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Iran Conflict 2026
1MAR

Iran killed protesters under blackout

3 min read
19:00UTC

Iran severed all internet connectivity as security forces killed an estimated 36,000 protesters in January 2026 — the same blackout tactic that hid the true scale of the 2019 killings for months.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The internet blackout was a premeditated operational component of the January 2026 massacre, not a reactive measure, and its imposition before killing began is forensic evidence of state-level intent.

Iran imposed a complete internet blackout during the 8–9 January 2026 security force crackdown that killed an estimated 36,000 or more protesters, according to Iran International. Mobile data, fixed-line broadband, and international connectivity were severed simultaneously. Iran's internet architecture makes this operationally straightforward: all international traffic routes through government-controlled chokepoints managed by the Telecommunications Infrastructure Company of Iran, and the Supreme Council of Cyberspace holds shutdown authority. NetBlocks, the internet observatory that has tracked Iranian connectivity disruptions since 2017, has documented Tehran deploying shutdowns of increasing scope and sophistication — from regional throttling during the 2017–2018 protests to near-total national blackouts.

Iran used this method before to lethal effect. During the November 2019 protests — known domestically as Bloody Aban — authorities imposed a near-total internet shutdown lasting approximately one week. Reuters, citing three Iranian interior ministry officials, later reported that approximately 1,500 people were killed during that blackout. The death toll took months to surface because the shutdown prevented real-time documentation, witness communication, and the transmission of visual evidence. The 2026 blackout followed the same operational logic on a far larger scale: sever the population's ability to record, coordinate, and transmit evidence while the killing is under way. Amnesty International's subsequent documentation of snipers targeting heads and torsos relied on testimony gathered after connectivity was restored — meaning the forensic picture of the January crackdown remains incomplete and dependent on survivor accounts rather than contemporaneous footage.

The information vacuum shaped how the outside world understood what followed. The mass protests building since December 2025 were met with lethal force behind a digital curtain, and the scale of the January killing remained largely invisible to international audiences for weeks. By the time US-Israeli strikes hit on 27 February, Western media coverage led with Iranian street celebrations and fireworks — real events, but ones that read very differently with and without knowledge of what those celebrating had survived at their own government's hands six weeks earlier. Chinese state media, according to analysis by The Diplomat, showed none of the celebrations at all. The blackout did not merely accompany the killing. It determined how long it took the world to understand why Iranians would cheer foreign bombs falling on their own capital.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When governments plan to use lethal force against large numbers of their own citizens, they frequently cut the internet first. Doing so stops protesters from coordinating in real time, prevents journalists and bystanders from uploading footage, and delays international condemnation long enough for the operation to be completed. Iran did exactly this in January 2026: the blackout went up, the killing happened, and by the time connectivity was restored, tens of thousands were already dead. The outside world — and Iranians in other cities — were partially blind throughout. This is why the death toll estimates vary so widely: the blackout created an evidentiary gap that has not been fully closed.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The internet blackout is simultaneously a tactical tool, a piece of forensic evidence, and a political miscalculation. As a tool, it achieved its immediate objective: suppressing real-time documentation and coordination during the operation. As forensic evidence, its premeditated deployment establishes that the massacre was planned, not improvised — a distinction that matters enormously for any future accountability process. As a political act, it failed: the death toll estimates that subsequently emerged, amplified by diaspora networks and organisations such as Iran International and Amnesty International, proved more damaging to the regime's legitimacy than real-time footage might have been, because they were attached to a narrative of deliberate concealment. The blackout also accelerated international legal responses — the EU designation of the IRGC, which followed directly from the January events, would have been politically harder to achieve had the massacre been less clearly premeditated. In suppressing the evidence of its own atrocity, the regime inadvertently strengthened the case for the institutional designation that would ultimately contribute to its isolation.

Root Causes

The Islamic Republic developed internet suppression as a counterinsurgency instrument following the 2009 Green Movement, when social media coordination proved decisive in sustaining protest momentum. By 2019 the capability had matured into a deployable tool requiring centralised authorisation. The January 2026 decision to impose a complete blackout — as opposed to the partial throttling used in earlier protest cycles — reflects a regime calculation that the scale of force being deployed required maximum information control. It also reflects institutional learning from the 2022 Mahsa Amini protests, during which partial blackouts failed to prevent global visibility of security force conduct. The full blackout in January 2026 was the logical endpoint of a decade-long escalation in Iran's information-control doctrine.

Escalation

The imposition of a complete internet blackout before mass killings began establishes premeditation and centralised command authority over the January 2026 operation. This finding has direct implications for the current conflict: it means the decision to kill at scale was made at the highest levels of the IRGC and Supreme Leader's office — not by local commanders losing control of a situation. That level of institutional culpability strengthens the legal and political case for treating the IRGC as an organisation that planned and executed mass atrocity, which in turn provides the evidentiary foundation for the EU's subsequent designation. The blackout tactic also failed in its ultimate purpose: enough footage, testimony, and data escaped — through VPNs, satellite connections, and delayed uploads — to generate the documentation that drove international condemnation. Future actors considering similar tactics will note that blackouts buy time but do not achieve permanent suppression.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The premeditated blackout confirms the January 2026 massacre was a centrally planned state operation, not a loss of command-and-control over local security forces.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Evidentiary gaps created by the blackout will complicate future international accountability proceedings, as critical forensic windows — the first hours of a mass casualty event — are irrecoverable.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The information vacuum created by the blackout has allowed death toll estimates to range so widely — from thousands to 36,000 — that all figures remain politically contestable, potentially frustrating justice mechanisms that require verified victim counts.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Iran's demonstration that a complete blackout can suppress real-time documentation of a mass atrocity, even if it fails to prevent eventual exposure, may be studied and replicated by other authoritarian states facing large-scale domestic unrest.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Bread lines and IRGC fear inside Iran

Iran International· 1 Mar 2026
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