THE DECAY OF IRAN
Time|September 25, 2023
The Islamic Republic of Iran has thus far proved too ideologically rigid to reform and too ruthless to collapse. As in the late stages of the Soviet Union, however, the foundations decay in plain sight. Outside their homeland, women of Iranian origin become world-class mathematicians and astronauts; inside Iran, the ruling clerics debate whether women should be allowed to ride bicycles.
KARIM SADJADPOUR
THE DECAY OF IRAN

One year ago this month, the regime's "morality police" detained and beat a 22-year-old woman-Mahsa Jina Amini-for allegedly showing too much hair beneath her compulsory veil. Her death in custody triggered Iran's longest antigovernment protests since the 1979 revolution that transformed the country from a U.S.allied monarchy to an anti-American Islamist theocracy.

Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei managed these protests as he always does, by crushing dissent, dividing adversaries, and refusing to offer any concessions. Over 20,000 people were arrested and over 500 killed, including several who were executed. Compromising under pressure, Khamenei believes, only projects weakness and emboldens dissent.

This story is from the September 25, 2023 edition of Time.

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This story is from the September 25, 2023 edition of Time.

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