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- Claim Text
-
Bombing campaigns could significantly destroy military and civilian infrastructure in Iran, but for regime change, the U.S. would have to be prepared to fight not just a standing military in a country the size of Western Europe, but a system with decades of experience in asymmetric warfare.
- Simplified Text
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Bombing campaigns could destroy infrastructure in Iran but the US would have to fight a standing military and a system with experience in asymmetric warfare for regime change
- Confidence Score
- 0.850
- Claim Maker
- Narges Bajoghli
- Context Type
- News Article
- Context Details
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{ "date": "February 5, 2026", "person": "Narges Bajoghli", "expertise": "Iran, resistance movements, social movements, feminism, revolutions", "affiliation": "Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS)" } - UUID
- a1179cf3-7fbd-4670-82fd-ba18656973af
- Vector Index
- ✗ No vector
- Created
- February 16, 2026 at 7:44 AM (2 months ago)
- Last Updated
- February 16, 2026 at 7:44 AM (2 months ago)
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2 months ago
https://washingtondc.jhu.edu/news/what-to-know-about-iran-february-2026
Narges Bajoghli, a SAIS professor, analyzes the situation in Iran after recent protests and rising tensions with the U.S. She believes the regime has reestablished control and doesn't see imminent collapse. The article discusses the regime's structure, potential outcomes, and the role of regional actors.
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