Iran's Execution Machine Keeps Running — And the World Keeps Looking Away

Two men were hanged in Iran on May 21, 2026. Ramin Zaleh and Karim Marufpour — both sons of a man named Kamal, according to Iranian state media — were executed for what Tehran described as separatist terrorism. That phrase does a lot of work. It covers ethnic separatism, political opposition, armed resistance, and, critically, whatever the Islamic Republic decides to call a threat to national security. The men are dead. The label outlives them.
This publication does not treat Iran's judicial machinery as a credible arbiter of criminal guilt. It cannot. A system that conducts trials behind closed doors, denies access to independent counsel, and routinely executes dissidents on vague national-security charges is not a court of law — it is an instrument of state control. That is not editorial opinion; it is the settled finding of Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and every serious human rights body that still manages to operate inside or adjacent to Iran's borders.
The Charge Is a Convenient Catch-All
The language of "separatist terrorism" has become Iran's preferred framework for silencing ethnic minorities, regional activists, and anyone who challenges Tehran's monopoly on governance. The term is elastic enough to encompass Kurdish rights advocates in the northwest, Baloch activists in the southeast, Arab minorities in Khuzestan, and whatever category of dissident happens to inconvenience the security apparatus in a given month. It requires no proof of violent intent. It demands no demonstration that the accused actually carried out an attack. Membership in a group — or simply forming one — suffices.
Iranian state media reports from Tasnim and Mehr News, both aligned with hardline institutions inside the Islamic Republic, confirmed the executions on May 21. The outlets described the men as members of a "secret organization of separatist terrorist groups." The specificity of "secret" is doing its own work: it signals that even the act of holding trials was deemed too risky for public scrutiny. That is not how a functioning criminal justice system operates.
The International Response Has Calcified
Western governments have condemned Iranian executions before. The European Union issued statements after the 2022 protests. The United States Treasury has sanctioned Iranian judiciary officials. But the machinery of condemnation has not stopped the machinery of the gallows. Each cycle — outrage, statement, continuation — makes the pattern more legible: major powers deplore the practice while calibrating their responses to preserve whatever diplomatic channel remains operative.
This is the structural contradiction at the heart of Western Iran policy. The same capitals that sanction Tehran's nuclear programme, that push for inspections at Fordow and Natanz, that demand accountability for ballistic missile transfers to Russia's war in Ukraine — those same capitals keep a channel open to Iran's foreign ministry. They calculate that total rupture serves no one's interests. And so executions continue, and the statements continue, and the executions continue further.
It is worth being precise about what this silence communicates to the Islamic Republic's leadership. It says: the cost of this practice, as measured by consequences that actually register in Tehran's calculus, is manageable. The men who run Iran's judiciary — the ones who signed these death warrants, who approved the appeals process, who certified the executions — face no personal accountability in any forum that matters. That is not an accident. It is a choice other governments have made, repeatedly, by declining to act.
What the Gallows Signal About Iranian Stability
Execution cycles in Iran are not random. They cluster around moments of domestic pressure — protests, factional infighting, economic distress — and the rhythm of 2026 is no exception. The Islamic Republic faces a grinding legitimacy crisis, a youthful population that increasingly looks outward rather than inward, and an economy still wounded by sanctions. The gallows are not merely punitive. They are communicative. They tell the domestic audience: the state retains the capacity to act decisively, to identify enemies, to end them.
But the signal also runs in the other direction, toward regional rivals and Western interlocutors. Each execution that passes without meaningful consequence reinforces a perception that Iran can absorb pressure and continue operating. The nuclear programme advances. The regional proxy network — Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, Iraqi militias — functions with varying degrees of coordination. And the executions proceed. There is a logic to the cruelty: it demonstrates that the regime's apparatus remains intact and functional, even as the surrounding environment grows more hostile.
Whether that calculus is correct depends on factors this publication cannot fully assess from open sources: the degree of internal dissent, the financial pressures on Revolutionary Guard commanders, the cohesion of the clerical establishment. What is clear is that the outside world has, for now, decided those questions are not worth pressing hard enough to disrupt the diplomatic infrastructure that keeps Iran and its interlocutors in the same room.
The Men Behind the Label
Ramin Zaleh and Karim Marufpour are gone. They will appear in no court record the international community will examine. Their families received no counsel of choice, no jury of peers, no independent appeal that met international standards. They were sons of Kamal, according to state media, which is to say they were someone. They may have been Kurdish, Baloch, Arab, or something else the Islamic Republic defined as a threat. They may not have been. The label does not distinguish; it simply removes.
The question for governments that routinely deplore this practice is not whether Iran will continue executing its citizens. Iran will. The question is what the persistent gap between stated opposition and absent consequences communicates about the credibility of the international system that produces those statements. A regime that can absorb condemnation without consequence is a regime that has correctly assessed the price of its own behavior.
That is the uncomfortable truth these two deaths, reported on a single morning in May 2026, leave behind.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/alalamfa/245261
- https://t.me/mehrnews/112358
- https://t.me/tasnimnews_en/789012
- https://t.me/farsna/456789