Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
1MAR

IRIB broadcaster struck again in Tehran

3 min read
12:00UTC

The same state broadcaster headquarters hit during June's twelve-day war was bombed overnight — the fourth category of Iranian institution targeted in 72 hours.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The IRIB strike completes targeting across all four pillars of Iranian state power simultaneously, which in prior Western air campaigns has been the operational signature of regime-change strategy regardless of stated objectives.

IRIB Director Peyman Jebelli confirmed overnight that the state broadcaster's Tehran headquarters was struck — the same facility hit during the Twelve-Day War in June. Broadcasting has not been interrupted. Contingency transmission systems installed after that earlier attack kept IRIB on air, evidence that Iranian institutional planning assumed a second campaign.

The target fits a pattern. The campaign's opening hours destroyed the IRGC's Sarallah Headquarters in Tehran and struck the Assembly of Experts' compound in Tehran, where Iran's next Supreme Leader would be selected . Up to 40 senior officials have been killed . Adding the state broadcaster means the campaign has struck across four institutional categories: military command, political leadership, religious authority, and state communications. The sequence is consistent with a doctrine of institutional dismantlement rather than purely military degradation.

The closest precedent is NATO's April 1999 strike on Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) in Belgrade, which killed 16 staff members. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia examined the strike and concluded it was of "dubious legality" — the legal question turned on whether a state broadcaster is a civilian object or a facility contributing to the war effort. IRIB's role in broadcasting military communications and coordinating civil defence complicates direct comparison, but the core legal tension is identical: at what point does a government's communication apparatus become a military target?

IRIB's contingency systems — installed after the June strike — kept broadcasts running through the second attack. The state's information infrastructure has shown more resilience than its military command: up to 40 senior officials are dead, the foreign minister has acknowledged units operating outside central direction , and no successor to the Supreme Leader has been named . Iran prepared for this war. Its preparations were uneven.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

IRIB is Iran's national broadcaster — the equivalent of the BBC — and the primary source of news for tens of millions of Iranians. Striking it serves two purposes: denying the government its main tool for controlling the domestic narrative during wartime, and signalling that no institution of the Iranian state is protected. Iran had contingency broadcast systems ready precisely because the same building was struck in a previous conflict, which means the attack's practical effect on broadcasting is limited — but its symbolic and legal significance is substantial.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The combined targeting of IRIB, the Sarallah IRGC headquarters, the Assembly of Experts, and underground ballistic missile infrastructure maps onto what US doctrine calls 'strategic paralysis' — severing simultaneously the regime's capacity to command forces, govern, project religious authority, and communicate with its population. This is the doctrinal signature of a campaign designed to collapse a government, not coerce it.

Root Causes

Under the Law of Armed Conflict — specifically Additional Protocol I, Article 52 — state broadcasters lose protected status only when they constitute military objectives making an effective contribution to military action. US targeting doctrine (Joint Publication 3-60) applies this threshold permissively to propaganda organs that sustain enemy will to fight. The legal exposure is real but historically has not prevented such strikes; it typically surfaces as post-conflict accountability.

Escalation

Targeting information infrastructure in the same campaign wave as military, political, and religious institutions historically presages regime-change operations even when officially denied — this was the sequencing in Serbia 1999, Iraq 2003, and Libya 2011. The Hegseth/Rubio contradiction on war aims (Event 16) is materially harder to sustain once the targeting pattern is mapped against US joint targeting doctrine.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Striking a state broadcaster alongside military and governmental targets normalises the targeting of information infrastructure in Western-backed air campaigns, lowering the threshold for similar strikes in future conflicts.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Post-conflict accountability processes — ICC referral, UN fact-finding — are more likely to include the IRIB strike as a case study if civilian casualties inside the building are confirmed.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    Iran's domestic population loses its primary state information channel at the moment casualty figures and displacement are highest, accelerating reliance on informal and foreign-broadcast sources that the government cannot control.

    Immediate · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #12 · Rubio rewrites war's legal case in Congress

NBC News· 3 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
IRIB broadcaster struck again in Tehran
The strike on IRIB, alongside the IRGC's Sarallah headquarters, the Assembly of Experts in Qom, and senior leadership residences, indicates the campaign is dismantling Iran's governing infrastructure across military, political, religious, and informational domains simultaneously. The targeting of a state broadcaster raises questions under international humanitarian law about the dual-use classification of media facilities — questions last formally examined after NATO's 1999 strike on Serbian state television.
Different Perspectives
IAEA
IAEA
Director General Rafael Grossi appeared in person at the UNSC on 19 May and warned that a direct hit on an operating reactor 'could result in very high release of radioactivity'. The session produced a condemnation record but no resolution, and the Barakah perimeter was already struck on 17 May.
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw documented three judicial executions and the detention of Kurdish writer Majid Karimi in Tehran on 19 May, establishing Khorasan Razavi province as the newest geography in Iran's wartime judicial record. The organisation's Norway-based operation continues to surface a domestic repression track running in parallel with every diplomatic and military development.
India
India
Six India-flagged vessels conducted a coordinated cluster transit under PGSA bilateral assurances during the 17 May window, paying no yuan tolls. New Delhi's inclusion in Iran's state-to-state passage track insulates Indian energy supply without requiring endorsement of the PGSA's yuan-toll architecture or alignment with the US coalition.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan is the only functioning diplomatic bridge between Tehran and Washington. Its role is relay, not mediation in the settlement sense: it conveyed Iran's 10-point counter-MOU in early May, relayed the US rejection, and is now passing 'corrective points' in the third documented exchange of this sub-cycle without either side working from a shared text.
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
Twenty-six coalition members have published no rules of engagement eight days after the Bahrain joint statement; Lloyd's underwriters have conditioned war-risk reopening on written ROE from either Iran or the coalition. Italian and French mine-countermeasures deployments are operating on the in-water clearance task CENTCOM Admiral Brad Cooper's 90% mine-stockpile claim does not address.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh has not publicly commented on the Barakah strike or the 50-47 discharge vote. Saudi output feeds the IEA's $106 base case; the $5 Brent premium above that model reflects institutional uncertainty no Gulf producer can compress through supply adjustment alone.