Home inFOCUS Iran: Freedom or Fire (Winter 2025) Artificial Intelligence Is Accelerating Iranian Cyber Operations

Artificial Intelligence Is Accelerating Iranian Cyber Operations

Michael Mieses, Nakissa Jahanbani and Noelle Kerr Winter 2025
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Ayatollah Khamenei at the 3rd International Conference on Quds and Protecting the Rights of the Palestinian People 29 (Photo: Unknown author/WikiMedia Commons)

In late June and early July, Iranian hackers stole information from Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and sent it to Biden campaign officials, according to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the FBI, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). This was far from a one-off. Recently, Tehran has increased its asymmetrical advantage by harnessing cyber capabilities through the internet and social media, a trend that extends back even further. Over the past few decades, Iran has been quietly building its cyber capability in the shadow of great powers.

These recent activities took place after sustained Houthi attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea and attacks on US-backed installations in Iraq and Syria. Iran’s cyber activities are part of a broader hybrid strategy combining conventional military power, economic leverage, and the strategic use of proxies. While there is considerable information about Iranian offline proxies, its cyber proxies largely fly under the radar. Though they are less visible than their offline counterparts, cyber proxies are nonetheless a powerful asymmetric tool.

Iran’s multifaceted approach in the cyber domain allows Iran to project power and influence in the Middle East while avoiding direct conventional military confrontations with stronger adversaries. Iran uses cyber operations to complement its broader geopolitical strategies, often employing cyber espionage and sabotage to gain strategic advantages or to retaliate against sanctions and military threats. As Iran increasingly incorporates AI technologies into its cyber operations, the likelihood of more disruptive and damaging activities escalates, presenting a substantial challenge not only to regional stability but also to global security.

Read the entire article at The Lawfare Institute. 

Michael Mieses is a Security Consulting Senior Analyst at Accenture. Major Noelle Kerr, USA, is a Downing Fellow at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. Nakissa Jahanbani, Ph.D., is a Senior Intelligence Analyst at the Afghanistan War Commission.