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Proscribing the IRGC will be Starmer’s first real test

Sir Keir will have to overcome Whitehall’s fear of being labelled Islamophobic for doing so

June 19, 2024 10:36
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Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) military personnel parade under an Iranian Kheibar Shekan Ballistic missile in Tehran during a rally commemorating the International Quds Day, also known as the Jerusalem day, on 29 April 2022. (Photo by Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto)
3 min read

The Labour Party has pledged to proscribe Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and, if elected, this will be Sir Keir Starmer’s first real policy test on antisemitism. The IRGC is the most antisemitic armed Islamist group in the world. “But what about Hezbollah and Hamas?” you ask.

Jeremy Corbyn’s infamous “friends” are the IRGC’s offspring. It created Hezbollah and co-opted Hamas. Think of the IRGC as the Godfather of these two proscribed UK terrorist groups – and today it operates as their biggest supporter militarily, financially and ideologically.

Yet Whitehall bureaucrats seem to be asleep at the wheel when it comes to recognising the nature of the IRGC, its violent Islamist extremist and antisemitic activities and how proscription would inhibit their ability to operate in Britain.

The IRGC is not a conventional nation-state armed force. Its purpose is not to defend Iran. Its senior leadership have clearly spelled this out, stating: “We are the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran is not even in our name.” Instead, the IRGC recognises itself as an armed Islamist organisation with “an ideological mission of jihad in God’s way to spread sharia law across the world.”

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IRGC