Breaking News From Iran. Headline - Party like it's 1399.
A curtain of silence has gone down over Iran. No news gets in, little non-state news gets out. Only unverifiable, and often chilling, bursts of communication escape the lockdown on Twitter, like shouts from down in a cave. However, behind the firewall an e-war is raging on Iran's intertubes. Tech-savvy protesters (they really need an encompassing title - Greens maybe?) have thoroughly destroyed many government run sites, Ahmadinejad's personal networks, crashed servers at the state media-controlling agencies, and even broken into the Revolutionary Guard's databases to erase whole lists of noted detractors and scattered in disinformation.
Meanwhile, as protesters are hacking up government webspaces, militiamen are reportedly hacking up protesters.
With axes. It's rumored that across the rural countryside sporadic, shocking violence is being meted out by the Basij on anyone unfortunate enough to fail a patriotism spot-check. The cities are turning brutal in a whole new way, after the establishment has recognized that it just can't stop people from communicating at will. The new policy - if you're caught with any battery-powered on your person, prepare to watch it get stomped to pieces. The Supreme Leader has ordered the police and militias to confiscate and/or destroy any electronic communication devices they see someone using, and universities have been stormed by literally pitchfork-wielding mobs smashing up ever computer they find.
What was already a iron-handed police state is quickly devolving into a barbarian kingdom. For those who haven't heard, a few days ago a sixteen year old girl was shot to death by the riot police. She's one of possibly a hundred people already killed in response - what makes her special is that her final, bloody moments were captured in
multiple angle cell-phone camera footage, which ricocheted across Iran and around the world. The establishment handed the protesters the greatest advantaged they could have - a martyr. At the same time, the Supreme Leader has obviously been convinced that no other country is going to take action, overt or otherwise, regarding the violence there, and has stopped voicing even the pretense of democratic process or reconciliation.
No one in or out of Iran really knows what's going on there right now, but it's widely suspected that with most organization cut off and the militia stepping up, the protesters are losing the ground war. The mind war is another matter, and what leaders the movement has are saying they're preparing for a long-term ideological insurgency. Mousavi has called for one last mass sit-in at Iran's marketplaces right about now, and is expected to give his ersatz rebellion it's first official marching orders in a few hours.
There is no patience left for quarter or compromise. The battlelines are drawn, the war begins today.