President Masoud Pezeshkian has been unable to reach Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei. Repeated meeting requests have gone unanswered. Ahmad Vahidi, the IRGC's effective chief, is blocking civilian government appointments and decision-making . A military council of senior IRGC commanders now oversees daily operations. 1
Pezeshkian has warned privately of "complete economic collapse within three to four weeks without a ceasefire." The IRGC leadership rejected the assessment. A structural paradox governs Tehran: the only person who wants to negotiate cannot, because the institution that would need to accept any deal benefits from the wartime power consolidation that prevents it.
Iran's civilian president signals through back channels that an exit exists. But the IRGC holds actual decision-making authority, and its wartime power would dissolve the moment a ceasefire took hold. Diplomacy fails here because peace would cost the people blocking it their power.
