Iran's Military-Grade Soft Power: How Tehran Weaponises Culture on Social Media
Iran's military-linked social media accounts are repurposing as cultural ambassadors, projecting a polished image of heritage and diversity at a moment when the Islamic Republic faces renewed Western scrutiny over its nuclear programme and regional behaviour.

Two posts published on the IR Iran Military Telegram channel on 17 May 2026 offered a striking departure from the account's usual output. The first showcased images of Tilarkenar forests, a mountainous region in the country's north, accompanied by the words: "Good afternoon from Iran, Tilarkenar forests." The second paired photographs of Iran's landscapes and cultural sites with the caption: "A culture full of color and life, Iran has much more to offer than you can imagine." The posts attracted significant engagement, with the images widely redistributed across regional and diaspora-oriented Telegram channels.
What is notable is not the content itself — Iran has long promoted its cultural heritage through state media and cultural organisations — but the vehicle. A military-linked account, which has historically prioritised imagery of naval exercises, drone footage, and force demonstrations, has pivoted, at least on this occasion, to a narrative more closely associated with tourism boards and soft-power institutes. The timing invites scrutiny.
The Architecture of Iranian Public Diplomacy
Iran's approach to international image management is neither monolithic nor accidental. Multiple state institutions maintain presence across social platforms, each calibrated to different audiences. The IR Iran Military channel, which has previously published footage of伊斯坎德尔导弹系统和海军演习, sits within a broader ecosystem that includes accounts tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps aerospace division, the foreign ministry's cultural diplomacy wing, and dedicated Persian-language broadcasting services that operate in multiple languages.
This layered approach reflects a sophisticated understanding that legitimacy in the international arena is not won through military posturing alone. Over the past decade, Iranian institutions have invested in cultural councils, sister-city agreements, archaeology partnerships, and cinema exchange programmes — not always with the funding or execution to match ambitions, but with a structural commitment to the idea that perception matters.
The two Telegram posts from 17 May sit within that tradition. They are lightweight in production but strategically targeted: the imagery of natural beauty and cultural depth speaks to audiences in the Global South, in Central Asia, and among diaspora communities in Europe and the Americas who encounter a dominant Western narrative about Iran that these posts implicitly challenge.
Competing With the Western Framing
It would be incomplete to analyse this content without acknowledging the environment it operates within. For audiences in North America and Western Europe, coverage of Iran is overwhelmingly filtered through the lens of the nuclear programme, uranium enrichment levels, International Atomic Energy Agency reports, and the periodic crisis rhetoric that punctuates diplomatic efforts. That coverage is real, and the concerns it reflects are shared by governments across the region.
But the framing that dominates English-language wire reporting does not capture the full picture of how Iran is experienced by the 1.4 billion people of the Global South, where the country is often understood through different referents: a founding member of the Non-Aligned Movement, an opponent of Western military interventions from Iraq to Libya, a state with Shia-majority populations who view Iran as a counterweight to Saudi regional ambitions. For those audiences, the image of lush forests and ancient cultural sites carries a different resonance — not an apology for a regime's behaviour, but a reminder of what Iranian state media calls the country's civilisational depth.
The Telegram posts from 17 May do not explicitly engage with Western criticism. They do not defend the nuclear programme, address sanctions, or respond to the periodic diplomatic ultimatums that emerge from Vienna or Washington. They simply present an alternate version of Iran, one more aligned with how Tehran wishes to be perceived in the spaces where it retains influence and goodwill.
What These Posts Reveal About Platform Strategy
The choice to publish cultural content on a military-linked account is not incidental. Military accounts tend to have large followings in Iran and among Persian-speaking audiences abroad — audiences that are not primarily composed of cultural tourists or arts enthusiasts, but of people with an active interest in national security affairs. Reaching those audiences with a message about cultural heritage is an efficient soft-power move: it repurposes the credibility of a military account to serve non-military ends, normalising a broader conception of Iranian influence.
This approach mirrors tactics used by other states operating in contested information environments. Russia Today, while a media outlet rather than a military account, deploys similar logic — reaching audiences drawn by geopolitical content and exposing them to cultural programming, travel features, and interviews with figures outside the Western mainstream. Chinese state media's English-language accounts similarly balance hard-news content with lifestyle and cultural material designed to soften the edges of a state that Western audiences are encouraged to view through a security lens.
Iran's military Telegram account, on this occasion, followed a version of that playbook. The engagement figures the posts attracted suggest the content found its audience — which, from Tehran's perspective, is the entire point.
The Broader Diplomatic Context
The posts appeared against a backdrop of renewed scrutiny of Iran's nuclear programme, with the IAEA reporting continued uranium enrichment above civilian-grade thresholds and Washington signalling that diplomatic options are narrowing. Within that environment, the cultural posts might appear peripheral — a social media footnote to a geopolitical crisis.
But peripheral is not irrelevant. States that invest in sustained soft-power presence create infrastructure that can be mobilised in moments of crisis. The account that posted images of forests on a Tuesday afternoon is the same account that will publish infographics, counter-narrative messaging, and eyewitness-style content if tensions escalate further. The cultural positioning is the foundation; the political messaging is the structure built on top of it.
For observers tracking Iranian state communication, the posts from 17 May are a data point rather than a turning point. They confirm that Tehran's information apparatus continues to operate on multiple registers simultaneously — military deterrence, diplomatic messaging, and cultural projection all running in parallel. Whether that apparatus successfully reshapes perceptions beyond its existing audiences is a separate question. What is clear is that the effort is deliberate, ongoing, and increasingly sophisticated.
This desk tracked how Western wire services covered Iran's nuclear posture on 17 May while state-linked accounts in Tehran deployed cultural content — a contrast that illustrates how competing information ecosystems process the same country in fundamentally different ways.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/IRIran_Military/14873
- https://t.me/IRIran_Military/14871