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Revolutionary Guard generals run Iran as a pragmatic military board

Monday, May 4, 2026 · from 3 podcasts, 4 episodes
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guard generals have sidelined clerical rule, taking direct state control as a military junta.
  • The injured Supreme Leader rubber-stamps decisions from a bunker, allowing generals to pursue sanctions relief and U.S. investment.
  • The generals calculate tolling Strait of Hormuz shipping could earn more than oil exports.

Iran’s clerical theocracy is dead. In its place, a board of Revolutionary Guard generals now runs the country as a military dictatorship, according to Farnaz Fassihi’s reporting from inside Tehran. Decision-making power has shifted decisively from the Supreme Leader to the military council that controls every key lever of state power.

The figurehead leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is a ghost. Severely injured in the war - he lost a leg and suffers severe facial burns affecting his speech - he lives in a high-security bunker with no electronic devices. Communication moves via handwritten letters sealed in envelopes and carried by a human chain of couriers. This lag forces him to delegate nearly all immediate authority to the generals, whom he rubber-stamps to lend their decisions religious legitimacy.

“Whenever I ask my sources in Tehran who is making decisions, the answer is no longer the Supreme Leader, but ‘Sepah’ - the Revolutionary Guards.”

- Farnaz Fassihi, The Daily

This new leadership is motivated by cash and power, not religious ideology. Having sidelined the clerics, the Guard generals are pragmatic businessmen. Their primary goal is sanctions relief to rebuild an economy shattered by an estimated $300 billion to $1 trillion in war losses. To that end, they have proposed an unthinkable reversal: inviting American oil and shipping companies to invest directly in Iran, ending a 47-year ban on U.S. commercial ties.

Even their aggression in the Strait of Hormuz is a commercial calculation. They’ve realized that the threat of sea mines alone can paralyze global trade and spike insurance rates. Now, they plan to monetize the waterway, treating it as a toll road. The generals calculate that charging fees for safe passage could generate more revenue than their entire oil industry, giving them a permanent economic lever against the West.

On Breaking Points, Krystal Ball noted the war is already as unpopular as Vietnam at its worst, but that took six years. The U.S. is now in a weaker position - with oil over $100 a barrel and regional bases degraded - facing a military state that has patched its vulnerabilities.

Former CIA officer John Kiriakou, speaking with Tucker Carlson, argues Washington fundamentally misreads Iran as a fragile theocracy rather than a durable military state. He points out that military states don’t collapse when you kill a religious figure; they consolidate. Attacking Iran triggers a nationalist reflex that bridges the gap between the regime and its secular critics.

“Iran is not a fanatical theocracy but a military dictatorship run by the IRGC. Military states don't collapse when you kill a religious figure; they consolidate.”

- John Kiriakou, The Tucker Carlson Show

The Guard generals’ ideal outcome is a grand bargain ending 47 years of hostilities with the U.S., unlocking frozen assets, and attracting foreign investment to stabilize their rule. They see Israel as a persistent wildcard, fearing covert attacks could continue even after a ceasefire with Washington. For now, they hold the wheel, and their driving motive is regime survival through economic revival, not martyrdom.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

What Does Tucker Carlson Really Believe? I Went to Maine to Find Out.May 2

  • Farnaz Fassihi reports the Revolutionary Guard commanders, not the supreme leader, now make Iran's critical decisions. The shift from clerical rule to a military dictatorship occurred after the war.
  • Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is severely injured and in hiding. He lost his left leg, had three operations, and suffers severe facial burns affecting his speech.
  • Iranian decision-making now operates like a board of directors. Senior Revolutionary Guard generals propose actions, and Khamenei rubber-stamps them from his secret location.
  • The Revolutionary Guards rose to power by securing borders, managing proxy groups like Hezbollah and Hamas, and crushing domestic protests. The war created an opening for them to dominate.
  • Fassihi argues the Guard generals are pragmatic, motivated by power and money, not clerical ideology. Their self-preservation instinct makes them more open to a deal with the U.S. than the former clerical leadership.
  • Iran's primary goals in negotiations are sanctions relief and an end to hostilities. The war caused an estimated $300 billion to $1 trillion in economic losses.
  • Revolutionary Guard generals have proposed letting U.S. oil and shipping companies invest in Iran for reconstruction. This reverses the late Ayatollah Khamenei's ban on American business involvement.
  • Iran views controlling the Strait of Hormuz as a lucrative tool. They calculate tolling ships could generate more revenue than oil exports.
  • Both Iran and the U.S. need a face-saving deal. Trump needs to claim victory, and Iran cannot look like it capitulated due to the war.
  • Israel remains a wild card for Iran. Leaders fear covert attacks and assassinations could continue even after a ceasefire with the U.S.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • The gunman at the White House Correspondents' Dinner was identified as Cole Thomas Allen, a 31-year-old from California. He was armed with knives, a shotgun, and a handgun.
  • President Trump cited the shooting as a reason to build a larger, more secure ballroom in the White House East Wing, describing it as dome-proof and bulletproof.

Who’s Really Running Iran?Apr 27

  • Farnaz Fassihi's month-long reporting inside Iran, including 22 interviews with senior officials and Revolutionary Guard members, reveals decision-making power has shifted decisively from the Supreme Leader to the Guards.
  • The Revolutionary Guards have evolved from an elite military force into a parallel power with key government positions and a vast economic conglomerate spanning energy, transportation, and tourism. The war has made them the dominant power.
  • Supreme Leader Moushabi is gravely injured from the initial air strikes, with a possible leg amputation, three operations, severe facial burns, and difficulty speaking, limiting his public role. Israeli assassination threats have forced him into a high-security hideout with communication limited to handwritten letters.
  • Moushabi's deep, decades-long personal bonds with Guard commanders, forged as teenage volunteers in the Iran-Iraq War's Habib Brigade, underpin the current trust and collaborative rule.
  • Fassihi argues Iran is transforming from a clerical theocracy into a military dictatorship with a cleric as its figurehead leader.
  • The Guard generals are more pragmatic than ideological clerics, motivated by power and economic survival rather than religious doctrine. This shift enabled them to directly negotiate with the US five weeks after their Supreme Leader was killed.
  • Iran's key incentive for a deal is sanctions relief to rebuild a shattered economy, with war losses estimated between $300 billion and $1 trillion. The Guards have proposed allowing American oil and shipping companies to invest, reversing a 47-year ban.
  • Iran views controlling the Strait of Hormuz as a monetizable tool, calculating they can earn more from tolling ships than from oil revenues. They use threats like mines to disrupt global shipping for leverage.
  • Major unresolved negotiation points include the level of uranium enrichment Iran will stop at and how both the US and Iran can save face and avoid looking like they capitulated.
  • Iran's leaders see Israel as a persistent post-war threat of covert operations and assassinations, believing the US has influence but not a guarantee to restrain them.
  • The Guards' ideal outcome is a grand deal ending hostilities and Iran's 47-year limbo with the US, leading to sanctions removal, American investment, and domestic stabilization.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • Decision-making now operates like a board of directors, with the Guards' generals as members and the injured Supreme Leader as chairman who approves decisions to lend them legitimacy.
  • A gunman armed with knives, a shotgun, and a handgun breached security at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, exchanging fire before being subdued. The suspect, Cole Thomas Allen, left a note targeting administration officials.

5/1/26: New Iran Strikes Imminent?, Platner Beats Mills, AI UnderClass, JPMorgan MeTooMay 1

  • A Barockravied report indicates Iran delivered a new response on a draft peace deal, signaling diplomacy is not entirely frozen despite Trump considering new military action.
  • Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Bagey said Pakistan has shown good capability in mediation and will remain the mediator, indicating a continued openness to talks.
  • Iran's stated strategic goal is to reach a point where 'the danger of war does not exist,' a direct response to Trump's threats to annihilate their civilization.
  • Iran currently holds under one thousand pounds of sixty percent enriched uranium, compared to the twenty-five thousand pounds removed to Russia in the 2015 deal.
  • Trump claims Iran's drone factories are eighty-two percent destroyed and missile factories almost ninety percent destroyed, framing the conflict as a successful military operation.
  • The U.S. shipped sixty-five hundred tons of munitions and equipment to Israel in twenty-four hours, indicating preparations for potential new strikes on Iran.
  • Republican Senator Ron Johnson reportedly referred to the Iran conflict as a 'two week bombing run,' reflecting initial administration expectations of a quick victory.
  • Ryan Grimm argues the U.S. is in a weaker position for renewed conflict, with oil prices over $100 a barrel and key regional bases destroyed, unlike at the war's start.
  • Krystal Ball notes polling shows the Iran war is already as unpopular as the Vietnam War was at its worst, but it took six years for Vietnam to reach that level.
Also from this episode: (13)

Energy (1)

  • Every U.S. state has higher gas prices compared to a week ago, with Indiana up eighty-four cents, Michigan seventy-two cents, and Ohio sixty cents.

Elections (5)

  • Graham Platner defeated sitting Governor Janet Mills to become the presumptive Democratic Senate nominee in Maine, a victory for a first-time candidate against an established figure.
  • Krystal Ball argues Platner's strength against Susan Collins and his focus on Israel and oligarchs reflects where the normie Democratic base is, not just the activist left.
  • Ryan Grimm notes Schumer's camp claimed they couldn't spend heavily against Platner because it would be politically toxic, given his majority support among Maine Democrats.
  • Zora Mom Donnie said the DNC establishment never reached out to him despite polling forty points ahead, highlighting a disconnect between party leadership and insurgent candidates.
  • DNC Chair Ken Martin refused to release the party's 2024 election autopsy, claiming focus should be on future lessons, not 'navel gazing' or placing blame.

Politics (1)

  • Ryan Grimm speculates the DNC may hide the report to obscure how a billion dollars was spent by specific consultants and firms during the short 2024 campaign.

AI & Tech (4)

  • Emily Jashinsky cites a New York Times piece arguing AI companies' core business model relies on disruption, creating a painful transition that will disempower millions into an underclass.
  • Krystal Ball argues a market logic where companies announcing AI-driven layoffs get stock bumps is front-running AI's actual capability, accelerating job displacement.
  • Ryan Grimm points out the absurdity of the AI doom loop: if AI puts everyone out of work, no one has income to buy the products AI companies sell.
  • An AI agent allegedly deleted a company's entire database and backups in nine seconds, showcasing the risks of implementing AI without proper safeguards.

Business (2)

  • A New York Post report on JP Morgan executive Lorna Hajdini, which included salacious sexual harassment allegations, appears to have been a complete fabrication by the male accuser.
  • Ryan Grimm warns the Daily Mail's reporting on the JP Morgan case, based on unsealed court documents without verification, could chip away at legal protections for press reporting on court filings.

Ex-CIA Officer John Kiriakou on the Truth About Iran, False Flags, and What’s Really Happening in DCApr 27

  • John Kiriakou asserts that the White House and US intelligence community lacked a consensus for war with Iran, which traditionally requires intelligence estimates and consultation with the State Department, Defense, National Security Advisor, and international allies.
  • Kiriakou claims the US did not consult European or Gulf Arab allies before the current Iran conflict, contrasting this with past wars (1990-91 Gulf War, 2003 Iraq War) where the US prioritized its own interests despite Israeli complaints.
  • Kiriakou argues that US decisions often reflect Israel's best interests over its own, citing two unanimous National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) from all 18 US intelligence organizations concluding Iran has no nuclear weapons program.
  • Kiriakou recounts a 2009-2011 Senate study revealing Afghanistan produced 93% of the world's heroin, alleging a DEA colleague suggested the US government allowed poppy cultivation to weaken Iran and Russia.
  • Kiriakou criticizes the CIA for historically prioritizing anti-communism over counternarcotics, noting that President Trump's reclassification of cartels as foreign terrorist groups could legally empower agencies against them, but has yet to have a significant effect.
  • Kiriakou asserts that diplomacy is the only path to restore stability in the Gulf, forecasting that Iran, now a BRICS country, will emerge stronger and closer to China, Russia, and India, potentially leading to a unified BRICS currency.
  • Kiriakou identifies the MEK (Mujahedin-e-Khalq) as a "quasi-communist cult" that engaged in anti-American terrorism in the 1970s and later paid millions to Washington lobbyists to be removed from the terrorism list in 2009.
  • Kiriakou describes the Shah's son, Reza Pahlavi, as a “playboy” unfit to lead, whose current prominence is a manufactured Israeli preference due to his father's diplomatic relations with Israel.
  • John Kiriakou’s MI6 acquaintance observed British bewilderment at US foreign policy post-9/11, particularly the Iran war, suggesting a decline in US-UK relations and noting a current “actively hostile” relationship with Canada.
  • Kiriakou attributes the Israel lobby's (AIPAC) influence to President Nixon's 1970 policy shift guaranteeing Israel's safety, arguing AIPAC should be required to register as a foreign agent, a measure John F. Kennedy attempted.
Also from this episode: (2)

Politics (2)

  • Kiriakou and Tucker Carlson question why investigations into assassination attempts against former President Trump were halted, attributing this lack of action to either presidential weakness or deeper systemic issues preventing appropriate government investigation.
  • Kiriakou is pessimistic about the US government returning to its original purpose, citing the politicization of the CIA, where 51 senior intelligence officers allegedly lied about the Hunter Biden laptop.