By Vahid
Sepehri
September 4, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei appointed on September 1 a new commander of the powerful Islamic
Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), a force that exists separately from Iran's
regular army. The appointment has been interpreted
variously for its domestic political or strategic significance, although
officials have called it routine.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei made the change
Head Of Controversial
IRGC
News agencies report that the supreme
leader appointed Mohammad Ali Jafari (also known as Aziz or Ali Jafari) to
succeed Yahya Rahim-Safavi as IRGC commander.
Observers appear to regard Jafari as
principally a tactician, organizer, and "technical" military man. His
appointment appears to be more a response to perceived external threats than a
reflection of domestic politics.
It is worth noting that the IRGC has
recently become a focus of U.S. criticism for its allegedly disruptive role in
Iraq.
Jafari spoke to the press on September 3
and said the IRGC's role is to "expand" the deterrence capability against "the
enemies of Iran and the revolution" without an exclusively military role. He
said the IRGC will "hasten" to help other institutions in Iran "where
necessary," ISNA reported.
Jafari added that Iran's "environmental
conditions" have changed, and the IRGC needs to be flexible in facing new
threats to Iran. The new commander assured reporters that the IRGC is better
prepared than in the past to face these threats, and with the necessary
intelligence on "enemies" and a considerable ballistic capability. He urged "the
enemies" to leave the Middle East region and choose instead an "interaction"
with Islamic states, ISNA reported.
Military
Experience
Jafari, born in 1957, was a
brigadier-general in the IRGC who now holds the rank of major general. He fought
in the 1980-88 war with Iraq, initially as a member of the Basij volunteer
militia before rising through the IRGC ranks.
Jafari spent nearly 15 years (from
1991-92 to 2005) as commander of the IRGC land forces, Iranian media have
reported, before being appointed as head of a strategic research center to map
out new defensive and military strategies in response to what Iran's leadership
has seen as evolving threats in the Middle East.
Jafari reportedly developed many of his
ideas and experiences on unconventional, or "asymmetrical," warfare -- which
officials have not spelled out in detail -- at the research center. In 1999, he
was among 24 IRGC commanders who wrote to President Mohammad Khatami,
effectively warning him at a time of public unrest in Tehran that Khatami's
liberalizing policies were threatening the Iranian leadership, Radio Farda
reported on September 2.
The outgoing IRGC commander,
Rahim-Safavi, has been appointed Khamenei's senior adviser on the armed
forces, "Kayhan" reported on September 3. He told state television on September
2 that he had been informed of the impending shuffle for over a month, and there
was nothing unusual about the end of his tenure. He noted that such appointments
"do not last more than 10 years," citing the example of current Supreme National
Security Council Secretary Ali Larijani being moved from the leadership of state
television and radio.
Radio Farda cited baztab.com --
which is regarded as close to a senior member of the Expediency Council --
Secretary Mohsen Rezai -- as stating that Rahim-Safavi had expressed a desire to
leave his post months ago, given the longevity of his tenure. Ayatollah
Khamenei's published note gave no reason for Safavi's removal.
'Asymetrical'
Strategies
Radio Farda commented on September 2 that
Jafari has extensive fighting experience and reportedly close relations with the
commanders of the former Badr force of the Supreme Council of the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI). It interpreted the appointment as a response to the
recent reports suggesting U.S. plans to place the IRGC on its list of terrorist
organizations.
Radio Farda and rooz.com highlighted
on September 2 and 3 Jafari's work on "asymmetrical" strategies -- including the
use of Iranian terrain in mobile-defensive operations -- and activities in
recent years that included the transfer of the lessons and experiences of the
Iran-Iraq War to younger IRGC commanders, and reflections on the strengths and
weaknesses of U.S. forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Jafari said in Tehran on September 3
that, given "the enemy's" numerical or technological superiority, the IRGC would
make use of "asymmetrical" warfare capabilities, which he said were developed in
the Iran-Iraq War. He said Hizballah used this type of warfare in 2006, when
Israel bombarded Lebanon from the air and by land in a bid to destroy the
Iran-backed militia.
Observers have speculated on the domestic
and foreign-policy significance of the reshuffle. Radio Farda said on September
2 that Jafari is or was thought to be close to the Expediency Council's
Rezai, who used to head the IRGC, and to Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, another former
IRGC guardsman and currently the mayor of Tehran.
The move might be interpreted as
a stimulus from Khamenei to the Rezai-Qalibaf clique -- a conservative
subfaction thought to be a counterweight to the radicalizers around President
Mahmud Ahmadinejad. Radio Farda observed that Rahim-Safavi is perceived to have
become too openly sympathetic to the Ahmadinejad government, when officers are
obliged to shun politics.
IRGC
Influence
It quoted observers saying that
Rahim-Safavi's almost partisan positions had caused unease or even rifts in the
IRGC ranks, and the appointment is meant to resolve that.
The Ahmadinejad government has placed a
number of IRGC officers in key executive positions. The most recent such
appointment was of Alireza Afshar to be deputy interior minister for political
affairs and head of the ministry's election headquarters.
But exiled analyst and IRGC founding
member Mohsen Sazegara offered a differing interpretation in comments to Radio
Farda on September 2. Sazegara associated Jafari with IRGC commanders who have
been given key posts in past months. (Those individuals include Alireza Afshar
and Mohammad Baqer Zolqadr, another deputy interior minister and brother-in-law
of Jafari.)
Sazegara said Jafari's appointment
strengthens the IRGC's access to political power and deepens its involvement in
-- rather than distancing it from -- politics. This interpretation suggests the
move is not designed to strengthen one conservative grouping against another,
but rather tighten the IRGC's grip on institutions, as a recent state -- not
Ahmadinejad -- policy.
In terms of strategy, Sazegara called the
appointment akin to putting the IRGC on a war footing -- given Jafari's work in
recent years on strategy and the perception of increasing threats against Iran
and the IRGC.

The
IRGC conducting maneuvers in February
Journalist Hossein Bastani told Radio
Farda that the IRGC strategic research center and the Imam Hossein University, a
military college, have been engaged in research on regional and military threats
to Iran. He said those groups had concluded -- observing Iraq in recent years --
that Iran must not allow itself to be disarmed by UN bodies or the international
community, as this would weaken it without assuring its protection from a
Western attack. Bastani said Khamenei's appointment of Jafari as the IRGC chief
indicates his approval of this conclusion and line of thinking, while the timing
means he believes them relevant to Iran's situation. Bastani cited Jafari as one
of the IRGC's less political commanders, albeit one who is a partisan of the
Basij militia's ever-closer affiliation and cooperation with the IRGC.
The IRGC's 'Periods Of
Duties'
The reformist daily "Etemad" observed on
September 3 that the IRGC has had three broad periods of duties since 1979. Its
first was to defend the Iranian system and Iran's territory after the 1979
revolution and the Iraqi invasion of Iran in 1980.
The second was participating in
reconstruction activities after the war's end in 1988. Now, the third, with
Jafari's appointment, signals it is once more playing a defensive role in the
face of perceived threats from Western states.
The daily quoted Mohammad Nabi Rudaki, a
former senior member of the inspectorate of the joint armed forces headquarters,
as saying on September 2 that Jafari's appointment could lead to changes among
the IRGC officers' corps and to more "tactical" and "lighter" fighting units.
Rudaki said he expects the corps to increase its fighting capabilities under
Jafari. (It was not immediately clear if this was Mohammad Nabi Rudaki, a member
of the parliamentary National Security and Foreign Policy Committee.)
Observers appear to regard Jafari as
principally a tactician, organizer, and "technical" military man. And his
appointment appears to be more a response to perceived external threats than a
reflection of domestic politics.
It might be that Jafari belongs to one or
another clique, and rivalries could well exist within the military as they
do inside conservative ranks. But the Iranian military is not -- in the
manner of some Latin American states in the past or Turkey -- prominently
involved in domestic politics. Those officers who go on to fill political or
administrative positions do so as civilians and are seen as elements with an
assured loyalty to the political system more than to the IRGC as a corps. Their
appointments are made by civilian or clerical officials, even if the
multiplication of these former military men may be said to strengthen a certain
mindset -- unquestioning, loyal, tough in the face of potential pressures --
within a system that has often seen itself as besieged by hostile forces.
Moreover, periodic rotation ensures that
no official comes to see himself as permanently entrenched in any position or as
indispensable. It reminds such officials that they are dependent on those to
whom Iran's postrevolutionary constitution has given formal
powers.
Copyright (c) 2007 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
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