Tehran (Iran): Tehran is actively preparing for a potential military conflict with the United States amid deep-seated distrust of Washington’s diplomatic intentions. According to strategic assessments, Iranian leadership is treating the Strait of Hormuz as its ultimate geopolitical lever to counter Western pressure. The Islamic Republic’s current strategy is operating across three distinct pillars comprising robust military readiness, consolidation of domestic support, and backchannel diplomacy. While diplomatic channels technically remain open to avert an all-out crisis, the regular Armed Forces and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps have been placed on maximum combat alert.
Iranian defense planners maintain that the control over the Strait of Hormuz provides an unparalleled strategic advantage, given that a massive portion of the world’s maritime oil transits through the narrow chokepoint daily. Tehran views this economic vulnerability as a critical tool to exert pressure on the United States and its regional allies. Supreme command officials have warned that in the event of active hostilities, American military installations, energy infrastructure, and regional corporate assets will face immediate retaliatory strikes. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps issued a severe warning indicating that any fresh American aggression would trigger an unprecedentedly violent response, with consequences rippling far beyond the borders of the Middle East.
The volatile standoff has been punctuated by high-stakes developments over the past twenty-four hours. Iranian air defense units claimed to have targeted American MQ-9B and RQ-4 surveillance drones, while also reportedly firing upon an F-35 fighter jet that allegedly breached Iranian airspace. Concurrently, the United States military carried out targeted strikes near the Strait of Hormuz against Iranian boats suspected of deploying naval mines, alongside strikes on missile installations in Bandar Abbas, which the US Central Command defended as a necessary act of self-defense. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened an emergency security meeting with top defense officials to review escalation protocols on the northern border, where military strikes against Hezbollah positions in Lebanon have intensified.
Amid these escalating regional tensions, Iran has partially restored global internet access after a near-total digital blackout lasting eighty-eight days, a disruption triggered initially by domestic protests and compounded by the outbreak of external hostilities in late February. The global internet monitor NetBlocks categorized the multi-month shutdown as the longest continuous national internet blackout in modern history, noting that it severely crippled local businesses, severed critical digital communication channels, and provided a screen for extensive security operations. While broadband connections have started flickering back online following an executive directive from President Masoud Pezeshkian, mobile data networks remain largely restricted as hardline judicial and security factions challenge the restoration order.