There are growing signs of cracks in the Iranian regime, with increasing reports of defections as Iran continues its deadly crackdown on nationwide, anti-government protests despite a US military buildup in the region.
Hundreds of junior and mid-level officers have recently
defected from Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and affiliated
Basij paramilitary force, Israel’s channel 12 reported on Wednesday, citing
Western intelligence sources.
Such a development could weaken the regime’s ability
to suppress the demonstrations.
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reportedly
ordered the IRGC to take control of the crackdown in part due to fears of
defections by the police and regular armed forces.
“He [Khamenei] is in closer contact with the IRGC than with
the army or the police, because he believes the risk of IRGC defections is
almost non-existent, whereas others have defected before,” a senior Iranian
official told The Telegraph. “He has placed his fate in the hands
of the IRGC.”
The Institute for the Study of War noted that the regular
Iranian military “is generally less ideological and more representative of the
Iranian population than the IRGC, which increases the risk that [army] members
could defect.”
However, there have been additional signs that the IRGC, an
internationally designated terrorist group, could be dealing with internal
dissent.
The Intelligence Organization of the IRGC issued a statement
earlier this month castigating the protests as part of a “terrorist” plot
orchestrated by the US and Israel to topple the regime. In a now-deleted
section of the statement, the IRGC also warned that any “defiance, desertion,
or disobedience” among the military would be met with “trial and decisive
action.”
“The apparent removal of this language likely reflects
concerns about triggering a panic, but it nevertheless exposes the depth of
anxiety among regime officials,” wrote Janatan Sayeh, a research analyst at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a think tank based in Washington, DC.
Meanwhile, the IRGC’s Intelligence Organization also said
that it was “dealing
with possible acts of abandonment,” similarly suggesting that some Iranian
security forces may have already defected or that the regime is concerned about
such a possibility.
A Kurdish human rights organization reported earlier this
month that the regime had arrested
“dozens” of security officers in Kermanshah City who refused to fire
on protesters.
Meanwhile, multiple Iranian officials outside the security
forces have openly defected.
An official serving in Iran’s Interior Ministry told the
news outlet Iran International that he has defected from his post and joined
the protests, urging US President Donald Trump to intervene against the Islamic
Republic.
Iran International also reported that Alireza Jiranieh Hokambad, a minister-counselor and the
second highest-ranking official at Iran’s UN mission in Geneva, has defected
and sought political asylum in Switzerland.
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