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ID168628
Title ProperIslamic Revolutionary Guards Corps in the Iran–Iraq war: an unconventional military’s survival
LanguageENG
AuthorAlemzadeh, Maryam
Summary / Abstract (Note)As Iraqi forces invaded the Iranian border shortly after the Islamic Revolution, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) participated in the battle along with the debilitated Iranian Army. The IRGC was a young religious-revolutionary institution that lacked the resources that revolutionary armies and militias conventionally rely on. Nevertheless, it survived the battle pressure and even achieved relative military successes in the second year of the war. By examining personal narratives written by Iranian veterans, this article argues that in the void of conventional resources in the first year of the war, the Guards retrieved elements of their Shia background to recognize a religiously inspired charisma in every combatant who would devotedly step up for martyrdom. This shared understanding of the omnipotent charisma was then acknowledged in action—by commanders’ deployment of it to impose order and through frequently held Shia rituals on the battlefield. It thereby created an alternative source of cohesion and motivation that led to the IRGC’s survival and prepared them for further successful steps by the end of the war’s first year.
`In' analytical NoteBritish Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 46, No.4; Oct 2019: p.622-639
Journal SourceBritish Journal of Middle East Studies Vol: 46 No 4
Key WordsIslamic Revolutionary Guards ;  Iran–Iraq War ;  Unconventional Military’s Survival


 
 
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