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The Intercept Briefing

Protests and Power Plays: From Tehran to the Arctic Circle

The Intercept Briefing

The Intercept

News, News Commentary, Politics

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 23 January 2026

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The people of Iran are in the midst of one of the country’s biggest uprisings — and harshest government crackdowns — since the Iranian Revolution. 

It started with shopkeepers in bazaars closing their doors at the end of December in protest of the plummeting Iranian rial and economic distress. But demonstrations soon spread to universities and across the country to every single province. Working-class Iranians wanted relief — both from the inflation crisis and U.S sanctions.

This week on The Intercept Briefing, host Akela Lacy speaks with Hooman Majd, an Iranian American writer and journalist, who explains what sparked the protests and the government’s brutal response. 

“I don't think in the history of Iran, even during the Islamic Revolution, have we seen this number of fatalities.” says Majd. “The death toll is staggering. Really, because that death toll is staggering, what's happened is there are no more protests. And that's where we are right now. No more protest, heavy security on the streets. Massive security on the streets, on every corner. It isn't martial law. But it feels like martial law to people living there.”

The path forward is unclear, Majd says. But a few things are certain. “The idea is no to shah, no to an ayatollah, no to theocracy. Let's just, finally, after 120 years of demonstrating — which is what the Iranians have been doing since 1906 — after 120 years of looking for democracy, can we just do that? Can we just get a democracy? That is probably the biggest sentiment in Iran: wanting a democratic rule, wanting the repression to end, wanting better relations with the rest of the world so these sanctions can be lifted.”

Some people inside and outside Iran have called on President Donald Trump to intervene. The idea that the U.S. should — or could — impose regime change militarily is folly, Majd says. “Sure, we were able to impose a regime change in Iraq militarily. They can do that again in Iran, possibly with the help of Israel or even without the help of Israel. But then what do you have? Do you have another basically authoritarian, autocratic government?’” 

Meanwhile, Trump has threatened to intervene in another international arena. He has set his sights on taking over Greenland. 

Despite walking back his statements pledging to do so by force, Trump has now said he’s forming a plan with the secretary general of NATO for Greenland’s future. We’re joined by independent investigative journalist Lois Parshley, who explains the financial interests behind Trump’s obsession with the Arctic island, the billionaires and tech moguls plotting to exploit Greenland’s natural resources, and how the people of Greenland have responded to the president’s pledge to violate their sovereignty.

Shortly before Trump first expressed an interest in Greenland during his first term, his ambassador to Denmark and Greenland visited a major rare earth mining project on the island, Parshley reported last year.  

“More recently, The Guardian reported that it was Ronald Lauder, heir to the global cosmetics brand [Estée Lauder] who was also a longtime friend of Trump's, who first suggested buying Greenland. He has acquired commercial holdings there and is also part of a consortium who want to access Ukrainian minerals.”

Fresh off the invasion of Venezuela, the idea that Trump wants to take over Greenland is even more alarming, Parshley says. 

“I'm not the first person to report on these kinds of major tech interests in things like crypto states or special economic zones. People have been pointing this stuff out for a long time, but it's not until President Trump started saying the quiet part out loud that people have really been registering some of these absurd concepts that seem to now be creeping toward reality.”

Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. 

If you want to support our work, you can go to theintercept.com/join


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Malcolm Gladwell here. This season on Revisionous History, we're going back to the spring of 1988 to a town in northwest Alabama, where a man committed a crime that would spiral out of control.

0:10.7

There was this joke that said that it was easier to get forgiveness in the Church of Christ for murdering somebody than it was to be divorced.

0:21.3

From revisionist history, this is the Alabama murders.

0:25.1

Listen to revisionist history, the Alabama murders, wherever you get your podcast.

0:32.6

Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I'm Michaela Lacey.

0:36.6

In late December, people in Iran took to

0:39.3

the streets to protest the worsening economy as the country's currency plunged to a record

0:44.1

blow. As protests grew, the government opened fire on civilians and implemented an internet

0:49.0

blackout. We tried to overcome the regime, but every night, when it got late, about midnight, they attacked with their guns, and they wiped out the streets from the living people.

1:12.3

They killed everybody, almost everybody.

1:15.9

If you got injured and you tried to run, they kill you.

1:20.9

We've obtained an exclusive and rare firsthand eyewitness account from one of the protesters

1:25.5

who took to the streets of Tehran over the

1:27.8

past few weeks. She wishes to remain anonymous, so for her safety, we'll call her Leila.

1:34.1

I'm sorry that I'm alive. I feel guilty, but I'm not dead. The others are.

1:42.9

It's been difficult to confirm the current death toll and estimates range from the low

1:47.3

thousands to over 10,000.

1:49.6

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump has threatened to intervene while Iran has blamed the U.S.

1:54.0

and Israel for the protests.

1:56.3

To understand what's happening, I'm joined by Human Majd, an Iranian-American writer and the author

2:01.8

of numerous books, including, most recently, Minister Without Portfolio.

2:06.2

Majd is written for The Intercept, the New Yorker, the New York Times and Foreign Affairs,

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