By: Razzak Baloch
As Washington debates escalation thresholds with Tehran and calibrates its Middle East posture, one reality is becoming increasingly clear: this conflict is not merely about missiles, militias, or maritime chokepoints. It is about endurance and about who shapes the political geography of Iran’s periphery in the years ahead.
If the confrontation with Iran evolves into a prolonged strategic contest, Western policymakers may find that their most underexamined leverage point lies not in airpower or sanctions, but in the political aspirations of marginalized or occupied nations within Iran itself particularly the Baloch.
For decades, Iran has projected power outward through an intricate network of proxy actors: from Lebanon to Syria, Iraq to Yemen. Even as Israeli operations degrade elements of Tehran’s forward deterrence architecture, including the weakening of Hezbollah and the erosion of Iranian strategic depth in Syria, the broader system remains adaptive. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) was built not for short wars, but for sustained confrontation.
Iran’s support for Russia’s war effort in Ukraine, most visibly through the supply of suicide drones, underscores the global dimension of its strategy. Tehran is no longer a purely regional disruptor; it is an exporter of asymmetric warfare technologies and doctrines.
Yet Western strategy continues to treat Iran largely as a centralized state actor, rather than an entity shaped by multiple occupations and coercive tactics over the decades and containing deeply disaffected populations.
The Peripheral Nations Question
Iran’s northwestern regions are home to millions of Kurds. Its southeastern occupied region , Sistan and Baluchestan, is inhabited primarily by the Baloch, a distinct ethno-national community with linguistic, cultural, and historical continuity across borders.
For much of the international community, Iran’s control over Baloch territories appears peripheral. But from a geopolitical standpoint, it is anything but.
Balochistan sits astride some of the most critical arteries of global commerce. The coastline along the Gulf of Oman lies adjacent to the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes. Instability in this corridor reverberates instantly through global energy markets.
For decades, Tehran has governed these regions through securitized administration, demographic engineering policies, and heavy military presence. Yet despite systemic marginalization, Baloch people have remained politically resistant and strategically aware of their geographic leverage.
This matters because prolonged war changes calculations.
When conflicts stretch beyond expectations, external powers begin reassessing which actors can shape outcomes over the long term. In such environments, sub-state actors, particularly those occupying strategic geography, gain relevance
Strategic Leverage Without Direct Escalation
Western governments face a dilemma: how to constrain Iranian expansionism without triggering uncontrollable escalation. Direct military confrontation carries enormous risks. Sanctions alone have shown diminishing marginal returns, but engagement with peripheral nations offers a different vector.
It means incorporating the political question of marginalized and occupied nations into the broader strategic framework.
A durable recalibration of regional order cannot occur while ignoring the internal fault lines that shape Iran’s behavior. The same governance model that enables Tehran’s proxy warfare abroad is the one that suppresses dissent voices for freedom and dignity at home.
If the West seeks long-term stability in the Strait of Hormuz, secure maritime transit, and a reduction in Iran’s expansionist doctrine, it must recognize that these outcomes are structurally connected to redefining the status quo and reshaping the approach towards inevitability and centrality of Iranian state.
A politically empowered Baloch region would fundamentally alter Tehran’s strategic calculus. It would reduce the regime’s capacity to militarize the southeastern flank while simultaneously lowering the chronic risk of maritime coercion.
A Corridor of Instability or a Corridor of Commerce
Ports such as Gwadar in Pakistani occupied Balochistan and coastal infrastructure along the Gulf of Oman are central to future trade routes linking South Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. Yet these corridors remain out of the direct domain of the Baloch people, heavily securitized and vulnerable to proxy conflict as Pakistani occupying state also wants to further her security and economic interests through these strategically important areas.
If Baloch territories were integrated into global economic systems through an independent and legitimate political representation rather than occupation and military oversight, the region could shift from being a zone of insurgency to a stabilizing commercial bridge.
This would also affect deterrence dynamics in South Asia. Pakistan’s security establishment has long treated Baloch nationalism and struggle to freedom as a purely internal threat, though this is not the case. However, in a prolonged Iran-West confrontation, the geopolitical weight of Baloch territories on both sides of the so-called borders increases.
Ignoring this dimension risks leaving a strategic vacuum that more revisionist actors will exploit.
The Long Game
Iran’s leadership has repeatedly demonstrated tolerance for economic pain and strategic patience in war. The IRGC’s doctrine is built around asymmetric endurance, not rapid victory.
If Washington and its allies are preparing for a long-term contest, their strategy must extend beyond missile defense systems and carrier strike groups. It must account for political geography.
Occupied nations such as the Baloch are not merely local dissidents; they are actors situated along the very arteries that define global energy and trade security. In a protracted confrontation, geography becomes leverage, and leverage becomes policy.
The question for Western policymakers is not whether internal Iranian dynamics matter. It is whether they will incorporate those dynamics deliberately or allow events to force their hand later.
Strategic recalibration often begins at the margins.
And today, one of those margins is Balochistan.





