By Parisa Hafezi and Angus McDowallDUBAI/LONDON, June 15 - Iran's theocratic rulers have seen off a U.S. military campaign but their real problems may be about to begin: managing the competing demands of hardliners buoyed by surviving the onslaught and those of an impoverished, angry people.Iran's powerful hardliners are energized by a three-month confrontation they feel Iran has won. They want the leadership to take a tough stance in coming talks with the U.S. and prioritise rearming, confident they can halt any internal dissent with force.

By Parisa Hafezi and Angus McDowallDUBAI/LONDON, June 15 - Iran's theocratic rulers have seen off a U.S. military campaign but their real problems may be about to begin: managing…

Hardliners want revenge, rearmament and a tougher line against Washington, while ordinary Iranians expect sanctions relief to ease years of poverty, inflation and destruction from…

Iran's theocratic rulers have seen off a US military campaign but their real problems may be about to begin: managing the competing demands of hardliners buoyed

Autoridades descreveu acordo com EUA para encerrar o conflito como 'uma faca de dois gumes', diante do aumento das expectativas dos iranianos

The Islamic Republic faced devastating losses during the conflict, but the regime has gained in confidence.