Hassan Ahmadian is best understood through David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory as the internal-regime interpreter who explains the strategic logic of the Islamic Republic to foreign audiences.
Most Iran analysts I have been decoding sit outside the Iranian state ecosystem. Ahmadian is unusual because he speaks from inside it. He is an associate professor at the University of Tehran and has appeared in Western outlets and media explaining Tehran’s strategic thinking during the current conflict.
That positioning makes him valuable. Western analysts rarely get direct access to voices operating within Iran’s policy discourse.
1. Institutional position
Ahmadian works inside the Iranian academic and strategic policy environment.
Iranian universities and think-tank circles are closely tied to the state. Scholars often overlap with advisory roles in diplomacy, security policy, or ideological institutions.
In Alliance Theory terms, he operates within the regime-aligned intellectual alliance. This alliance includes:
state universities
strategic think tanks close to the government
policy advisers
media voices explaining Iran’s worldview
These actors do not necessarily hold formal political office but help articulate the regime’s interpretation of events.
2. His core message: system durability
Ahmadian’s commentary consistently emphasizes one theme.
The Islamic Republic is institutionalized, not dependent on any single leader.
This message appears frequently in interviews and commentary where he argues that Iran will retaliate against attacks and that external pressure will not quickly break the system.
In Alliance Theory terms, that narrative performs a stabilization function.
Authoritarian systems survive by convincing both insiders and outsiders that the regime is structurally durable.
The argument runs like this.
Leaders can die.
Commanders can be assassinated.
Facilities can be destroyed.
But the system remains intact.
That narrative is important for three audiences:
domestic elites who must remain loyal
foreign adversaries deciding whether pressure will work
regional allies deciding whether Iran is still a reliable partner
3. His strategic framing of the war
In recent commentary he has argued that Iran is willing to absorb costs and retaliate in order to restore deterrence.
This reflects a core Iranian strategic principle.
Deterrence in the Middle East depends heavily on reputation. If Iran appears unable to respond to attacks, it risks encouraging more strikes.
So Ahmadian’s argument emphasizes endurance rather than immediate victory.
Iran’s goal is to show it can impose costs over time.
4. His alliance role
Within the global Iran discourse, Ahmadian serves a unique role.
He acts as a regime-side explainer.
Most Western analysts interpret Iran from the outside.
Ahmadian explains how Iranian strategic thinkers interpret the same events.
This gives journalists and analysts a rare window into the mindset of Tehran’s policy circles.
5. How he differs from other experts
The Iran analysis ecosystem has clear role differentiation.
Afshon Ostovar explains the IRGC structure.
Farzin Nadimi explains Iranian weapons systems.
Reid Pauly explains nuclear coercion theory.
Holly Dagres explains Iranian society and protests.
Ahmadian represents the internal strategic narrative of the Iranian state.
His analysis tells you what the regime wants outsiders to believe about its resilience and intentions.
6. Alliance Theory summary
In Alliance Theory terms, Hassan Ahmadian is a legitimacy and durability narrator for the Islamic Republic’s strategic coalition.
His job is to communicate that the Iranian system is deeper than individual leaders and that external pressure will not easily break the institutional foundations of the regime.
Hassan Ahmadian represents the internal strategic voice of the Iranian state. While other experts you’ve decoded act as maps or technical specs for the Western security establishment, Ahmadian is the voice of the institutional apparatus itself.
His function is to project a image of durability and predictability from within a system that outsiders often view as fragile or chaotic, especially following the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28, 2026.
The “System over Persona” Narrative
Ahmadian’s primary alliance function is to stabilize the perception of the Iranian state during the current succession crisis. In his March 4, 2026, commentary, he emphasized that “the process of electing a new leader is in motion” and that “the Islamic system is deeply institutionalized.”
The Institutional Buffer: He argues that there is no power vacuum. In Pinsof’s terms, this is a legitimacy signal to both domestic elites and foreign adversaries. By claiming that “each governmental unit fulfilled its respective function” from the moment of the assassination, he refutes the “decapitation” narrative favored by the U.S. and Israeli security alliances.
Tacit Knowledge of the “Beyt”: Ahmadian’s location at the University of Tehran gives him a unique “inside-out” view. He translates the complex interplay between the Assembly of Experts, the Guardian Council, and the IRGC into a coherent story of constitutional continuity.
The Death of “Strategic Patience”
Ahmadian has recently shifted his framing of Iranian strategy, moving away from the decades-long doctrine of “strategic patience.”The June Lesson: He argues that the June 2025 “Twelve-Day War” taught Tehran that “restraint is interpreted as weakness.” This provides a deterrence logic for the massive Iranian retaliation seen in early March 2026.The “Cost-Imposition” Strategy: He explains that Iran’s current goal is not to “win” a head-to-head war against the U.S.—which he admits is impossible—but to outlast the adversary by imposing “unbearable costs” on American regional interests and global energy markets.
The “Funeral Trap” and Social Cohesion
In his March 2026 interviews, Ahmadian highlighted how the regime uses the 40-day mourning period for Khamenei as a strategic tool.Symmetry of Grief and Strategy: He characterizes the mourning as a “funeral trap” for the opposition. By flooding the streets with millions of mourners, the regime creates a “human shield” that makes anti-government protests logistically and morally difficult.
The “Polarized Society” Acknowledgment: Unlike pure propagandists, Ahmadian acknowledges that Iranian society is “sharply polarized” and that people have “serious grievances.” However, he argues that the “silent majority” is not seeking an American-backed overthrow, thereby challenging the “regime change” assumptions of the Western liberal-democratic alliance (like that of Abbas Milani).
Hassan Ahmadian is the epistemic bridge between the Iranian state and the Western media.Afshon Ostovar maps the IRGC’s power.
Farzin Nadimi maps the military hardware.
Hassan Ahmadian maps the regime’s intent.
In the current war, he is the voice explaining that the 1979 order is not a “house of cards” but a “deeply rooted institution” that will fight a war of attrition to survive. He ensures that when the Western alliance looks at Tehran, they see a system that is “ready for war, but preferring a diplomatic settlement”—as long as that settlement is not a “submission.”
