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Iran Conflict 2026
22MAR

36,000 dead in Iran's January crackdown

4 min read
05:50UTC

Iran International estimates security forces killed 36,000 or more protesters in two days. If confirmed, the January massacre explains why Iranians are cheering the destruction of their own government.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

If even partially accurate, the January death toll represents a qualitative rupture in the history of state violence against civilians — and is the single most important contextual fact for understanding why many Iranians are celebrating the regime's destruction.

Iran International estimated that Iranian security forces killed 36,000 or more protesters on 8 and 9 January 2026. Thousands more were arrested. No independent body — not the United Nations, not the International Criminal Court, not any humanitarian organisation with ground access — has verified the toll. A complete internet blackout accompanied the killings and severed the country from outside observation at the moment it most needed witnesses.

If the figure is accurate, it dwarfs comparable events in recent decades. The Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989 killed between 1,000 and 3,000, according to declassified British diplomatic cables. Iran's own 'Bloody November' of 2019 killed an estimated 1,500, according to Reuters. Syria's deadliest single chemical attack — Ghouta, August 2013 — killed between 281 and 1,729 depending on the source. A toll of 36,000 in 48 hours would be state violence without modern precedent outside full-scale war.

The massacres followed months of escalating unrest. Protests described as the largest since the 1979 revolution had spread across more than 100 cities since December 2025 , driven by the rial's collapse and economic breakdown. The government's response was mass killing rather than concession. President Pezeshkian, who now sits on the three-person interim leadership council , publicly apologised for the crackdown, according to Iran International — an admission, from a sitting president, that the state's own actions were indefensible.

This is the fact that makes the street celebrations intelligible. Iranians cheering the destruction of IRGC facilities are not expressing gratitude toward Washington. They watched their own government gun down tens of thousands of their neighbours six weeks earlier. The apparatus of that repression — the IRGC, the Basij, the Security Council that ordered the crackdown — has now itself been struck. The fireworks over Tehran are relief that the machinery of domestic terror has been broken, not endorsement of the external force that broke it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran International — a Persian-language satellite broadcaster widely watched by Iranians both inside the country and in the diaspora — has estimated that Iranian security forces killed 36,000 or more people in just two days during the January 2026 protests. To place this in context: the Tiananmen Square massacre in China in 1989, one of the most infamous government crackdowns in modern history, is estimated to have killed somewhere between several hundred and a few thousand people. The Srebrenica genocide — the worst atrocity in Europe since the Second World War — killed approximately 8,000 people. If the 36,000 figure is anywhere near accurate, this would represent one of the worst instances of a government killing its own people in the 20th or 21st century. The figure has not been independently verified by any UN body, human rights organisation, or journalist with access to Iran.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 36,000 figure — unverified but now politically operative — fundamentally reframes the meaning of the celebrations on Tehran's streets. These are not, as some Western commentary initially framed them, a population greeting foreign liberators with gratitude. They are people who watched their government gun down their neighbours six weeks ago and are expressing relief that the machinery of that domestic terror has been broken. This distinction matters enormously for long-term analysis: populations that celebrate regime destruction after witnessing mass killing by that regime are not expressing pro-American sentiment; they are expressing anti-regime sentiment that may very quickly convert into anti-occupation or anti-intervention sentiment if foreign actors overreach. The 1953 CIA coup and its 26-year delayed consequence — the Islamic Revolution — is the cautionary precedent the narrative explicitly invokes.

Root Causes

The January 2026 crackdown was rooted in the regime's assessment that the December 2025 protest wave — described in the source narrative as the largest since 1979 — posed an existential threat to its survival. The IRGC and Basij had already demonstrated escalating willingness to use lethal force in 2009 (dozens killed), 2019 (hundreds to over a thousand killed), and 2022 (hundreds killed) — each successive crackdown larger than the last. The complete internet blackout that accompanied the January killings (reported as a separate event in this briefing cycle) indicates the regime was aware the scale of violence exceeded any internationally defensible threshold and required concealment from the outset. The underlying driver is the structural logic of an authoritarian system that, having foreclosed all non-violent channels for political change, had no non-lethal mechanism to suppress a mass uprising.

Escalation

The January massacres do not directly drive immediate kinetic escalation, but they profoundly shape the political environment in which any post-conflict settlement must be constructed. Perpetrators — IRGC commanders, Basij unit leaders, intelligence service heads — face individual criminal liability at a scale that makes compliance with accountability mechanisms existentially threatening to them personally. This creates strong incentives for armed resistance to any transitional political process, potentially prolonging instability. The massacres also provide retroactive moral justification for the strikes that Washington and Jerusalem will deploy in any international forum, making it harder for Russia and China to sustain an unqualified 'illegal aggression' framing without appearing to defend a regime that killed 36,000 of its own citizens.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The January death toll is the essential context for interpreting street celebrations: they reflect relief from domestic terror, not gratitude toward Washington, and should not be read as a stable pro-Western political alignment.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Perpetrators of the January massacres have individual incentives to resist any accountability mechanism, potentially sustaining armed resistance to transitional political processes.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The scale of the crackdown, if verified, would constitute one of the most severe crimes against humanity in modern history and create individual criminal liability extending to senior commanders, some of whom may now hold positions in Iran's transitional structures.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    If the 36,000 figure is confirmed and international accountability mechanisms fail to respond, it will set a precedent that mass domestic killings at this scale do not trigger effective international legal consequences.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Bread lines and IRGC fear inside Iran

Iran International· 1 Mar 2026
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