Despite war, Iran’s regime quells protests and plans for the future

The video clip, taken one recent night in western Tehran, shows a man in plainclothes pointing an assault rifle with a green laser sight high up a tall residential building.

From the upper floors, anti-regime chants are heard calling for the death of Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Basij militia – the same forces that killed thousands of Iranian protesters during a crackdown in January.

“What is he pointing at?” asks the man recording the video. Then gunfire echoes among the residential buildings of the capital’s Chitgar district, as Iran’s regime enforcers appear to target the chanting voices of dissent.

Why We Wrote This

The U.S. and Israel aimed vast destructive power at regime targets in Iran. But the Islamic Republic’s true believers in the Revolutionary Guard Corps and Basij militia are operating diligently – and without known defections – to intimidate any Iranian who might heed the call to rise up.

The country is in the fifth week of an existential battle that began with a surprise U.S. and Israeli attack seeking regime change in Iran and the destruction of its military power, missile arsenal, and nuclear program.

Also heavily targeted have been the tools of Iran’s machinery of repression that control the streets, including the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC), the most powerful military force in Iran, with its outsize influence over politics and firm grip on the economy, and the Basij. The vast uniformed and plainclothes paramilitary force is implanted everywhere in Iran, and surveils society from neighborhoods to universities.

In the Islamic Republic’s self-declared “Government of God,” where clerics hold top judicial and intelligence posts, the IRGC and Basij together constitute the foundational force of true believers upon which the regime depends for control and obedience.

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