1. Executive Summary
A decade after the 2016 foresight exercise in Tehran, the geopolitical landscape has converged strikingly toward several of the high-impact scenarios anticipated in the matrix. The 2025–2026 U.S.–Israel–Iran war—triggered by escalating tensions over Iran’s nuclear program and culminating in large-scale joint strikes and regime destabilization efforts—represents a partial realization of the “Direct War / Militarized State” pathway envisioned in multiple scenarios.
The foresight exercise proved particularly strong in identifying:
The high probability of direct military confrontation
The centrality of external alliances (U.S., Israel vs. Iran with Russia/China tilt)
The economic consequences (capital flight, disruption, inflation)
The interaction between domestic unrest and external pressure
However, it underestimated:
The speed and intensity of escalation (decapitation strike killing leadership)
The global systemic shock (energy crisis, inflation surge)
The resilience of the Iranian state despite leadership disruption
Overall, the exercise demonstrates high structural foresight accuracy, though with gaps in timing, escalation dynamics, and nonlinear shocks.
2. The 2016 Scenario Architecture
The original framework mapped eight interacting drivers and uncertainties:
U1: External military pressure (U.S./Israel/Saudi)
U2: Internal regime posture (IRGC / militarization)
U3–U4: External balancing (EU vs. China/Russia)
U5–U7: Domestic socio-economic and political dynamics
U8: Ethnic fragmentation risk
Across all plausible scenarios, two dominant archetypes emerged:
A. War–Militarization Pathway
Direct war
Militarized state
Economic contraction / capital flight
Armed conflict and possible separatism
B. Internal Destabilization Pathway
Inciting opposition
Civil disobedience
Potential territorial fragmentation
3. What Actually Happened (2025–2026)
3.1 Military Escalation: Direct War Realized
In June 2025, the first open Iran–Israel war broke out.
In February 2026, the U.S. joined with Israel in a massive campaign targeting:
Nuclear infrastructure
Military systems
Leadership
The operation killed Iran’s Supreme Leader and senior officials, marking a decapitation strategy.
π This aligns strongly with Scenarios involving (Direct War + Militarized State).
3.2 Militarization of the State
Iran shifted into full security-state mode, with:
Centralized control
suppression of unrest
cyber/information restrictions (e.g., internet shutdown)
π Matches the assumption of IRGC dominance under war conditions.
3.3 Economic Shock and Capital Dynamics
Global oil prices surged above $100/barrel amid blockade threats.
IMF warns of global inflation and slowed growth due to the war.
Inside Iran:
Capital flight pressures intensified
Economic hardship deepened
π This directly confirms the repeated scenario outputs:
“Capital Flight / Economic & Livelihood Stress”
3.4 External Alignments: Partial Confirmation
The U.S.–Israel axis acted decisively with Saudi support
China/Russia provided indirect backing and strategic cover (less visibly than expected)
Europe remained diplomatically engaged but strategically secondary
π The “Economic & Military Umbrella vs. Diplomatic Umbrella” distinction proved valid.
3.5 Domestic Dynamics: Mixed Outcomes
Iran experienced protests and internal unrest prior to escalation
However, full collapse or separatism did not occur
The regime showed unexpected resilience despite leadership loss
π This partially confirms but also challenges:
“Civil disobedience” ✔️
“Separatism / territorial fragmentation” ❌ (not realized)
3.6 Nature of the War Outcome
No decisive victory for any side
Continued instability, retaliation, and economic disruption
Israel and U.S. failed to achieve full strategic objectives
Iran remained operational and regionally relevant
π Reflects a hybrid scenario:
War without resolution
Attritional equilibrium
4. Scenario Validation Matrix
| Scenario Element (2016) | 2026 Outcome | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Direct War | Occurred (2025–26) | ✅ Strongly validated |
| Militarized State | Fully realized | ✅ Strongly validated |
| Capital Flight | Evident | ✅ Validated |
| Economic Collapse | Partial | ⚠️ Moderate |
| Civil Disobedience | Present | ✅ Validated |
| Regime Collapse | Did not occur | ❌ Not validated |
| Separatism | Did not materialize | ❌ Not validated |
| External Umbrella (China/Russia) | Partial | ⚠️ Moderate |
5. Key Insights: Why the Foresight Worked
5.1 Structural Drivers Were Correct
The exercise captured:
Geopolitical polarity
Security dilemma escalation
Economic vulnerability loops
This is why war + economic stress + militarization emerged correctly.
5.2 Systems Thinking Over Prediction
Rather than predicting a single future, the framework:
Modeled interaction of drivers and uncertainties
Allowed multiple pathways
This enabled accurate anticipation of scenario clusters, not specific events.
5.3 Correct Identification of Tipping Points
The model implicitly identified:
Nuclear negotiations failure
External military intervention
Domestic unrest
These became the actual triggers of escalation.
6. Where the Foresight Fell Short
6.1 Nonlinear Shock Underestimation
Leadership decapitation (killing of Supreme Leader)
Speed of escalation (hours, not months)
π The model lacked black swan / rapid escalation layers.
6.2 Overestimation of State Fragility
Expected: collapse or fragmentation
Reality: adaptive resilience under pressure
6.3 Insufficient Global System Modeling
Energy markets
Inflation spillovers
Global macroeconomic feedback
π The war became a global systemic event, not just regional.
7. Meta-Evaluation of the Method
Using the methodology from Playbook of Foresight, the exercise demonstrates:
Strengths
Multi-actor design
Integration of geopolitical + economic + social variables
Clear scenario differentiation
Limitations
Static scenario combinations
Lack of temporal sequencing
Limited modeling of cascading global effects
8. Final Assessment
Overall Foresight Accuracy: HIGH (Structural Level)
Event-Specific Accuracy: MODERATE
The 2016 foresight exercise successfully anticipated the shape of the future, even if it could not predict its exact form.
9. Concluding Reflection
The most striking conclusion is this:
The 2016 exercise did not predict what would happen—
it predicted what could not be avoided.
By 2026, the system followed its structural logic:
unresolved nuclear tensions
entrenched geopolitical rivalry
domestic pressure within Iran
The result was not a surprise—but a delayed inevitability.
