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Iran’s ruling elite are increasingly anxious that a US military strike could undermine their hold on power by reigniting mass protests, as public fury remains high after a violent crackdown on anti-government demonstrations, according to six current and former officials. Reuters reported, citing unnamed former and current officials, that during senior-level discussions, officials warned the country’s 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that anger over last month’s repression, the deadliest since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, had reached a stage where fear was no longer containing the population. They told him that many Iranians were ready to confront security forces again, and that outside pressure, including a limited US strike, could embolden them and cause lasting damage to the political system. "People are extremely angry," a source said, adding a US attack could lead Iranians to rise up again. "The wall of fear has collapsed. There is no fear left." These accounts point to private doubts within the leadership that contrast sharply with Tehran’s publicly defiant posture toward protesters and Washington. Sources declined to describe Khamenei’s reaction. Iran’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Last week, several people told Reuters that US President Donald Trump was considering measures against Iran, including precision strikes on security forces or leaders aimed at energizing protesters, even as Israeli and Arab officials cautioned that air power alone would not be enough to bring down the clerical establishment. Any unrest triggered by a US strike would differ from the public response to Israeli and US attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June, which did not spark anti-government demonstrations. A former senior moderate official said circumstances have shifted since the early January crackdown, noting heightened tensions between Tehran and Washington and the deployment of a US aircraft carrier and escorting warships to the region, which has expanded Trump’s military options after repeated warnings over the violence. Several opposition figures who were once part of the system have cautioned leaders that surging public anger could lead to the collapse of the Islamic Republic. “It’s The river of warm blood that was spilled on the cold month of January will not stop boiling until it changes the course of history," former prime minister Mirhossein Mousavi, who has been under house arrest without trial since 2011, said in a statement published by the pro-reform Kalameh website. During the January protests, witnesses and rights groups said security forces used lethal force to suppress demonstrations, killing thousands and injuring many more. Iranian authorities blamed the bloodshed on “armed terrorists” linked to Israel and the United States. Although Trump ultimately refrained from intervention, he has since pressed Iran to make concessions on its nuclear program. Both sides have signaled openness to reviving diplomacy over the long-running dispute. Analysts and insiders say that while the streets are quiet for now, the underlying grievances remain unresolved. Public discontent continues to build over economic decline, political repression, widening inequality, and entrenched corruption, leaving many Iranians feeling stuck in a system that offers neither relief nor hope. “This may not be the end, but it’s no longer just the beginning,” said London-based analyst Hossein Rassam. One official said that although anger is greater than before, the state would respond with even harsher measures if it came under U.S. attack, warning that such a scenario could lead to mass bloodshed. Ordinary Iranians interviewed by Reuters said they expected the authorities to respond brutally to any renewed protests. A Tehran resident whose 15-year-old son was killed on January 9 said demonstrators were only asking for a normal life and were met “with bullets.” Another official said Iran’s adversaries were hoping to provoke further unrest to end the Islamic Republic and that, “unfortunately,” any uprising would bring more violence.
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