Iran’s regime crisis is best modeled as a nonlinear system where coercive cohesion and information control interact with external signaling, chokepoints, and nuclear uncertainty, so incoherent outside support tends to amplify escalation and blowback; effective policy therefore requires coherent signaling and low-salience measures that avoid handing the regime a foreign-ownership narrative while preserving credible deterrence.
Iran’s Regime Crisis as a Systems Problem
Iran’s regime crisis is best modeled as a nonlinear system where coercive cohesion and information control interact with external signaling, chokepoints, and nuclear uncertainty, so incoherent outside support tends to amplify escalation and blowback; effective policy therefore requires coherent signaling and low-salience measures that avoid handing the regime a foreign-ownership narrative while preserving credible deterrence.