Trump’s Russia scandal is more like Iran-Contra than Watergate which isn’t good news – Salon
As the scandal surrounding President Donald Trumps apparent entanglements with Russia has grown increasingly serious the comparisons to Watergate have grown increasingly frequent. It goes beyond comparison, as cable news shows populate their coverage with people who were connected to Richard Nixons 1970s scandal, from onetime White House counsel John Dean to former Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, who helped draft some of the impeachment language, to an array of former prosecutors involved in the case.
Its valuable to have people like that on hand, people whove been through it all, as the layers of deception and denial are stripped away. At the same time, its a fundamental distortion of perspective to use Watergate as the primaryframe of reference for the unfolding scandal.
For multiple reasons, wed be much better served to use Ronald Reagans Iran-Contrascandal as our primary reference frame, and use Watergate only as a supplement. Iran-Contra was as messy, complicated and ill-defined as Watergate is neat and tidy, at least in the popular elite version and that contrast is part of my point: The Trump-Russia scandal is perhaps even messier and more complicated than Iran-Contra was, and we shouldnt try to pretend otherwise.
But the short version of Iran-Contrais that the Reagan administration illegally sold arms to Iran, in hopes of getting hostages released, and used some of the proceeds to illegally fund the right-wing drug-dealing terrorists in Nicaragua known as the Contras (in other words, the counterrevolutionaries opposed to that nations leftist Sandinista government).Writing here on its 25th anniversary, Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archives offered a slightly expanded bill of particulars:
The Reagan administration had been negotiating with terrorists (despite Reagans repeated public position that he would never do so). There were illegal arms transfers to Iran, flagrant lying to Congress, soliciting third country funding to circumvent the Congressional ban on financing the contra war in Nicaragua, White House bribes to various generals in Honduras, illegal propaganda and psychological operations directed by the CIA against the U.S. press and public, collaboration with drug kingpins such as Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega, and violating the checks and balances of the constitution.
Altogether, independent counsel Lawrence Walsh, a lifelong Republican appointed to the federal bench by President Dwight Eisenhower, investigated several dozen individuals and indicted a dozen of them, including Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, national security advisers Robert C. McFarlane and John Poindexter and Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams. Pardons by President George H.W. Bush effectively ended the prosecutions and effected a final layer of coverup over the whole affair. Walsh considered charging both Reagan and Bush, but did not, for reasons having nothing to do with culpability. He found Reagan suffering from early signs of dementia disorderduring an interview, and saw faint prospects of success with Bush, given the extent of the coverup protecting him.
The Iran-Contra affairs are not a warning for our days alone, Kornbluh quotes historian Theodore Draper writing at the time. If the story of the affairs is not fully known and understood, a similar usurpation of power by a small strategically placed group within the government may well reoccur before we are prepared to recognize what is happening.
Clearly, the warning has gone unheeded until now. Its time we did better, and Iran-Contra can help us on at least five counts. First, Watergate perpetuates the illusion that the system worked, whereas Iran-Contra shows clearly how and why it did not. Second, Watergate was a narrowly focused domestic affair, while Iran-Contra was a far-flung enterprise involving significant foreign actors. Third, Watergate fostered the misleading impression that impeachment turned on breaking the law, while Iran-Contra made it clear that it was about abuse of power and the political elites collective willingness to restrain it. Fourth, Watergate was a relatively self-contained scandal, while Iran-Contra was connected with multiple other illegal international enterprises a coalition of high-level international lawlessness. Fifth, Watergate occurred at the end of an era, in which a different set of norms and institutional constraints still held sway, while Iran-Contra reflected how badly those norms and constraints had been eroded in Watergates aftermath.
Both the scandal and the world we live in today are even further removed from Iran-Contra than Iran-Contra was from Watergate, so I am not proposing that Iran-Contra is an ideal framework for understanding the Trump-Russia scandal. Rather, it is a better framework, which can help us better understand the evolutionary trajectories that make this situation so different from what came before, though still similar in some respects. Lets go through those five different counts, one by one.
First, the illusion that the system worked. This claim seems so self-evident to political elites that no one ever thinks to explain it. But what does it mean? That Nixon was forced to resign? That seems like an appallingly low bar in light of all thats happened since. The destructive forces that Nixon unleashed were only briefly restrained, if at all. Public confidence in government which began falling during the Vietnam War declined as a result of Watergate, and was not restored by its conclusion. Political polarization intensified, and institutions continued to erode.
The press also failed. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post are legendary figures. But they werent part of the White House press corps, or even the political press. They were metropolitan reporters assigned to cover a burglary story in June 1972, which they did to devastating effect, but not until after the 1972 election. The presss failure to cover Watergate before the election was a key factor that led sociologist Carl Jensen to establish Project Censored in 1975. The burglary sparked one of the biggest political coverups in modern history, Jensen later recalled. And the press was an unwitting, if willing participant in the coverup. Watergate taught us two important lessons about the press: First, the news media sometimes do fail to cover some important issues, and second, the news media sometimes indulge in self-censorship.
Yet elites today are blind to all the above failures. So lets consider Iran-Contrainstead. No jail time was served by anyone, not even the lowliest underling, while Reagan and Bush escaped so thoroughly that their involvement is scarcely even remembered by elites, while the heroic prosecutor, Lawrence Walsh, was subject to hostility and contempt. His book, Firewall: The Iran-Contra Conspiracy and Cover-up,was a damning indictment of how the system failed, with detailed descriptions of how the multi-layer coverup unfolded over time. But elites had no appetite to face up to it. As one reviewer explained the antipathy:
On one front, the Washington media wants to perpetuate the myth that it remains the heroic Watergate press corps of All the Presidents Men. On another, the national Democratic establishment wants to forget how it crumbled in the face of pressures from the Reagan-Bush administrations. And, of course, the Republicans want to protect the legacy of their last two presidents.
Those were the words of investigative reporter Robert Parry, another key figure in the historical comparison. He was the Woodward and Bernstein of Iran-Contra. He co-wrote a December 1985 AP story reporting that three Contra groups had engaged in cocaine trafficking, in part to help finance their war against Nicaragua. The story almost didnt run, due to Reagan administration pressure, but it drew the attention of Sen. John Kerry, who chaired a subcommittee thatspent the next few years producing a damning report, Drugs, Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy, released on April 13, 1989.
Well pick up that strand again later. After that, Parry and his collaborator Brian Barger worked for months on a followup story, in which they exposed the illegal Contra-supporting side of the scandal. But the rest of the Beltway media relied heavily on Lt. Col. Oliver North of the National Security Council as a favorite inside source, and he effortlessly waved them off the story. In the face of that pushback, AP pulled Parry and Barger off the story, only to have it explode again after two Mideast newspapers blew the whistle on the Iranian arms sale side of the scandal.
Ill have more to say about Parry and his discoveries below, but the mere fact that hes not as famous as Woodward and Bernstein speaks volumes about how different the political climate had become. In Watergate, Nixon had only a handful of allies in his fight to hold back the truth. In Iran-Contra, there was a well-coordinated, multi-level defense system in place. If anything it was the prosecutors and investigative reporters who were isolated and ultimately scorned by the political establishment.
The second way in which Iran-Contra is a more useful reference frame is the matter of scope. Although Watergate had some foreign policy origins the plumbers started out burglarizing Daniel Ellsbergs psychiatrists office in response to the Pentagon Papers it was an overwhelmingly domestic affair with a narrow focus. Iran-Contra was a vast, far-flung enterprise with significant foreign actors: Middle East arms dealers, Iranian government officials, Central American paramilitary groups, etc. There were also no clearly defined outer edges to the scandal. In fact, there were additional overlapping scandals involving some of the same individuals and similar or related activities. The broader framework of criminality in which Iran-Contraarose, and the importance of foreign actors, potentially quite hostile to America as a whole, as well as profound uncertainty of how far the scandals go, all set Iran-Contraapart from Watergate but are essentially the same situation we confront today.
The third way that Iran-Contra is a more useful reference frame is in terms of focus: What is the scandal about? Watergate fostered the misleading impression that the question of impeachment turned on breaking the law. But, Iran-Contramade clear that it was about abuse of power, and the elites collective willingness to restrain it. Impeachment was never intended to punish specific violations of law. Its purpose is protect the whole framework of the rule of law from the encroachments of tyranny. It was certainly appropriate for Walsh, as a prosecutor, to carefully weigh whether it made sense to prosecute not just based on his belief that crimes had been committed but on multiple other factors; it was also appropriate for Congress to weigh its responsibilities. At the very beginning of the process, Democratic senators said they were not interested in impeachment, thus setting the tone for an extended pageant of delays, digressions and denials.
Even worse, congressional committees took testimony heedlessly ignoring prosecutorial needs. Most notably, Oliver Norths convictions for accepting an illegal gratuity, obstruction of a congressional inquiry and destruction of documents were all overturned on appeal because North had been granted congressional immunity, even though Walsh built his case independent of that testimony. Everyone involved but especially those with key congressional power needs to be clear about the nature and purpose of impeachment and other oversight responsibilities, and their relationship to law enforcement. The more these issues get muddled, the more damaging it is to the rule of law and the health of our democracy.
The fourth way in which Iran-Contra is a better reference frame is in terms of background. Watergate was a relatively self-contained scandal. Although Nixon engaged in several different sorts of activity that led to drafting impeachment charges, there was little to connect them, beyond Nixons own exaggerated sense that when the president does it, its not illegal. In contrast, the Iran-Contra affair.
The broader context of Iran-Contra can be thought of as two additional overlapping scandals: one involving the Contra drug-dealing, the other an earlier Iranian arms deal linked to meddling in the 1980 election, the so-called October Surprise in which Iran and the Reagan campaign colluded to prevent the release of the U.S. Embassy hostages in Tehran until after Election Day. Both these scandals were much more intensively suppressed than Iran-Contraitself, but they call attention to the broader framework of criminality in which the whole affairarose, which is significantly more extensive today.
As mentioned above, Parry co-wrote a 1985 story about Contra drug involvement that was virtually ignored by political elites, except for John Kerrys subcommittee. The resulting 1989 report covered drug trafficking in the Bahamas, Colombia, Cuba and Nicaragua, Haiti, Honduras and Panama, with the longest chapter devoted to the Contras. It stated that The war against Nicaragua contributed to weakening an already inadequate law enforcement capability in the region which was exploited easily by a variety of mercenaries, pilots, and others involved in drug smuggling. It did not find that Contra leaders were personally involved in drug trafficking, but there was substantial evidence of drug smuggling through the war zones on the part of individual Contras, Contra suppliers, Contra pilots, mercenaries who worked with the Contras, and Contra supporters.
Awareness of the criminality reached all the way to the National Security Council. Norths notebooks were made available to the subcommittee in redacted form, but 16examples were cited which discernibly concern narcotics or terrorism. In addition, it noted that numerous other entries referred to individuals or events that apparently related to narcotics, terrorism, or international operations, but whose ambiguities cannot be resolved without the production of the deleted materials by North and his attorneys.
In short, the illegal conduct involved in the Iran-Contrascandal took place against a background of widely tolerated criminality. Beyond that, The logic of having drug money pay for the pressing needs of the Contras appealed to a number of people who became involved in the covert war. Indeed, senior U.S. policy makers were not immune to the idea that drug money was a perfect solution to the Contras funding problems.
Throughout the 1980s, there were repeated rumors and scattered bits of evidence pointing to a secret deal struck between Iran and the Reagan campaign to prevent the release of hostages before Election Day in 1980, an October surprise that could have benefited Jimmy Carter. In fact, theres undisputed evidence that arms transfers to Iran began well before thenegotiations for release of hostages, using Israel as a go-between. One such arms shipment was shot down aboard an Argentinian CL-4 turboprop near the Soviet-Turkish border on July 18, 1981. Irans president during this period, Abolhassan Banisadr, was a primary source affirming that these were connected to the October Surprise deal, but it wasnt until after Iran-Contra came to light that pressure started to build for a full investigation.
Robert Parry played a significant role investigating this scandal as well. He was involved in a 1991 PBS Frontline documentary that helped to build support for a congressional investigation. That investigation, however, was severely crippled both by outside media criticism promoting coverup narratives (detailed by Parry here), and by the leader of the investigation himself, Rep. Lee Hamilton, an Indiana Democrat. In a detailed dissection of the resulting reports weaknesses, Parry decribes how Hamilton suppressed a dissent from Rep. Mervyn Dymally, D-Calif.:
[W]hen Dymally submitted his dissent, he received a terse phone call in early January 1993 from the task forces Democratic chairman Lee Hamilton, who vowed to come down hard on Dymally if the dissent were not withdrawn.
The next day, Hamilton, who was becoming chairman of the House International Affairs Committee, fired the entire staff of the Africa subcommittee, which Dymally had chaired before his retirement from Congress which had just taken effect. Hoping to save the jobs of his former staffers, Dymally agreed to withdraw the dissent but still refused to put his name on the task forces conclusions.
To this day, Hamilton enjoys an elevated reputation for his Beltway bipartisanship, of which this is a classic example: He beat up on other Democrats for the sake of a unified coverup. Parry went on to publish a book based on his research, Trick or Treason, in 1993. But two years later he discovered much more information. In 1995, he began publishing an eight-part series, the October Surprise X-Files, based on his investigation of the neglected work product of Hamiltons task force. The first story in that series, Russias Report, revealed that the task force had received a last-minute response from Russia (in its post-Soviet, pre-Putin glasnost phase), which provided strong confirmation:
To the shock of the task force, the six-page Russian report stated, as fact, that [CIA director William] Casey, George Bush and other Republicans had met secretly with Iranian officials in Europe during the 1980 presidential campaign. The Russians depicted the hostage negotiations that year as a two-way competition between the Carter White House and the Reagan campaign to outbid one another for Irans cooperation on the hostages. The Russians asserted that the Reagan team had disrupted Carters hostage negotiations after all, the exact opposite of the task force conclusion.
What these examples show is both the existence of much wider criminality andmuch more intense bipartisan denial. Ignoring either of these two aspects surrounding Iran-Contraonly further misleads us in any effort to make sense of the unfolding Trump-Russia scandal.
The fifth and final way in which Iran-Contra is a better reference frame is a reflection on all the above, and how hostile Washington had become to exposing the truth and defending democratic norms. Watergate occurred at the end of an era in which a different set of norms and institutional constraints still held sway. Its delusional to pretend that those norms and constraints still hold. The bungled non-resolution of the Iran-Contrascandal, not to mention the two related scandals discussed above, shows just how badly those norms and constraints had been eroded in Watergates aftermath. Things have only gotten worse since then.
Part of the explanation simply goes back to who controls Congress. During Watergate, it was all Democrats, across the board. During Iran-Contra, Democrats had just won back the Senate after Republicans had controlled it for six years, and were particularly eager to prove how fair and bipartisan they could be. Republicans took every advantage they could as a result. Now Congress is entirely in Republican hands, and you can see the results for yourself every day.
But its not just the numbers. Its also the kinds of people involved, and the nature of the power blocs behind them. From a big-picture perspective, as I wrote in 2013, scandal narratives function differently for conservatives and liberals based on essential differences across the centuries in how they define things. This is largely based on the distinction between logos,which is concerned with how the world works, and mythos,which is concerned with making meaningful sense of the world.
Liberals generally understand scandal in terms of logos:a breaking of the rules, once hidden, brought into the light. It is very much about the facts of the case, an empirical investigative process. Conservatives generally understand scandal in terms of mythos, as unmasking a violation of the sacred order of things, that sacred order being that conservatives and those they favor are on top, and everyone else is beneath them. In this view, the very existence of liberalism is scandalous, because liberalism posits a fundamental equality of people, rather than an immutable hierarchy. For conservatives, scandal is a spectacle or a morality play, whose facts are largely determined by how well they resonate with pre-established meanings.
So the very idea of investigating conservative scandals is itself a scandal in conservative eyes. This, above all, is the change in overarching attitude that distorts everything we are living through, and makes the Watergate model so woefully outdated when it comes to understanding what were up against now.
Read the rest here:
Trump's Russia scandal is more like Iran-Contra than Watergate which isn't good news - Salon
- Trump says all meetings with Iran are off until crackdown on protesters ends - CNN - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- At least 2,571 killed in Iran's protests, Trump says 'help is on the way' - Reuters - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Heres What to Know About the Protests in Iran - The New York Times - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- More than 2,000 people reported killed at Iran protests as Trump says 'help is on its way' - BBC - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Column | Could Iran go the way of Venezuela? - The Washington Post - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Iran latest: Man, 26, to be executed today, says rights group - and more than 2,500 protesters killed - Sky News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Opinion | Ive waited for this electrifying moment in Iran for 10 years - The Washington Post - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Trump warns US will take very strong action if Iran starts executing arrested protesters - The Guardian - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Iran protest updates: Trump to Iranians- keep protesting, help on the way - Al Jazeera - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Why Iran cant afford to shut down the internet forever even if the world doesnt act - The Conversation - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Iran protests: what we know so far about the spiralling anti-government demonstrations - The Guardian - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- 7 highlights from Trump's interview with CBS News: Iran, Renee Good, Jerome Powell and his own morality - CBS News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Oil prices rise more than 2% after Trump cancels meetings with Iran, tells protesters help is on the way - CNBC - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Why the massive Iran protests havent toppled its clerical establishment - The Times of Israel - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Trump urges Iran protesters to "take over" government institutions - Axios - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- A long, dire history of US interference in Iran | Letters - The Guardian - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Israeli and Arab officials have privately suggested U.S. hold off on Iran strikes - NBC News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Access to Elon Musks Starlink internet service is now free in Iran as regime continues brutal crackdown on protests - CNN - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Trump pressures Iran with tariffs that could raise prices in the US - AP News - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- 'Now there's the threat of executions' in Iran - BBC - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Decision time for Trump on Iran but what does he ultimately want? - BBC - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Jeremy Bowen: Authoritarian regimes die gradually then suddenly, but Iran is not there yet - BBC - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Protests in Iran: Is war with the US or Israel really imminent? - Euronews.com - January 14th, 2026 [January 14th, 2026]
- Trump threatens Greenland and Iran at meeting with oil bosses on Venezuela US politics live - The Guardian - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Khamenei says Iran wont back down amid mass protests and Trump threat - The Washington Post - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Is this time different in Iran? - vox.com - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Opinion | How Trump Makes Good on His Threat to Iran - The Wall Street Journal - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- How Trump Could Help the People of Iran - The Atlantic - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran protests are the biggest in years to challenge the regime. Here's what to know. - cbsnews.com - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Grave Concern That State Massacre of Protesters is Underway in Iran Amid Internet Blackout - Center for Human Rights in Iran - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Growing protests in Iran do not necessarily herald a return to monarchy - The Guardian - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- A timeline of how the protests in Iran unfolded and grew - AP News - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Internet and phones cut in Iran as protesters heed exiled prince's call for mass demonstration - AP News - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran protests latest: At least 62 killed as Ayatollah threatens harsher crackdown - The Independent - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- At least 51 people killed during protests so far, rights group says | Iran International - - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Why Theres No Starlink Access During Nationwide Shutdown in Iran? - IranWire - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Why are there huge protests going on in Iran? - BBC - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran judiciary chief vows there will be 'decisive' punishment for protesters - abcnews.go.com - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- What to know about the intensifying protests shaking Iran and putting pressure on its theocracy - PBS - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran protests: brutal crackdown as uprising gathers pace | The Latest - The Guardian - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran, Israel, & Immigration | Gregg Roman on The Saad Truth - Middle East Forum - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Amid protests, Khamenei digs in, says Iran wont back down to 'saboteurs,' Trump will be overthrown - The Times of Israel - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Iran: Deaths and injuries rise amid authorities renewed cycle of protest bloodshed - Amnesty International - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- How US gave Iran, China, Russia reality check in Venezuela - The Jerusalem Post - January 9th, 2026 [January 9th, 2026]
- Protests Spread in Iran, and Crackdowns Escalate - The New York Times - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran ready to fight back if US or Israel attacks again, says foreign minister - The Times of Israel - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran threatens pre-emptive attack if it sees 'indication of threat' - Euronews.com - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran army chief threatens preemptive attack over 'rhetoric' targeting country after Trump's comments - AP News - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran is on the edge of revolution - New Statesman - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran army chief threatens preemptive attack on enemies after Trumps comments - The Independent - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- What is Happening in Iran | Gregg Roman on Washington Watch - Middle East Forum - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Violent clashes reported as Iran protests spread to more areas - BBC - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Facing unrest, Iran is on edge as Trump threatens Tehran on heels of Venezuela operation - Los Angeles Times - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- They are killing us: authorities use force against protesters in Kurdish regions of Iran - The Guardian - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- 'This Big Truck Is Coming': Iran After The Maduro Kidnapping - FOREVER WARS by Spencer Ackerman - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Irans Uprising Expands with Strikes and Demonstrations in Tehran and Other Cities as Youths Clash with Suppressive Forces - National Council of... - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran says open to US talks but ready for war - The Jerusalem Post - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- It's the economy: grim livelihoods explain Iranian anger | Iran International - - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Out from the margins: how Ilam became the heart of Iran protests - - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran Says Its Investigating Violence at Weekend Protests - The New York Times - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Activists say at least 36 killed amid Iran protests after Trump's warning of a possible U.S. intervention - CBS News - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Can Iran's plan for a $7 monthly cash handout calm the streets? | Iran International - - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Did a minister just reveal Israeli assets were operating in Iran? - www.israelhayom.com - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Could Iran launch preemptive strikes on Israel, US? - The Jerusalem Post - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Exiled prince, Kurdish parties call for protests and strikes on Thursday | Iran International - - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran executes another man accused of spying for Israel, as protests roil country - The Times of Israel - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iranian protesters plead with Trump: 'Don't let them kill us' | Iran International - - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran's Army chief warns against hostile rhetoric, vows response to threats - AnewZ - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran accused of deploying Iraqi militias to crush protests at home - middle-east-online.com - January 8th, 2026 [January 8th, 2026]
- Iran warns it may act before an attack if it detects a threat - - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Iran protests: 29 killed, over 1,200 arrested by regime - The Jerusalem Post - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- What Will Happen To Iran As Global And Regional Powers Eye Options? - Forbes - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Iran Protests, January 4, 2026 - Institute for the Study of War - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Israel hospitals exposed to Iran ballistic missile threat - The Jerusalem Post - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Iran has been shaken by a series of protests over the past 50 years. Heres a look at them - AP News - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Trumps abduction of Maduro escalates concerns over potential war with Iran - Al Jazeera - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- What to know about the protests now shaking Iran as tensions remain high over its nuclear program - AP News - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Security forces clash with protesters in Iran's main market as at least 35 killed in demonstrations - Los Angeles Times - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Rights groups say at least 16 dead in Iran during week of protests - Reuters - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]
- Iran protests spread to 222 locations as death toll hits 20 on eighth day | Iran International - - January 6th, 2026 [January 6th, 2026]