Strike fear: Iran's protests and Israel

伊朗危机与以色列

The Intelligence from The Economist

2026-01-12

26 分钟
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Each country fears an attack from the other: Iran may wish to distract from internal conflict, Israel to exploit it. In an interview with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu we explore perspectives on the war-gaming. As the first cohort of graduates weaned on generative AI enters the workforce, we examine a changing career ladder. And why European pension systems badly need reform.
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  • Hello and welcome to The Intelligence from The Economist.

  • I'm Jason Palmer.

  • Every weekday we provide a fresh perspective on the events shaping your world.

  • There's a whole graduating class coming in 2026,

  • that will have had generative AI at its fingertips for the whole of its college education.

  • We ask how those grads will fair in the workplace,

  • and how the workplace is likely to change to accommodate them.

  • And pensions in Europe are a fiscal time bomb as demographics change.

  • Shoring them up by changing retirement ages or benefits is politically dangerous.

  • We look at what must and what might happen to fend off crises across the continent.

  • But first, in Iran, the authorities are using an ever heavier hand,

  • to suppress the protests we were talking about on Friday.

  • Across the country, cities and towns, demonstrators are being mowed down.

  • 490 according to a Washington-based human rights group.

  • That's almost certainly an undercount.

  • We've said this before, I know, but what's going on inside Iran really is different this time,

  • which makes for a different dynamic outside it, in particular for its principal rival in the region.

  • People asked me during the war is your goal regime change?

  • And I said, no, it's not.

  • But it could be the consequence of the war if we were successful.