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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIran's Revolutionary Guards: The Spine of a Militarized State
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/08/us/iran-islamic-revolutionary-guards-corps.htmlhttps://archive.ph/u8oiI
Irans Revolutionary Guards: The Spine of a Militarized State
With their pervasive military, political and economic clout, the Guards are often considered the main impediment to regime change, or any change, in Iran.
By Neil MacFarquhar
March 8, 2026, 5:11 a.m. ET
Within hours of the first Israeli and American airstrikes hitting Iran last weekend, militiamen from the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps deployed in neighborhoods across Tehran, the capital, and in most urban centers.
Eyewitnesses and the occasional furtive video posted online depicted men in plainclothes, often armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles, manning checkpoints where they searched cars and cellphones, alert for signs of endorsing the war. Black anti-riot vehicles were lined up in places like closed schoolyards that were less likely to be struck by missiles.
They tried to create the illusion for outsiders that they are in control, and inside to create fear for people so they do not dare come out to the street, said Saeid Golkar, a political science professor at the University of Tennessee and the author of Captive Society: The Basij Militia and Social Control in Post-Revolutionary Iran.
President Trump has suggested that the Guards drop their weapons to buttress popular support for regime change. Analysts consider that scenario highly unlikely. Iran might appear to be a theocracy, and its official ideology is firmly rooted in Shiite Islam, but the Guards constitute the spine of a militarized state. Analysts consider their pervasive military, political and economic clout the main barrier to regime change, or any change, in Iran.
Here is a primer on this powerful group.
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Iran's Revolutionary Guards: The Spine of a Militarized State (Original Post)
dalton99a
Sunday
OP
gulliver
(13,904 posts)1. Hopefully the "mosaic" approach doesn't work long without a "Supreme Lowlife"
I guess we'll see. Right now, they're acting like a disturbed nest of hornets, flying around and stinging everything.
David__77
(24,575 posts)2. Hopefully the US stops its immoral and criminal campaign.
JI7
(93,493 posts)3. Yes, it's not like Al Qaeda, ISIS , Taliban etc. For these people it's about their privileged, elite place in the count
when they go to other countries which have more freedom they live just like the locals and enjoy those freedoms. The female relatives also live more free and don't cover themselves up.
But in Iran they will beat and kill a woman for doing the same things.