History promises more of this: the scene of an Iranian ballistic missile strike in the Tel Aviv area, June 13, 2025. Times of Israel / Magen David Adom

The joint US–Israel strikes on Iran, which killed the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Tehran’s retaliatory strikes on Israel and neighbouring Arab countries have again plunged the Middle East into war.

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said their aim is to bring about a favorable regime change in Iran. The implications of this for Iran, the region and beyond should not be underestimated.

Although Khamenei’s killing is a significant blow to the Islamic regime, it is not insurmountable. Many Iranian leaders have been killed in the past, including Qassem Soleimani, Tehran’s regional security architect, who was assassinated by the US in January 2020.

But they have been replaced relatively smoothly, and the Islamic regime has endured.

Khamenei’s departure is unlikely to mean the end of the Islamic regime in the short run. He anticipated this eventuality, and reportedly last week arranged a line of succession for his leadership and that of senior military, security and political leaders if they were “martyred.”

However, Khamenei was both a political and spiritual leader. He commanded followers among not only devout Shias in Iran but also Muslims across the wider region. His assassination will spur some of them to seek revenge, potentially sparking a wave of extremist violent actions in the region and beyond.

A regime built for survival

Under a constitutional provision of the Islamic Republic, the Assembly of Experts – the body responsible for appointing and dismissing a supreme leader – will now meet and appoint an interim or long-term leader, either from among their own ranks or outside.

There are three likely candidates to be his successor:

  • Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i, the head of the judiciary
  • Ali Asghar Hejazi, Khamenei’s chief-of-staff
  • Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

The regime has every incentive to do what it must to ensure its survival. There are many regime enforcers and defenders, led by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and its subordinate paramilitary Basij group, across the country to suppress any domestic uprisings and fight for the endurance of the regime.

Their fortunes are intimately tied to the regime. So are a range of administrators and bureaucrats in the Iranian government, as well as regime sympathizers among ordinary Iranians. They are motivated by a blend of Shi’ism and fierce nationalism to remain loyal to the regime.

Trump and Netanyahu have called on the Iranian people – some 60% of whom are below the age of 30 – to topple the regime once the US-Israeli operations have crippled it.

Many are deeply aggrieved by the regime’s theocratic impositions and dire economic situation and took to the streets in protests in late 2025 and early 2026. The regime cracked down harshly then, killing thousands.

Could a public uprising happen now? So far, the coercive and administrative state apparatus seems to be solidly backing the regime. Without serious cracks appearing among these figures – particularly the IRGC – the regime can be expected to survive this crisis.

Global economic pain

The regime has also been able to respond very quickly to outside aggression. It has already hit back at Israel and US military bases across the Persian Gulf, using short-range and long-range advanced ballistic missiles and drones.

While many of the projectiles have been repelled, some have hit their targets, causing serious damage.

The IRGC has also set out to choke the Strait of Hormuz – the narrow strategic waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and Indian Ocean. Some 20% of the world’s oil and 25% of its liquefied gas flows through the strait every day.

The United States vowed to keep the strait open, but the IRGC is potentially well-placed to block traffic from going through. There could be serious implications for the global energy supply and broader economy.

Both sides in this conflict have crossed all of the previous red lines. They are now in open warfare, which is engulfing the entire region.

A prolonged war looks likely

If there was any pretense on the part of Washington and Jerusalem that their attacks would not lead to a regional war, they were wrong. This is already happening.

Many countries that have close cooperation agreements with Iran, including China and Russia, have condemned the US-Israeli actions. The United Nations secretary-general António Guterres has also urgently called for de-escalation and a return to diplomatic negotiations, as have many others.

But the chances for this look very slim. The US and Iran were in the middle of a second round of talks over Tehran’s nuclear program when the attacks happened. The Omani foreign minister, who mediated between the two sides, publicly said just days ago that “peace was within reach.”

But this was not enough to convince Trump and Netanyahu to let the negotiations continue. They sensed now was the best time to strike the Islamic Republic to destroy not just its nuclear program but also its military capability after Israel degraded some of Tehran’s regional affiliates, such as Hamas and Hezbollah, and expanded its footprint in Lebanon and Syria over the last two and a half years.

While it is difficult to be definitive about where the war is likely to lead, the scene is set for a long conflict. It may not last days, but rather weeks. The US and Israel do not want anything short of regime change, and the regime is determined to survive.

With this war, the Trump leadership is also signalling to its adversaries – China, in particular – that the US remains the preeminent global power, while Netanyahu is seeking to cement Israel’s position as the dominant regional actor.

Pity the Iranian people, the region and the world that have to endure the consequences of another war of choice in the Middle East for geopolitical gains in an already deeply troubled world.

Amin Saikal is an emeritus professor of Middle Eastern studies at Australian National University, The University of Western Australia and Victoria University.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Amin Saikal, professor of political science and director of the Center for Arab and Islamic Studies (Middle East and Central Asia) at the Australian National University, is the author of Iran Rising: The Survival and Future of the Islamic Republic.

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19 Comments

  1. The elephant in the room is China’s oil supply. Until yesterday she got fifteen percent of her oil from Iran, heavily discounted too. Add in the four percent lost from Venezuela and that is almost twenty percent of her oil supply discontinued. Europe must be feeling nervous as well, if LNG shipments from the Gulf are interrupted they will have to go back to Russia or pay through the nose for American gas.

    1. China has been stockpiling oil for this moment. Iran will now make the FASCISTS pay big time, bleed them out. Destroy their bases. Iran wins by surviving and defying the West. While Chump lives for the tweets, he is scheduled to visit China end of this month. And do you think China will give him a good deal? China will pop his tiny sack and he will go home with nothing, much like everything else he does.

      1. Oh no the F word. I didn’t realise you also had tourrettes. Too many cousin marriages ?

  2. The Zionist regime is being lit up all across the region. You will not hear it on the gaslighting Western corporate media of course. Take a look at US bases in Bahrain, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, KSA to see how they are doing. UAE is paralyzed, they are unable to support the Rapid Support Forces in their Sudan genocide now. Well done Iran. American operated ports and ships are being attacked.

    And Iran is still using its low quality missiles – the good quality missiles are not yet unleashed. Wait until Houthis join in and groups in Iraq. Chump and his fragile Western ego is going to be battered. USA the evil empire is burning in the Middle East. And the Western media is running cover for its Epstein elite pedo philes.

    This is how you kick an empire out of an entire region.

    1. US gets very little oil from the Mid East. Revolution and destruction will affect China’s oil supply.
      You do know how long the world reserves will last? 30days. Less for China and longer for the USA as they are almost self sufficient

  3. This is what you get when the fake West is hijacked by Jewish and Christian extremism. You Westerners are led by apes.

  4. I don’t understand why Allah hates his true believers, he always gives the best weapons to the infidel. The faithful have been losing for the last three hundred and fifty years with no end in sight.

  5. But back to Turbans. Does the Ayatollah bind his up every day (like Sikhs) or is it ready-made, like a hat. Does it come in any other color, apart from black?
    Can I get a patriotic one – red, white and blue, with the southern cross ?

    1. Regime change not happening. You have been lied to yet again. The same mental midgets advising Chump are selling you koolaids

    1. US bases will be evicted much sooner than Iran will. And their AD will deplete sooner than Iran runs out of missiles.

      The Orange Swindler in Chief made a big mistake with Operatin Epestein’s Fury. Running cover for Jewish pedo philes and child killers.

  6. Every dictatorship is built for survival
    ‘the scene is set for a long conflict. It may not last days, but rather weeks’
    Weeks is not a long conflict, unless it’s Putin’s 3wk SMO !