Iran’s high-status actors do not compete for power by admitting they want it. They compete by invoking moral languages that make their authority appear sacred, necessary, or inevitable. This is the logic David Pinsof‘s Alliance Theory makes visible. Moral vocabularies are not just beliefs. They are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, discipline insiders, and justify control over institutions. Every coalition makes the same structural claim: we should have authority because we uniquely possess something essential. The vocabulary changes. The structure does not.
Iran makes this dynamic unusually transparent because the state is explicitly ideological. The competition is not hidden behind claims of neutrality, as it is in liberal democracies. It is conducted openly through rival interpretations of Islam, revolution, national interest, and survival. That transparency makes Iran a useful case. The same forces operating beneath the surface of American elite competition operate here in plain sight.
Two institutions concentrate this struggle more than any others. The security apparatus and the economic state are Iran’s master institutions. Whoever controls them controls coercion, capital, and the channels through which all other authority flows. What looks like debate over resistance strategy, sanctions relief, or economic reform is, underneath, a jurisdictional war over who gets to define the Islamic Republic itself.
The war over the security state runs along three fault lines. The Revolutionary Guard coalition, centered on the IRGC, its intelligence branches, the Basij, and its vast economic networks, uses the language of resistance, martyrdom, and revolutionary vigilance. The claim is elemental: Iran is under permanent siege, and only those forged in struggle can defend it. Pinsof’s framework decodes this quickly. By framing every domain as a battlefield, the Guard expands its jurisdiction without limit. Economic activity becomes resistance economics. Foreign policy becomes proxy warfare. Domestic dissent becomes infiltration. The language of survival launders institutional expansion as necessity. What looks like ideological commitment also secures control over an estimated thirty to forty percent of GDP through opaque networks that sanctions weaken for rivals while strengthening for those already positioned inside them.
The clerical-religious establishment tied to the Supreme Leader’s office, the Guardian Council, and the Qom seminary network deploys a different kind of authority claim. Its language is guardianship, jurisprudence, and continuity with the founding principles of the revolution. It claims the right to arbitrate what the revolution means, which is a more durable form of power than operational control in some respects because it allows the establishment to validate or constrain other factions without directly displacing them. The clerical core does not need to win every fight. It needs to remain the court before which other coalitions must justify themselves. That interpretive position is what Khamenei held for decades, and what his succession now puts in play.
The third security coalition is the pragmatic-technocratic bloc, overlapping with parts of the regular military, the Foreign Ministry, and older state bureaucracy. Its language is national interest, strategic patience, and regime survival through managed stability. This is not liberalism or reformism. It is an alternative survival theory. It argues that overextension, whether through regional adventurism, proxy escalation, or excessive internal repression, weakens the state more than external pressure does. This coalition’s move is to reframe strength away from permanent mobilization toward adaptive preservation. It competes not by rejecting the Guard’s goals but by questioning its methods.
The economic war follows a parallel structure. The IRGC’s resistance economy bloc uses the language of self-reliance and sanction-busting as moral duty to justify control over industrial, energy, and financial networks that are difficult for rivals to penetrate. Sanctions, in this framing, become both constraint and coordination tool: they punish actors who depend on global integration while reinforcing the Guard’s monopoly over clandestine channels. The reform-technocratic coalition, drawing on economists, urban professionals, and moderate political figures including those in President Masoud Pezeshkian’s orbit, deploys the language of efficiency and development. Its coalition logic is to align the urban middle class, younger professionals, and internationally oriented business interests by framing reform not as ideological deviation but as the only path to genuine national strength. The populist-distributive bloc attacks both of these from below. Its language is justice and the dignity of the oppressed, the mustazafin of Khomeinist rhetoric, repurposed to attack Guard monopolies as corruption and technocratic proposals as elite abandonment. It claims subsidies, welfare networks, and redistribution as its institutional terrain. All three coalitions claim to serve the people. Each defines the people differently, and each definition conveniently extends the authority of the coalition invoking it.
The cultural and epistemic domain is less consolidated but no less important, because it determines which moral languages retain resonance and which begin to decay. The clerical core maintains its monopoly through seminaries, state media, and religious institutions, using the language of piety and authentic tradition. The reformist and intellectual coalition, operating through universities, civil society, and moderate political currents, uses the language of interpretation and pluralism to push from within rather than reject the system outright. The third force has no building or budget. It is the diffuse, generational, diaspora-influenced informal public sphere shaped by digital media, and its language is the authenticity of lived experience against official narrative. It cannot take institutions. It can make official languages feel hollow, which over time is its own form of power.
As of early 2026, all of these dynamics are compressed and intensified by the aftermath of strikes that killed Supreme Leader Khamenei and triggered an acute succession crisis. An interim leadership council governs while the Assembly of Experts deliberates. The IRGC has used wartime conditions to tighten its grip on operational decision-making, consolidating the security coalition’s position even while absorbing losses. Succession speculation centers on figures who can bridge the clerical-security nexus, whether Mojtaba Khamenei, backed by hardliners and IRGC elements, or senior clerics who can credibly claim both doctrinal authority and strategic realism. The pragmatic bloc has space to operate in the margins, particularly around foreign policy and economic management, but the dominant framing is survival, which structurally benefits the Guard.
External pressure behaves as a rebalancing mechanism in this system rather than a destabilizing one in the way outside observers often expect. War and strikes strengthen the Guard’s crisis jurisdiction language. Economic stagnation strengthens the technocratic competence argument. Inequality and corruption scandals strengthen the populist justice claim. Crisis does not resolve the competition. It shifts which moral language carries the most weight at any given moment, and therefore which coalition has the strongest claim on institutional authority.
The system holds not because one coalition has won but because none can fully displace the others without risking collapse. The IRGC cannot govern without clerical legitimacy. The clerical establishment cannot maintain security without Guard muscle. The technocratic bloc cannot implement anything without navigating both. The populist coalition needs state resources that only the other factions control. This mutual dependency is what Pinsof would recognize as the equilibrium: not stability in the ordinary sense, but a persistent jurisdictional contest that the system requires in order to function.
The most powerful actors in Iran are not those who win doctrinal arguments or dominate a single domain. They are those who can bridge coalitions, speaking resistance and pragmatism simultaneously, combining religion with statecraft, and addressing justice without undermining control. That bridging capacity is what Khamenei exercised for decades. The succession question is really a question about who can reassemble a similar coalition architecture under wartime conditions. It may not be a single figure. It may be a council structure that distributes the bridging function across several actors, each speaking to a different coalition in the language it recognizes as legitimate.
Iran is not, in the end, a monolith driven by singular ideology. It is a layered regime where competing elite coalitions each dominate their territory using the moral language that most effectively justifies their position. The instability visible from outside is not a sign of imminent breakdown. It is the functional logic of the system. The regime endures not despite jurisdictional conflict but through it.
Stephen Turner’s convenient beliefs are battle-tested and thriving inside the IRGC command bunkers right now. With Khamenei martyred, nuclear sites turned to rubble, oil terminals smoking, and the U.S.-Israeli air campaign grinding into its second month, these beliefs let the generals, commanders, and economic czars maintain iron discipline, keep the rank-and-file motivated, justify the body count, and preserve their sprawling economic empire even as missiles fly both ways. They coordinate the coalition of hardliners, shield the “resistance economy” from blame, and let every surviving IRGC leader look at the burning horizon and still see victory.
Here are the 10 most useful ones likely circulating in the IRGC high command today:
The Zionist-American aggression has only accelerated the divine victory of the Islamic Revolution.
Every crater is proof that the enemy is panicking; our survival after losing the Supreme Leader is living proof of Allah’s favor.
Our asymmetric arsenal (missiles, drones, proxies) is far more effective than their billion-dollar jets.
One cheap Shahed or proxy attack on a tanker is worth ten of their precision strikes—keeps morale high while the Air Force is grounded.
The “resistance economy” is not collapsing; it is being purified and will emerge stronger.
Black-market oil sales, currency controls, and IRGC business empires are framed as genius self-reliance, not desperation.
Any internal protests or desertions are purely foreign-orchestrated (CIA/Mossad/MEK) and have zero organic support.
Lets commanders crush dissent without ever admitting the Iranian street is tired of the war.
Mojtaba Khamenei’s leadership transition proves the system is more stable than ever.
No power vacuum here—just seamless continuity under the son, with the IRGC as the real backbone.
The Axis of Resistance is delivering decisive blows; Hezbollah, Houthis, and Iraqi militias are bleeding the enemy on multiple fronts.
Conveniently ignores that the proxies are also taking heavy losses—still, every Houthi drone launch becomes “strategic depth.”
Nuclear breakout was never the goal; the program was always a peaceful deterrent that the enemy has now proven we need more than ever.
Gives cover to quietly restart enrichment deeper underground while claiming moral high ground.
The West and Israel lack the will for a long war; they will tire, fracture, and beg for talks.
Classic: our patience (and willingness to absorb casualties) is our greatest weapon against their short attention spans.
Sanctions and strikes only strengthen the IRGC’s grip on the economy and society.
Every new restriction funnels more money and loyalty through IRGC companies and foundations—perfect for expanding control.
Final victory is inevitable through continued resistance, faith, and strategic patience; this is just the latest chapter in the 45-year war.
The ultimate meta-belief. It lets IRGC leaders sleep at night (or in bunkers), keep issuing orders, and position themselves as the eternal guardians who will outlast yet another “decisive” enemy campaign.
These aren’t conspiracy theories—they’re adaptive survival tools for men whose entire identity, wealth, and power are fused with the regime’s survival. Even as the IRGC loses generals, infrastructure, and oil revenue, these beliefs keep the machine loyal, the propaganda crisp, and the internal purges justified. Question too many of them out loud and you risk becoming the next “martyr” on state TV.
