Fortune | FORTUNE 10月13日 03:59
伊朗“抵抗轴心”受损,地区影响力面临挑战
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

近期,伊朗长期以来支持的“抵抗轴心”在地区冲突中遭受重创。以色列对加沙地带的打击,以及对黎巴嫩真主党、哈马斯等武装组织及伊朗军事核项目领导人的精准打击,削弱了其盟友的实力。同时,伊朗国内经济因国际制裁和能源价格下跌而举步维艰。文章分析了伊朗在地区格局中的地位变化,指出其“抵抗轴心”联盟的瓦解,以及国内面临的经济压力和核计划的不确定性,预示着伊朗未来在中东地区的影响力将面临严峻考验。伊朗未来如何应对,是选择强硬反击还是专注于国内重建,将是关键。

🛡️ **“抵抗轴心”联盟受损严峻**:伊朗长期以来构建的“抵抗轴心”联盟,通过支持黎巴嫩真主党、也门胡塞武装、伊拉克民兵组织及哈马斯等,试图在中东地区对抗以色列和美国。然而,近期以色列对加沙的打击以及对该联盟关键领导人的精准清除,已严重削弱了其成员国的作战能力,导致该联盟的整体实力和影响力大幅下降。

📉 **经济困境与战略调整**:伊朗经济深受国际制裁和全球能源价格下跌的影响,国内资源捉襟见肘。有分析认为,伊朗对哈马斯的支援更多是出于对美国边境冲突转移的反应。经济的疲软迫使伊朗在地区事务上采取更为谨慎的策略,其在中东地区的影响力也因此受到限制。

⏳ **地区格局巨变与未来不确定性**:自2003年伊拉克战争以来,伊朗的地区影响力一度达到顶峰。但如今,叙利亚政权遭遇挑战,黎巴嫩真主党和哈马斯领导层受到打击,伊拉克武装组织趋于沉寂,也门胡塞武装也面临以色列的精确打击。同时,伊朗核计划的进展也引发国际担忧。这些因素共同导致地区格局发生深刻变化,伊朗的战略空间面临前所未有的挑战,其未来走向充满不确定性。

Tehran has operated its self-described “Axis of Resistance”over several decades, supporting militant groups and nations allied with it against Israel and the United States. But as Israel bombed the Gaza Strip, it also turned its crosshairs toward top leaders abroad in militant groups like Hamas, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and even the top echelon within Iran’s military and nuclear program — killing many and disrupting their ability to fight back.

As President Donald Trump prepares for a Middle East trip that likely will see him praised by Israel and Arab nations, Iran won’t be at the table as it still struggles to recover from June’s 12-day war.

How Tehran’s theocracy responds in the weeks and months ahead, whether that means lashing out or trying to rebuild its hobbled economy at home, will be crucial.

“Undoubtedly this is a not a proud moment for Iran,” said Ali Vaez, the Iran project director at the International Crisis Group. “Its alliance system in the region is in ruins but it doesn’t mean that the ‘Axis of Resistance’ is no more.”

‘Like a bankrupt gambler’

Iranian state media has sought to describe the Gaza ceasefire as a victory for Hamas, despite the war destroying the Gaza Strip and killing over 67,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants but says around half the dead are women and children.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry welcomed “any decision … that guarantees halting the genocide of Palestinians.” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi reiterated that on Saturday, telling state television that Hamas decided to accept the deal and that Tehran has “always supported any plan, any action that led to the halt of crimes, genocide” by Israel against the people of Gaza.

But perhaps more tellingly, an adviser to Iran’s 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei suggested the ceasefire would only lead to conflict elsewhere in the region.

“The start of the ceasefire in Gaza may be the behind-the-scenes end of the ceasefire somewhere else!” Ali Akbar Velayati, an adviser to Khamenei, wrote on X, referencing Hezbollah, Yemen’s Iranian-backed Houthi rebels and Iraq.

The fear of further Israeli strikes, particularly on Iran, remains acute in the public’s mind as much of Iranian air defenses likely were destroyed by Israel in June. Khamenei has not resumed his usual routine of weekly speeches to audiences. Without explanation, Iran avoided holding a major military commemoration marking the end of the Iran-Iraq war in September, which typically sees top officials watch drones and missile launchers parade past them.

Iran’s economy also has suffered under international sanctions and as global energy prices fall.

“Iran has always focused on its interests, we do not have resources anymore, our economy has weakened,” said Tehran-based analyst Saeed Leilaz. “Our support to Hamas was a reaction to U.S. to divert conflicts from our borders.”

Others are less optimistic.

“Iran is like a bankrupt gambler after winning some small money in the first rounds,” said Amir Kazemi, a university student in Tehran. “When Hamas attacked Israel, Iran was happy about it. But now, after the ceasefire, Iran finds nothing in its pocket.”

Mideast looks far different

In the immediate years after Iran’s revolution, its theocratic government sought to export its Shiite revolutionary ideology more widely in the Middle East. That morphed following its devastating 1980s war with Iraq into more of an effort to provide a level of deterrence as Arab nations around it purchased sophisticated American bombs, warplanes and tanks that Tehran couldn’t access due to sanctions.

The U.S. military’s presence across the Persian Gulf also expanded following the 1991 Gulf War, with Arab nations granting basing rights to American forces to Tehran’s constant anger.

The peak of the “Axis of Resistance” came in the chaotic years after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and Yemen’s subsequent collapse into a civil war. Then, it could count on Hezbollah, Syrian autocrat Bashar Assad, the Houthis, Iraqi militant groups and even Hamas — a Sunni militant group.

Today, the Mideast looks far different.

In Syria, rebels overthrew Assad last year, Israeli strikes killed Hezbollah and Hamas’ top leaders, while Iraqi militant groups faded into the background. Yemen’s Houthis, while still capable of launching attacks on Israel and commercial shipping in the Red Sea corridor, find themselves now targeted by increasingly precise Israeli strikes.

And the 12-day war in June left Iran likely no longer enriching uranium for its nuclear program, which the West long has worried could be weaponized.

‘Collapsing regional clout’

Iran, meanwhile, has yet to receive any major support from either China or Russia, despite providing Beijing with likely discounted oil and Moscow with the drones it uses in its war on Ukraine. Tehran has also shied away from confronting women who are increasingly abandoning the hijab, or headscarf, instead executing prisoners it already holds at a rate unseen in decades.

“The ceasefire is reflective of Tehran’s collapsing regional clout following the unraveling of its long-powerful ‘Axis of Resistance’ since 2024,” said Ali Fathollah-Nejad, the director of the Berlin-based Center for Middle East and Global Order. “The ceasefire will free Israeli military capacities that would now be used against Iranian interests — whether in Lebanon against Hezbollah or directly against Iran.”

For his part, Trump seized on Iran accepting the ceasefire as “terrific” news. However, there’s been no move toward renewed public negotiations with Tehran over its nuclear program.

“Time is not on Iran’s side but their problem is no one is really giving them an exit ramp,” Vaez said. But whether Tehran would take the ramp also remains in question as its leaders still debate what turn to now take.

Fortune Global Forum

returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business.

Apply for an invitation.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

伊朗 抵抗轴心 中东局势 地缘政治 Iran Axis of Resistance Middle East Geopolitics
相关文章