20 April 2026 - 12:21
Source: Social Media
Imported security system of some Persian Gulf littoral states under question: Academic

A university professor, Hossein Abbasian, briefed pilgrims of Imam Reza Shrine on the role of society, power developments in economic and security structures of the Persian Gulf region.

AhlulBayt News Agency: A university professor, Hossein Abbasian, briefed pilgrims of Imam Reza Shrine on the role of society, power developments in economic and security structures of the Persian Gulf region.

Lecturing at Parizad School of Imam Reza Shrine, Dr. Abbasian said: “The enemy considered assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Chief of Staff of Armed Forces, IRGC Commander-in-Chief, Defense Minister, and a number of other salient military commanders something like beheading palm tree of the Islamic Republic of Iran which may lead to total collapse of the political system”. 

He added: “What saved Iran at very early hours after losing leadership during the third imposed war was nothing but presence of the people. This was the people who led the country and gave time to the system to recover”.

He further noted: “Security of the southern countries in the Persian Gulf was something imported from the West which is now under question. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain that had provided land for US bases for years are now facing this reality that the US administration is not able to supply its own security let alone security of the Arab states.”

The lecturer went on to say: “The resistance front is not limited to Hezbollah anymore; rather, it is a multi-layer network including Ansarullah of Yemen and other resistance groups. This front is now more developed both in size and in goal, featuring Iran’s macro plan for deterrence throughout the region”.

Opining on some Western intellectuals’ claims of the collapse of current system of the United States, Abassain stated: “Iran has been under sanctions and embargo for many years and some kind of "economic resilience" has been achieved through all these years of hardship; the Persian Gulf littoral states, however, are far more vulnerable to any naval blockade or disturbance in the Strait of Hormuz and Bab al-Mandab Strait”.

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