Document Type : Original Article
Authors
1
Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Tehran, Iran
2
Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
10.22082/cr.2026.2069937.2841
Abstract
This study investigates the reflection of the twelve-day war between Iran and Israel on Persian-language social media and its implications for the Islamic Republic’s media policy. Drawing on networked public sphere theory and Castells’ concept of network power, the research shows that contemporary conflicts unfold more in narratives and public perceptions than on the military front. The dataset includes roughly 2,000 popular posts from X, Instagram, Telegram, and Eitaa between June 13 and June 30, analyzed through a mixed quantitative–qualitative approach. Findings reveal that Telegram and Eitaa generated the most content, while Instagram and X attracted the highest engagement. On X, users were predominantly politically active and opposed to the Iranian government, with critical narratives dominating. Instagram exhibited anti-Iran bias due to content removal, though foreign users partially moderated narratives with humanitarian perspectives. Telegram primarily served a news function, while Eitaa acted as a channel for official narratives, albeit with limited analytical depth. Key themes included military attacks, narrative warfare and misinformation, global reactions, security analyses, and cyber operations. Opinion analysis indicated that foreign users were supportive of Iranians, whereas Iranian users focused more on political concerns and polarization. Despite Iran’s on-the-ground advantages, it faced challenges in shaping Persian-language narratives due to opposition dominance, weak engaging content, and lack of coordinated storytelling. The study concludes with strategic recommendations, including people-centered media policy redesign, strengthening global media diplomacy, improving domestic media performance, intelligent information management, and establishing a national crisis narrative center.
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