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Iran Conflict 2026
1JUN

Mourning and fireworks on Iran streets

3 min read
08:32UTC

While Western cameras fixated on celebrations, pro-regime mourning crowds also gathered across Iran — a country too divided for any single image to represent.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The coexistence of mourning and celebration crowds in Iran reflects a genuine societal fracture rather than a unified national response, and will shape the political landscape of whatever comes next.

Pro-regime mourning crowds gathered across Iran in the hours after Khamenei's death was confirmed , a parallel reality to the fireworks and 'Death to Khamenei' chants in Tehran, Karaj, Borazjan, and Mamasani (ID:474). Western broadcasters led overwhelmingly with the celebrations. The mourners received less airtime. Both were real.

The Islamic Republic has never lacked a domestic constituency. The Basij and IRGC employ or subsidise millions of families. The bonyads — revolutionary foundations controlling an estimated 20% of Iran's GDP — distribute patronage deep into provincial towns and rural communities. Religious conservatives in Qom, Mashhad, and the smaller shrine cities hold genuine reverence for the velayat-e faqih, the guardianship of the jurist that Khamenei embodied. A framework that treats 87 million Iranians as a monolithic bloc awaiting liberation has failed every time it has been tested — in 1953, in 2003 next door, in 2011 across the Arab world.

Separating genuine grief from orchestrated display is impossible under current conditions. The IRGC's reported deployment of armed members on motorbikes through Tehran — cited by Middle East Eye from unverified sources — means mourning crowds gathered under the watch of the same apparatus that killed an estimated 36,000 protesters in January . A crowd assembled under visible armed surveillance is not the same as one assembled freely, and no camera resolves that ambiguity.

Iran is fighting two simultaneous crises: external military attack and internal state fracture. The National Security Council's instruction for Tehran residents to evacuate, the empty supermarket shelves in northern Tehran, and the IRGC's street patrols all indicate the security apparatus considers domestic control at least as urgent as the foreign threat. During the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988), the Khomeini government weaponised external conflict to consolidate internal power. Whether a decapitated state can execute the same manoeuvre is the open question.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When news of Khamenei's death spread, Iran did not react as one. In some parts of the country, people set off fireworks, took to the streets in joy, and celebrated what they saw as the fall of a repressive regime. In other parts, people gathered to mourn — whether out of genuine grief, religious duty, or fear of what happens next. Both crowds are real. This is not a country that has been 'liberated' and is uniformly grateful, nor is it a country uniformly devastated by a foreign attack. It is a deeply divided society processing an enormous shock through contradictory but equally authentic responses.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The dual crowd is the most honest single image of what Iran actually is: a country in which the same event — the death of the supreme leader under foreign bombs — produces both relief and grief, sometimes within the same family. Western media's tendency to amplify the celebrations and authoritarian media's tendency to show only the mourning and the bombs are both acts of political curation rather than journalism. The political implications are profound: any post-Khamenei governance arrangement must reckon with a society that is genuinely split, not one that has been uniformly liberated. The mourning crowds are not simply regime plants or coerced participants — they represent a constituency that will need to be accommodated in any stable settlement, and whose alienation will be a resource for any actor seeking to destabilise whatever comes next.

Root Causes

The pro-regime crowd reflects constituencies with genuine stakes in the survival of the Islamic Republic's order: families of IRGC members, religious conservatives whose identity and community infrastructure is bound to the clerical state, and those who genuinely feared the alternative more than the regime. The January 2026 massacre (Event 10) did not eliminate these constituencies; it radicalised both sides of the divide simultaneously. Decades of state investment in religious and ideological infrastructure — mosques, seminaries, state media — have produced a genuine social base for the Islamic Republic that cannot be dismissed as pure performance, even if its size relative to the opposition is uncertain.

Escalation

The existence of organised pro-regime mourning crowds alongside street celebrations creates conditions for inter-communal confrontation. If IRGC units (Event 2) are protecting or facilitating mourning gatherings while simultaneously intimidating celebratory crowds, the potential for direct violent clashes between the two groups increases significantly. Historical transitions from authoritarian regimes in which the security apparatus retains armed capacity — Iraq 2003, Libya 2011 — demonstrate that dual-crowd dynamics can rapidly transition from parallel protest to active conflict. The interim council's ability to prevent such confrontation is uncertain given the disruption to command structures following the strikes.

What could happen next?
1 meaning2 risk1 consequence1 precedent
  • Meaning

    The dual crowd reveals that Iran is not experiencing a unified liberation but a contested societal fracture that will define the political character of whatever governance follows.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Direct confrontation between mourning and celebration crowds, particularly if IRGC units align with one side, could trigger inter-communal violence in Tehran and other major cities.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Pro-regime constituencies, even if currently a minority, represent a durable political base that any interim or successor government will need to manage rather than simply suppress.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The societal fracture visible in dual crowds will be exploited by external actors — Russia, China, and regional proxies — to sustain instability and prevent consolidation of any pro-Western successor government.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If mourning crowds provide a social base for IRGC remnants to reconstitute political authority, Iran could follow a trajectory similar to post-2003 Iraq, where regime remnants became the nucleus of sustained insurgency.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Bread lines and IRGC fear inside Iran

Middle East Eye· 1 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Mourning and fireworks on Iran streets
The simultaneous mourning and celebrating reveals that Iran's population is deeply fractured along lines that predate the strikes, complicating any narrative — Western or Iranian government — that claims to speak for 'the Iranian people' as a whole.
Different Perspectives
Human rights monitors (Hengaw, Amnesty International, Iran HRM)
Human rights monitors (Hengaw, Amnesty International, Iran HRM)
Monitors documented a second death sentence for Zahra Tabari, 68, reported cemetery record deletions at Behesht-e Zahra, and a poll showing 81.5% of medical residents want to emigrate, against a background of 200+ confirmed executions since February. Iran's security courts operate at uninterrupted wartime tempo regardless of the diplomatic track.
Pakistan (mediator)
Pakistan (mediator)
Islamabad carried Trump's revised MOU demanding HEU destruction to Iranian negotiators, 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.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait intercepted Iranian missiles and drones for a second time in days on 1 June, with air-raid sirens sounding nationwide, after invoking Article 51 self-defence on 28 May following the Ali Al Salem ballistic-missile strike. The repeated interceptions test whether Kuwait's domestic politics can sustain hosting US forces as a de facto co-belligerent.
China (PRC)
China (PRC)
Beijing sent scholars to Shangri-La rather than its defence minister and addressed Taiwan without mentioning Iran, maintaining bilateral energy corridor protection with Tehran while refusing diplomatic exposure at multilateral forums. Trump barred China as an HEU custodian on 27 May, removing Beijing from the deal architecture while China continues supplying DPI hardware that caps Iran's internet.
Lloyd's of London / war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's of London / war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's held its Hormuz war-risk designation at $10-14 million per voyage while Brent recovered to $93.91, maintaining the structural divergence from futures pricing that has persisted since late May. Underwriters require a UN Security Council resolution or government certification letter, not diplomatic optimism.
Gulf Cooperation Council states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar)
Gulf Cooperation Council states (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar)
Five Gulf states wrote to the IMO on 21 May rejecting Iran's PGSA transit authority over international waters; Saudi Arabia and the UAE have not confirmed participation in the European Hormuz mission. The GCC is navigating between US security guarantees and exposure to Iranian fire, with no Gulf state formally co-belligerent except Kuwait.