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Pezeshkian ends Iran's ~4-month internet blackout — and the IRGC pushes back

Pezeshkian ends Iran's ~4-month internet blackout — and the IRGC pushes back

The president orders international access restored after one of the longest shutdowns on record; hardline outlets say he had no authority, exposing the rift inside the system

Leaders·Courts· active Ce qui a cassé·Qui décide ·8 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

Masoud Pezeshkian ordered the Communications Ministry on 25 May to restore Iran's international internet to its pre-January state, with partial restoration the next day — slow and still filtered. The blackout had run from 8 January, near-total for months in one of the longest nationwide disruptions on record, with daily losses estimated at $70-80m and cumulative costs near $1.8bn by mid-April; online sales fell about 80%. The order ran through a special headquarters under First Vice-President Mohammad-Reza Aref, which voted 9 to 3 in favour. IRGC-affiliated Fars News challenged the president's authority, arguing the shutdown was a Supreme National Security Council decision only that body could reverse. Social media — X, Telegram, Instagram, WhatsApp — stayed largely blocked. The episode exposes the rift between the elected government and the security organs as Mojtaba Khamenei consolidates as supreme leader.

By the numbers

  • ~4.5 months — blackout from 8 Jan to the 26 May partial restoration.
  • ~$70-80m/day — estimated total daily cost; ~$1.8bn cumulative by mid-April.
  • ~80% — fall in online sales during the shutdown.
  • 9-3 — vote in Aref's special headquarters to restore access.

Why it matters

Whether a president can switch the internet back on is a test of who actually governs Iran. Pezeshkian reasserting the elected government's writ — and hardliners disputing it — maps the post-war power struggle between the reformist administration and the IRGC-security bloc.

What to watch

  • Whether social-media platforms are unblocked or stay restricted.
  • How far the IRGC pushes its claim that only the security council can decide.
  • Renewed shutdown threats during summer unrest over water and power.