07 January 2026 The Hindu Editorial
What to Read in The Hindu Editorial( Topic and Syllabus wise)
Editorial 1: At a crossroads
Context
Iran needs to undertake reforms and renew its engagement with the international community.
Introduction
Iran is witnessing a renewed wave of unrest triggered by a deepening economic crisis, rapid currency collapse, and rising cost of living. What began as a localized strike has expanded into nationwide protests, exposing the fragile balance between economic distress, political rigidity, and external pressure confronting the Islamic Republic at a critical moment.
Trigger and Spread of Protests
Initial spark: A strike by shopkeepers in Tehran on December 28, protesting the sharp fall of the Iranian rial
Escalation: The strike snowballed into nationwide protests, the largest since the 2022–23 unrest
Historical parallel: Comparable in scale to protests after the custodial death of Mahsa Amini
State response:
Assurances on addressing traders’ economic grievances
Warnings of harsh action against “rioters”
Human cost: At least 12 deaths reported within a week as protests spread
Geopolitical Backdrop
Timing matters: Unrest comes six months after Iran survived a 12-day war with Israel
Foreign involvement claims heighten regime anxiety:
Mossad claimed its operatives were “in the field” with protesters (Dec 29)
Donald Trump warned the U.S. was “locked and loaded” if protesters were killed (Jan 2)
Perception problem: Rulers see protests as economic dissent plus externally fuelled instability
Economic Crisis at the Core
Inflation shock: Food inflation at 64% (October), second highest globally
Currency collapse: Rial down ~60% since the June war
Energy stress: Daily power outages
Oil exports: ~7% decline in 2025 compared to 2024 average
Official admission: President Masoud Pezeshkian said the government was “stuck” and couldn’t perform “miracles”
Key Economic Indicators
| Indicator | Status | Implication |
| Food inflation | 64% | Severe cost-of-living stress |
| Rial value | −60% since June | Loss of savings, import shock |
| Oil exports | −7% (2025) | Reduced state revenues |
| Electricity | Daily outages | Industrial & household disruption |
Governance Constraints and Contradictions
Social easing: Some relaxation of morality police enforcement
Hard limits: Economy and national security remain tightly controlled
Repression loop:
Economic decline cause public anger
External threats cause greater repression
Repression cause deeper crisis
Role of External Pressure
Washington’s approach: Economic squeeze and threats
Domestic impact: Ordinary Iranians suffer, regime grows more paranoid
Policy alternative: Engage and empower Pezeshkian rather than escalating threats on Israel’s behalf
Why the Old Narrative Is Failing
Default blame: Crises attributed to foreign conspiracies
Structural reality: Shrinking opportunities and eroded freedoms
Societal shift: Religion and nationalism may no longer offset economic despair
What Needs to Change
Initiate genuine reforms
Tackle corruption
Restore economic opportunity
Re-engage with the world
Acknowledge public anger as structural, not merely external
Conclusion
The protests reflect not merely foreign interference but a structural crisis rooted in economic mismanagement, shrinking freedoms, and public disenchantment. Without meaningful reforms, efforts to curb corruption, and re-engagement with the world, reliance on repression, religion, and nationalism will prove insufficient, risking recurring instability and deeper erosion of state legitimacy.
Editorial 2: Dangerous paradigm
Context
Trump has weakened established norms governing conduct on the global stage.
Introduction
The forcible abduction of a sitting head of state, carried out through unauthorised military action, marks a profound rupture in international norms. Under Donald Trump, U.S. foreign policy appears to be embracing neo-imperialist coercion, openly threatening sovereignty, multilateralism, and the rule-based global order, while signalling a readiness to reshape geopolitics through force and intimidation.
Unprecedented U.S. Military Action
Kidnapping and transfer of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife to U.S. soil
Operation conducted without U.S. Congressional authorisation and without UN approval
Overnight strike on Caracas, reportedly involving artillery and special forces
Objective: To extract the Maduros to face drug trafficking and weapons charges, which Mr. Maduro denied
Expansionist Signals from Washington
U.S. President Donald Trump indicated a broader neo-imperialist posture
Explicit or implicit threats directed at Colombia, Greenland, Mexico, Cuba, and Iran
Remarks suggesting:
Regime pressure on Colombia, targeting President Gustavo Petro
A “national security need” to control Greenland
Possible military or coercive action against Mexico to combat drug cartels
Cuba’s vulnerability due to reduced Venezuelan oil support
Severe retaliation against Iran if protests were forcefully suppressed
Break from International Norms
Trump administration has consistently diluted global norms governing state conduct
Sharp departure from bipartisan U.S. foreign policy traditions
Open unauthorised intervention and regime-change tactics mark a new low in hemispheric politics
Disregard for international law, sovereignty, and multilateral institutions
The “Donroe Doctrine” and Its Risks
So-called “Donroe Doctrine” rooted less in democracy promotion and more in strategic resource capture, especially Venezuelan oil
Sets a dangerous precedent for other powers inclined toward unilateral military action
Risk of normalising force-based regime change, encouraging global instability
Global Domino Effect
Venezuela today, Ukraine yesterday, and potentially Taiwan tomorrow
Such a paradigm could trigger cross-border conflicts and major power confrontations
Autocrats elsewhere may feel emboldened to act aggressively under similar pretexts
Need for Collective Global Response
UN leadership and targeted states have voiced opposition
Effective deterrence requires collective resistance
India, Europe, Australia, Africa, and Latin America must speak in one voice
Unified action is essential to halt the spread of this destabilising doctrine and restore international restraint
Conclusion
If left unchecked, this dangerous precedent risks legitimising unilateral aggression, encouraging authoritarian adventurism, and accelerating global instability. Preventing the spread of this norm-breaking doctrine demands a collective international response, where major powers reaffirm international law, resist regime-change by force, and uphold the principle of sovereign equality in global affairs.
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