A number of leftwing student groups at the Arizona State University staged a protest against the United States’ recent strikes on Iran.
Iranian students held a counter-protest to ‘make clear that the Iranian people stand with the United States and for human rights, accountability, and peace.’
Alena Dasha Peethala '29 |
March 6, 2026, 2:24 pm ET
Socialist and pro-Palestine student groups rallied Monday at Arizona State University to protest U.S. military action involving Iran, drawing pushback from Iranian students who said the activists misrepresented the views and experiences of the country’s people.
The protest, organized by ASU Students for Justice in Palestine, United Campus Workers Arizona, and the Phoenix chapter of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, was branded in a March 1 Instagram
post as an “emergency day of action.”
In their joint post, the organizations
framed the protest as an opposition to “corporate greed” and “endless war,” adding that “students have always been at the forefront of past anti-war movements.”
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The groups disabled comments on the post after users challenged their stance and accused organizers of deleting comments from students who expressed support for the military action in Iran.
The Party for Socialism and Liberation’s national chapter
issued a statement on Feb. 28 condemning U.S. military action and rejecting claims that Iran poses an imminent threat to the United States.
“Today, protests are taking place in scores of cities nationwide,” the organization said in their statement. “These mobilizations will continue, and they will express the sentiment of the majority of people in this country: Stop the war on Iran!”
The ASU Iranian Students Association organized a counter-protest following the campus demonstration,
writing in a March 2 Instagram post that the “Iranian people have been in conflict with their own government for over 47 years, suffering repression, crackdowns, and human rights abuses.”
The organization stated that its members would “make clear that the Iranian people stand with the United States and for human rights, accountability, and peace.”
“Many members of our organization felt that the messaging of the protest did not fully reflect the experiences of many Iranians and instead framed the issue in a political way,” AmirDanial Azimi, president of the Iranian Students Association at ASU, told
Campus Reform.
”For over four decades, the Iranian people have lived under a dictatorship, facing a lack of basic freedoms and violent crackdowns for speaking out against their government. Most of our members strongly support greater international pressure and accountability toward the Iranian regime, which has brutally oppressed its own people and contributed to violence affecting Americans as well,” Azimi continued.
Azimi explained that universities should absolutely be places where students can engage in open discussion and debate about important global issues but clarified that at the same time, it is important that student voices are not overshadowed by outside political organizations.
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More than a dozen individuals gathered on each side of the lawn, chanting from opposite ends, according to ASU’s student-run newspaper
The State Press.
In a statement to
Campus Reform, the ASU Media Affairs division cited the university’s
free speech policies, which permit demonstrations in designated outdoor areas and outline guidelines for student expression.
The university did not indicate whether it maintains policies governing collaboration between student organizations and outside political groups, such as the Phoenix Party for Socialism and Liberation.
The demonstration comes amid similar campus protests nationwide following joint U.S.-Israel strikes on Iranian targets.
Campus Reform previously
reported on similar demonstrations at San Jose State University, University of Illinois Chicago, Louisiana State University, and other universities.
ASU Iranian Students Association, ASU Students for Justice in Palestine, United Campus Workers Arizona, and the Party for Socialism and Liberation (Phoenix) have been contacted for comment. This article will be updated accordingly.