Stephen Turner’s convenient beliefs are working overtime at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies right now. With the U.S.-Israeli campaign in month two, Khamenei gone, nuclear facilities bombed, the IRGC bleeding, and the regime still firing back with whatever missiles it has left, these beliefs let FDD’s analysts, fellows, and donors stay on-message, keep the funding pipeline open, dominate the hawkish lane on cable news, and avoid any awkward “maybe we over-promised on quick collapse” conversations. They keep the coalition tight, the op-eds flowing, and the policy recommendations laser-focused on “more pressure, not less.”
Here are the 10 most useful ones circulating in the FDD bullpen today:
The current campaign proves the regime was always far more fragile than the engagement crowd ever admitted.
Khamenei’s death and the cratered sites are vindication, not a surprise—any surviving protests or IRGC fractures are just the beginning of the end.
Diplomacy and sanctions relief were always a dangerous fantasy that only bought Tehran time to enrich uranium and arm proxies.
The war is Exhibit A: every JCPOA-style deal was just a pause button on the nuclear clock and the Axis of Resistance.
Iran’s proxies are not “autonomous”—they are direct extensions of Tehran’s command-and-control terror network.
Hitting Iran directly was (and remains) the smartest way to degrade Hezbollah, the Houthis, and the rest in one go.
Sanctions and military pressure actually work; the so-called “resistance economy” was always a propaganda slogan.
The regime’s economic free-fall and internal panic show that maximum pressure bites the mullahs harder than it ever hurt ordinary Iranians.
Real expertise is about tracking missiles, money flows, and IRGC personnel—not sipping tea in Tehran or quoting Persian poetry.
Gatekeeps the briefing rooms and donor calls for the data-driven, no-nonsense analysts who got it right.
Talk of “pragmatic reformers” or a “moderate wing” inside the regime is the same recycled delusion that has failed for decades.
Mojtaba Khamenei and the hardliners running the show prove there was never a viable partner—just a regime that only respects force.
Half-measures and de-escalation only embolden the mullahs; sustained escalation dominance is the only language they understand.
Keeps the recommendations coming for follow-on strikes, tighter sanctions, and no premature cease-fires.
The broader Beltway Iran-expert consensus has been wrong for 20+ years—FDD’s analysis has now been dramatically vindicated by events.
Coalition morale booster and perfect talking point for fundraising decks and congressional testimony.
Nuclear breakout remains the existential threat; the strikes delayed it but didn’t eliminate it—full, verifiable denuclearization is the only acceptable end-state.
Even with sites bombed, the belief locks in the long-term goal of regime change or permanent military posture.
Patient, unrelenting pressure—not “strategic patience” or engagement—is the only proven path to real security and eventual regime implosion.
The ultimate meta-belief. It lets FDD double down on the same hawkish playbook that just got battlefield-tested while positioning the organization as the clear-eyed adults who warned everyone else.
These aren’t conspiracy theories—they’re adaptive survival tools for a think tank that thrives when the threat is clear, the policy lane is hawkish, and the donor base (pro-Israel, pro-strong defense) is energized. Even as the regime survives the first round of beating, these beliefs keep the analysis coherent, the recommendations urgent, and the brand intact. Question too many of them and you risk becoming “that guy who went soft” and loses the next panel invite or research grant.
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