deep-packet-inspection hardware that caps Iran's internet at 40 per cent and enables an instant on-demand blackout, and was barred by Trump as a potential HEU custodian on 27 May. Beijing gains from Iran's continued non-alignment with the West while the DPI sale extends Chinese surveillance-technology exports as a geopolitical instrument.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar met Rubio in Washington on 29 May, formally inheriting the role of sole active mediator after Oman's forced withdrawal. Pakistan lacks Oman's banking infrastructure for frozen-asset routing and carries its own regional stakes, making it a less structurally neutral broker for the Qatar-held $12 billion sequencing.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait invoked Article 51 of the UN Charter after absorbing an Iranian ballistic-missile strike on Ali Al Salem Air Base on 28 May, becoming the first Gulf state to make a formal individual self-defence claim in the war. The invocation creates a legal record enabling a future bilateral defence-pact activation without yet triggering it.
Oman
Oman
Oman denied any Hormuz toll plan within hours of Bessent's 28 May threat, absorbing a sanctions warning from the country it has brokered for since 1981. The rapid capitulation preserved the channel formally, but Tehran now knows Washington will threaten its own mediator, which changes Muscat's calculus on how far it can lean into any joint-management architecture.