Iran's Digital War: The Imperial Boomerang!
Iranian civilization, one of the world's oldest continuous civilizations, known historically as Persia. The Islamic era of Iranian civilization (651 CE–present) began with the Arab-Muslim conquest of the Sasanian Empire. The highlights of US-Israel-Iran war 2026 are the heroic and valiant efforts presented by the people of Iran; making conflict a major text book lesson. This write up "Iran's Digital War: The Imperial Boomerang!" is an opinion published on Vox Ummah with additional comments for wider audience discussion.
أَعُوذُ بِاللّٰهِ مِنَ الشَّيْطَانِ الرَّجِيمِ
بِسۡمِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّحۡمَـٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
In the name of ALLAH, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful
Iran's Digital War: The Imperial Boomerang!
The Imperial Boomerang: How Iran Turned Cognitive Warfare Against Empire
Sara Larijani at Vox Ummah on May 25th, 2026
During the 2026 US–Israeli war on Iran, something extraordinary happened on the digital front. Iranian youth—long targeted by imperial cognitive warfare—launched campaigns on X and Instagram that pierced Western audiences with pro-resistance messaging. The result was a success, opening up Western audiences to a view of Iranian society hardly seen. Why did this work so well?
Over the last two years, televised scenes of imperial and settler-colonial atrocities during the genocide in Gaza have shattered global perceptions of Western morality and of the West as the guardian of human rights and custodian of a stable international order. On a world scale, the naked rhetoric of the White House about controlling the territory and waterways of other sovereign nations, as well as dominating and plundering their resources, has further unsettled the so-called moral legitimacy of Western interventions in other continents. Over the past decades, propagandistic discourses such as “The Responsibility to Protect” (R2P), “humanitarian intervention,” and the “War on Terror,” which legacy media have long recycled to legitimize wars in West Asia, have become far less credible in light of the horrific consequences of these invasions in Libya, Iraq, and Afghanistan – just to cite a few recent examples.
A central justification for imperial encroachments was the construction of images of “uncivilized,” irrational, violent, or inherently destabilizing others in West Asia. Edward Said shows how colonizers built an “imaginative geography” of the Orient through negative, static, and essentialist representations of the European Other to justify expropriation and imperial encroachment (Orientalism).
The rise of national liberation movements and the political independence of former colonies exposed the limitations and biases of Orientalist discourse and imaginative geography of the other. The arbitrary Orientalist images failed to capture the dynamic and transformative processes of historical change in the mid-20th century.
Likewise, Orientalism, rebranded under US-led imperialism since the dawn of the twenty-first century, cannot account for the televised realities of resistance by nations and groups in West Asia. As the gloss over imperial violence receded, especially after the genocide in Gaza, the imaginative geography that had long reduced resisting nations and movements to fixed stereotypes began to collapse. This created the conditions for Iranian social media campaigns to emerge and gain traction.
For decades, imperial powers and their regional allies invested heavily in cognitive warfare through Persian-language satellite channels, entertainment media, social platforms, and algorithmically amplified propaganda. Their aim was not only political destabilization but also epistemological transformation of Iranian society, normalizing Western consumerism and liberal individualism, presenting Western countries as sites of freedom and prosperity, and depicting Iran as backward, irrational, and historically failed.
The ultimate objective of this long process was to create a collective inferiority complex among Iranian youth and, whenever required, make them more willing to accept US solutions and actions as superior. Therefore, many are drawn into what Jalal Al-Ahmad, in the 1960s, called Westoxication (gharbzadegi), though most of its contemporary forms operate through digital infiltration. By presenting the West as superior to the Iranian public, this imaginative geography encouraged many young people, especially in digital spaces, to model their lives and self-presentation on the Western Other. The byproduct of this infiltration was the emergence of a generation deeply familiar with Western languages, values, aesthetics, and digital cultures.
The Israeli-US imposed war on Iran in June 2025 marked a decisive rupture among segments of this digitally “Westoxified” generation. The openly visible support or silence of digital space in the West regarding the unjust aggression against Iran made imperial violence difficult to conceal behind liberal rhetoric. For many Iranians, imperialism ceased to be an abstract slogan and became an immediate geopolitical reality. At the same time, Iran’s demonstrated resilience across military, technological, and social domains disrupted the long-cultivated image of a weak and irrational country. It was a historical moment in which political clarity emerged.
This re-evaluation did not remain in consciousness. When the US-Israeli war on Iran escalated again in February 2026, it found organized expression in digital space. The cognitive rupture translated into a practical intervention. Many Iranians accounts on Western digital platforms mobilized their linguistic, cultural, and technical skills to challenge dominant narratives and to communicate Iran’s case directly to global audiences. Their narratives were so powerful that platforms like X (Twitter) and Instagram found no solution but to shut down these accounts.
This phenomenon may be understood as an imperial boomerang in soft warfare. The “imperial boomerang” concept has often described the return of colonial methods of repression to the imperial core. But here the boomerang takes another form. Imperial efforts to Westernize the minds of resisting nations involved massive investments, but they failed to secure vital interests at the decisive moment. Instead, it equipped a generation in Iran with the cultural and technical capacities to counter the empire on its own terrain. Their familiarity with American lifestyles, Western humor, trends, and media cycles enabled them to craft culturally resonant messages for Global North audiences, boosting visibility and reach.
Westernization undeniably erodes cultural confidence, political autonomy, and historical consciousness—a critique that endures. Yet when the moral clarity of resistance crystallized with striking clarity, decades of investment in portraying Iran as backward ironically equipped a generation with the tools of cognitive warfare to fuel digital resistance. What imperialism cultivated as de-Iranization and de-Islamization became its digital undoing—an infrastructure of resistance built with its own tools.
**Sara Larijani is a postdoctoral fellow and researcher at the Center for the Study of Resistance, Sovereignty, and Development (MOHAAT) at the University of Tehran.**
Additional Comments
USA- a country offering "American Dreams" as a Land of Freedom, liberty and Democracy turned into "Vampire" since 9/11; but it will be governed by fools, idiots and jokers was some thing least expected by any commentator on geo politics. However, USA has become a laughing stock for all the serious watchers of the world's affairs. The current US Administration led by Donald Trump has turned the Capital Hill into a circus and world is holding its breadth and praying for the fragility of the peace under threat. The US and Israel attack of Iran on 28th of February 2026 was one such reckless war and the results so far are changing the world's order.
The major miscalculation was about the Iran's civilization. Iran, historically known as Persia, is one of the world's oldest and most continuous major civilizations, with urban settlements dating back over 5,000 years. A cradle of human creativity, it fundamentally shaped global history through profound innovations in governance, astronomy, poetry, architecture, and human rights. Today Iran is a bed rock of Islamic Faith, albeit "Shai"; but she is an Islamic nation with a sound "Hussaini Karbala" sentiments. The US and the West underestimated the spirit of sacrifice and "nationhood", therefore betted on "Raza Shah's placement" as a cry of enlightened citizens (who do exist, but few in numbers).
Iranians rallied behind the government, viewing the bombardment by foreign powers as a unifying national crisis. Some Iranians actively supported the US and Israeli actions, hoping foreign intervention would topple the Islamic Republic. As civilian casualties and infrastructure damage mounted, even this thin support shifted toward resentment; and West lost that support as well. The citizen of Iran overcoming initial shock of war, really took to the digital world and bombarded media with what civilization really means to its people. The above article from Sara Larijani amply reflects upon Imperial Boomerang created by people of Iran.
Iran has a long-term strategic interest in cooperation with its Gulf neighbours, not an ongoing war. Iran will be restrained, if any restraint is needed, by its great-power patrons, Russia and China, who both desire a stable and prosperous region. The Iranian leadership understands this clearly, and will stop the fighting. Shia Islam helped shape Iran by providing a unifying national identity, centralizing state power against foreign empires, and establishing an ideological foundation for modern governance. Iran has emerged victorious in the war and it has improved her image in all the Islamic World. Iran has all the advantages now to argue for peace to provided long awaited prosperity to her population.