
Who are Iran's true allies and will they help if US joins the war?
While considering a US attack on Iran's nuclear sites, Trump has threatened Iran's supreme leader, claiming to know his location and calling him 'an easy target.' He has demanded 'unconditional surrender' from Iran.
Meanwhile, countries such as Germany, Canada, the UK and Australia have toughened their rhetoric, demanding Iran fully abandon its nuclear program. So, as the pressure mounts on Iran, has it been left to fight alone? Or does it have allies that could come to its aid?
Has Iran's 'axis of resistance' fully collapsed?
Iran has long relied on a network of allied paramilitary groups across the Middle East as part of its deterrence strategy. This approach has largely shielded it from direct military strikes by the US or Israel, despite constant threats and pressure.
This so-called 'axis of resistance' includes groups such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) in Iraq, the Houthi militants in Yemen, as well as Hamas in Gaza, which has long been under Iran's influence to varying degrees. Iran also supported Bashar al-Assad's regime in Syria before it was toppled last year.
Members of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) carry images of comrades killed in US airstrikes in western Iraq in 2024. Photo: Ahmed Jalil / EPA via The Conversation
These groups have served both as a regional buffer and as a means for Iran to project power without direct engagement. However, over the past two years, Israel has dealt significant blows to the network.
Hezbollah — once Iran's most powerful non-state ally — has been effectively neutralised after months of attacks by Israel. Its weapons stocks were systematically targeted and destroyed across Lebanon. And the group suffered a major psychological and strategic loss with the assassination of its most influential leader, Hassan Nasrallah.
In Syria, Iranian-backed militias have been largely expelled following the fall of Assad's regime, stripping Iran of another key foothold in the region.
That said, Iran maintains strong influence in Iraq and Yemen. The PMF in Iraq, with an estimated 200,000 fighters, remains formidable. The Houthis have similarly-sized contingent of fighters in Yemen.
Should the situation escalate into an existential threat to Iran — as the region's only Shiite-led state — religious solidarity could drive these groups to become actively involved. This would rapidly expand the war across the region.
The PMF, for instance, could launch attacks on the 2,500 US troops stationed in Iraq. Indeed, the head of Kata'ib Hezbollah, one of the PMF's more hardline factions, promised to do so:
If America dares to intervene in the war, we will directly target its interests and military bases spread across the region without hesitation.
Iran itself could also target US bases in the Persian Gulf countries with ballistic missiles, as well as close the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of the world's oil supply flows.
Houthi supporters hold anti-US and Israel placards and wave the flags of the Iran-backed 'axis of resistance' during a protest in Yemen's capital. Photo: Yahya Arhab / EPA via The Conversation
Will Iran's regional and global allies step in?
Several regional powers maintain close ties with Iran. The most notable among them is Pakistan — the only Islamic country with a nuclear arsenal.
For weeks, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has tried to align Iran more closely with Pakistan in countering Israel's actions in Gaza.
In a sign of Pakistan's importance in the Israel-Iran war, Trump has met with the country's army chief in Washington as he weighs a possible strike on its neighbour.
Pakistan's leaders have also made their allegiances very clear. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has offered Iran's president 'unwavering solidarity' in the 'face of Israel's unprovoked aggression.' And Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Asif recently said in an interview Israel will 'think many times before taking on Pakistan.'
These statements signal a firm stance without explicitly committing to intervention.
Yet, Pakistan has also been working to de-escalate tensions. It has urged other Muslim-majority nations and its strategic partner, China, to intervene diplomatically before the violence spirals into a broader regional war.
In recent years, Iran has also made diplomatic overtures to former regional rivals, such as Saudi Arabia and Egypt, in order to improve relations.
These shifts have helped rally broader regional support for Iran. Nearly two dozen Muslim-majority countries — including some that maintain diplomatic relations with Israel — have jointly condemned Israel's actions and urged de-escalation.
It's unlikely, though, that regional powers such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Turkey would support Iran materially, given their strong alliances with the US.
Iran's key global allies, Russia and China, have also condemned Israel's strikes. They have previously shielded Tehran from punitive resolutions at the UN Security Council.
However, neither power appears willing — at least for now — to escalate the confrontation by providing direct military support to Iran or engaging in a standoff with Israel and the US.
Theoretically, this could change if the conflict widens and Washington openly pursues a regime change strategy in Tehran. Both nations have major geopolitical and security interests in Iran's stability.
This is due to Iran's long-standing 'Look East' policy and the impact its instability could have on the region and the global economy. However, at the current stage, many analysts believe both are unlikely to get involved directly.
Moscow stayed on the sidelines when Assad's regime collapsed in Syria, one of Russia's closest allies in the region. Not only is it focused on its war in Ukraine, Russia also wouldn't want to endanger improving ties with the Trump administration.
China has offered Iran strong rhetorical support, but history suggests it has little interest in getting directly involved in Middle Eastern conflicts.
Ali Mamouri is research fellow, Middle East Studies, Deakin University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AllAfrica
3 hours ago
- AllAfrica
Thai government headed, for the moment, by former student leftist
BANGKOK – Thailand's struggle with democracy has resulted in three very different prime ministers in three days with Phumtham Wechayachai becoming the newest caretaker leader, after a court suspended former Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra for alleged 'ethical misconduct.' So, who is Acting Prime Minister Phumtham ('POOM-tom')? Phumtham, 72, is a veteran politician who was commerce minister and caretaker prime minister in 2024 and Paetongtarn's defense minister during 2025. Some generals in the US-trained military were wary of Phumtham when Paetongtarn appointed the civilian as defense minister, because in 1976 he had joined an anti-military leftist student movement and acquired the nickname 'Big Comrade' for voicing speeches against the return of military dictator Thanom Kittikachorn. When the military violently crushed the university students' protests – by official count killing 46 students although there were estimates of more than 100 dead – Phumtham fled into the countryside with hundreds of others who were welcomed by Thailand's hardened China-backed communist guerrillas. Students who survived those battles eventually surrendered and received amnesty. Some joined mainstream politics after changing their political views. 'I went to escape the violence,' Mr. Phumtham said last year, denying the military's suspicions that he believed in communism. 'It was not only me. There were other students, too.' The dizzying changes at the top of this Southeast Asian, Buddhist-majority US ally are an attempt by Paetongtarn to keep herself and her Shinawatra family's dynastic Pheu Thai (For Thais) Party in her fragile ruling coalition, after the powerful Constitutional Court suspended her from the prime ministership on July 1. In a cabinet shuffle hours before her suspension, Paetongtarn appointed herself as culture minister to remain in the government while the court deliberates her fate, which could come quickly or take weeks. Paetongtarn, 38, faces a possible ban from politics for 10 years, or worse punishment, for criticizing a Royal Thai Army commander during her leaked phone call to Cambodia's de facto leader, Senate President Hun Sen, on June 15. As a result of Paetongtarn's cabinet shakeup, the military was given only a new acting defense minister, General Nattphon Narkphanit, after Phumtham resigned as defense minister to become acting prime minister. 'Leaving such an important position vacant is unprecedented in Thai politics,' a July 3 editorial by the conservative Bangkok Post editorial said, adding that the move was especially worrying because Thailand and Cambodia are involved in a deadly border dispute. Thai troops shot dead a Cambodian soldier during a brief clash on May 28 in the jungle and scrubland of the Emerald Triangle where eastern Thailand, northern Cambodia, and southern Laos meet. During June, the feud morphed into current economic boycotts of some imports and exports by both sides and border closures. 'Why, in a situation where we are still entangled with Cambodia, do we not have a defense minister?' said popular opposition People's Party member of parliament Rangsiman Rome. 'I think this kind of signal is not good for the Thai people, and we all know that the defense minister is important, not just for signing arms procurement deals, but also for strategy and working with the National Security Council, which today plays an important role in resolving various problems that arise, including the Cambodia [border] issue,' Mr. Rangsiman told Khaosod English news. 'Evidently, the new cabinet is not based on meritocracy,' the Bangkok Post said in its July 3 editorial, describing it as 'a lame-duck government.' 'The change is to ensure the [Pheu Thai] party's short-term, if not immediate, survival by sharing the political cake among those in its circle – giving or returning favors so they do not jump ship and will still be around at the next election,' the editorial said. Acting Prime Minister Phumtham is a trusted aide of Paetongtarn's politically powerful father, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a billionaire perceived as the de facto leader of Thailand who influences his politically naive daughter's decisions and policies. When a military coup toppled twice-elected Thaksin's 2001-2006 government, Phumtham and many of Thaksin's other party members were banned from politics for five years. Phumtham's rise to become acting prime minister involved a dazzling political zig-zag. On July 3, Phumtham replaced a previous caretaker prime minister, Suriya Juangroongruangkit, whom Paetongtarn had suddenly appointed on July two hours before the Constitutional Court suspended her. As a result, former Transport Minister Suriya became acting prime minister for only one day, July 2, before Phumtham took over that caretaker role on July 3. Paetongtarn in her role as the new culture minister went on July 3 with her multi-party cabinet to Dusit Palace, where they swore an oath of allegiance to King Vajiralongkorn as required when an administration shuffles its cabinet. Outgoing Acting Prime Minister Suriya that day also took the oath as acting prime minister, alongside Phumtham who was sworn in as Thailand's new interior minister and reconfirmed as a deputy prime minister. Hours later on July 3 Suriya resigned, as planned, to allow Phumtham to be appointed as the new caretaker prime minister. Phumtham had previously been lower in the order of succession than Suriya, so Mr. Phumtham was unable to become acting prime minister until the cabinet reshuffle and allegiance oath on July 3. As a newly sworn-in interior minister and deputy prime minister, Phumtham was then qualified to be promoted to acting prime minister. The confusing, hurried changes reflect Paetongtarn's rapidly weakening position and her seemingly desperate attempts to exploit legal loopholes in parliament, where her party has a razor-thin majority. The National Anti-Corruption Commission, the Election Commission and the Central Investigation Bureau are all due, separately, to hear allegations that her conversation with Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen may have violated the constitution or threatened Thailand's security. Lawmakers were scheduled for a no-confidence vote against Paetongtarn's coalition on July 3 but the five opposition parties agreed to postpone it until the Constitutional Court reviews her case. Paetongtarn said, 'I insist I had no ill intentions' in criticizing the high-ranking general. The prime minister was given 15 days to defend herself in court. The Constitution Court's nine judges voted unanimously to consider a petition by 36 appointed, pro-military senators accusing Paetongtarn of 'lacking integrity' as well as committing 'ethical misconduct' while speaking to Hun Sen during their ongoing border feud, and voted 7-2 to suspend her immediately from the prime minister's post. Audio from her phone call on June 15 to Hun Sen was leaked, exposing her criticism of Thailand's Second Army Region Commander Lt. Gen. Boonsin Padklang. General Boonsin's troops guard northeastern Thailand's border with Cambodia, including the disputed Emerald Triangle zone where the shooting occurred. In an audio clip of her leaked call – which she later confirmed – Paetongtarn told Hun Sen that she did not want him 'to listen to the opposing side, especially since the [Thai] Second Army Region commander is entirely from the opposition.' The Thai commander 'just wants to appear cool or impressive. He may say [hawkish] things that are not beneficial to the country,' Paetongtarn said to Hun Sen during her call. The Bangkok Post described her comments about the commander as 'derogatory remarks' and criticized her 'submissive tone towards Hun Sen, with her signaling a readiness to comply with the Cambodian strongman's demands.' Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based American foreign correspondent reporting from Asia since 1978, and winner of Columbia University's Foreign Correspondents' Award. Excerpts from his two new nonfiction books, Rituals. Killers. Wars. & Sex. – Tibet, India, Nepal, Laos, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka & New York and Apocalyptic Tribes, Smugglers & Freaks are available here.


The Standard
3 hours ago
- The Standard
Furor over Epstein files sparks clash between Bondi and Bongino at the Justice Department
Attorney General Pam Bondi, left, listens as President Donald Trump, right, speaks during a cabinet meeting at the White House, Tuesday, July 8, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Worker dies after migrant raid on California farm, judge orders stop to arrests
A farmworker died on Friday after being injured during a raid by US immigration agents on a legal cannabis farm in California that resulted in the arrests of 200 undocumented migrants and clashes with protesters. President Donald Trump , meanwhile, called demonstrators involved in attacks on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents 'slimeballs' and said they should be arrested. In another development, a district judge ordered a halt to 'roving patrols' in Los Angeles by federal agents who were detaining suspected undocumented migrants without probable cause and denying them due process. Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong ordered an end to the arrests, which she said were being made 'based upon race alone', on whether a person was speaking Spanish or English with an accent or because of their place of work, and ordered them stopped. Trump's remarks and the court order come a day after a chaotic raid on a cannabis plantation in Ventura county, some 90km (56 miles) from Los Angeles, left one farmworker critically injured. A protester flees as Customs and Border Protection officers fire chemical agents into the crowd during a raid by federal immigration agents at Glass House Farms in Camarillo, California, on Thursday. Photo: AFP The United Farm Workers labour union said in a social media post on Friday that the worker had 'died of injuries they sustained as a result of yesterday's immigration enforcement action'.