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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The secret Iran war — suppressed by the regime, behind Internet walls

 For 55 days and counting, the Islamic Republic of Iran has kept 92 million people offline.

The blackout that began on Feb. 28 with the onset of Operation Epic Fury is now the longest nationwide Internet shutdown in recorded history: over 1,296 hours of forced darkness.

Tehran’s own communications minister admits that the shutdown is bleeding the economy of roughly $35 million daily. NetBlocks puts total losses at nearly $2 billion. Meanwhile, 80 percent of online sales have vanished, and small businesses are going bankrupt by the hour.

A regime that has told its people for 47 years that the enemy is outside the country is now helping to further tank its own economy to keep people from talking to each other.

A person in a black abaya holds up a poster featuring an illustration of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
For fifty-five days and counting, the Islamic Republic of Iran has kept ninety-two million people offline.AFP via Getty Images

The Islamic Republic has always had one true Achilles’ heel, and it is not Israeli jets or American sanctions. It is the Iranian street.

The ayatollahs understand this in their bones because they came to power the same way.

In 1979, the revolution that carried Khomeini from exile in Paris to power in Tehran began with smuggled cassette tapes, bazaar merchants closing their shutters, university students pouring into streets, and ordinary Iranians contesting the Shah’s security apparatus.

The men now clinging to power in Tehran know exactly how a regime falls because they wrote the manual.

Which is why they cannot allow the Iranian people to tell their own story to one another, or to the world.

And the Iranian people are very good at telling that story.

In June 2009, when the fraudulent re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sent millions into the streets under the banner of the Green Revolution, Iranians became the first people in human history to power a political uprising with social media.

The world called it the Twitter Revolution for a reason. Young women in Tehran uploaded grainy phone videos of Basij militiamen beating protesters. Students livestreamed from rooftops. A generation of citizen journalists introduced the West to an Iran it had not seen since 1979, a country of modern, educated, style-conscious, cosmopolitan young people who wanted exactly what young people in Los Angeles and London want: Just basic freedoms.

A young woman named Neda Agha-Soltan bled out on a Tehran sidewalk that summer and the whole world watched, because a stranger with a phone filmed it. That 40-second clip did more damage to the regime’s legitimacy than any foreign interdiction.

A UN convoy driving through destroyed houses in southern Lebanon near the Israeli border.
A UN convoy driving close to destroyed buildings in Lebanon near the Israel border.AFP via Getty Images

The ayatollahs learned that if the Iranian people can broadcast themselves, the regime cannot control the narrative, and if the regime cannot control the narrative, the regime cannot survive.

Cut the cable. Silence the country. Let no image of a burning billboard, no video of a woman removing her hijab, no audio of a bazaari denouncing the regime reach the outside world or even the next town over.

And the hypocrisy is hard to miss. The regime that has silenced 92 million people runs one of the most aggressive social media operations in the region.

The office of the supreme leader posts in 11 languages. The Foreign Ministry tweets through the blackout. IRGC outlets flood Telegram and X with war propaganda from a country the regime insists has gone dark. Regime officials post glossy photo-ops to the same Instagram their citizens can be arrested for opening.

The blackout tells us where the regime is weakest. In the middle of a war with the United States and Israel, the mullahs are just as afraid of the young woman in Shiraz with a phone, because she is the one who can finish what the streets of 1979 began and what the streets of 2009 started.

That fear is a gift to American strategy. For a generation, we have debated Iran policy in the vocabulary of centrifuges and sanctions and carrier groups. The regime itself is telling us its vulnerability is its own people, reconnected to one another and to the world.

A serious Iran strategy therefore begins with getting the Iranian people back online. We need Starlink terminals, and Psiphon and VPN licenses funded at scale and pushed through diaspora networks already built for the job.

Treasury designations should target Chinese and European firms selling Tehran its surveillance apparatus with secondary sanctions teeth that actually bite. The US should amplify every image, video and voice that makes it past the firewall, so that Iranians inside the country know the world is watching.

This costs a fraction of a single B-2 sortie. It targets the regime’s legitimacy and aligns American power with the 92 million people the mullahs have spent almost five decades lying about.

The regime has told us how to defeat it. The Iranian people are waiting to tell their story. Our job is to make sure the world hears it.

Lisa Daftari is a foreign policy analyst and media commentator based in Los Angeles.

https://nypost.com/2026/04/29/opinion/the-secret-iran-war-suppressed-by-the-regime/

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