
Drop Site News How the U.S. and Israel Are Trying to Co-opt Iran's Protests
Jan 13, 2026
Samira Mohyeddin, an Iranian-Canadian journalist and managing editor at On The Line Media, teams up with Narges Bajoghli, an associate professor of anthropology at Johns Hopkins, to unpack the recent protests in Iran. They explore how economic collapse and sanctions sparked mass unrest and the role of media narratives in shaping perceptions. The guests analyze the risks of U.S. military intervention and discuss the complexities of Iranian civil society. They also critique the influence of foreign powers and underscore the urgent need for internal reform.
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Sanctions Fueled The Economic Spark
- Sanctions and economic mismanagement drove inflation and currency collapse that sparked the protests.
- Murtaza Hussain and Jeremy Scahill emphasize sanctions as a deliberate pressure tool that made daily life unaffordable for many Iranians.
Market Protests Grew Into Broader Unrest
- The protests began in Tehran's Grand Bazaar over the rial's collapse and inflation.
- Samira Mohyeddin notes they started as merchant-led economic protests before broadening into wider unrest.
Foreign Statements Escalated State Violence
- External praise and claims of foreign operatives accelerated state repression.
- Samira links public statements by U.S. and Israeli officials to a quick hardening of Iran's security response.



