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Opinion

The Government's latest IRGC sanctions truly miss the mark

More sanctions will fail to achieve the desired goal of thwarting terror

July 7, 2023 17:43
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) military personnel parade under an Iranian Kheibar Shekan Ballistic missile 2kd8ntt
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Photo: Alamy)
2 min read

As Iran continues to try to kill or kidnap UK nationals, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly’s assertion that the latest sanctions on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) guarantees that there ‘“will be no hiding place for those who seek to do us harm” truly misses the mark. 

Enhanced sanctions will fail to achieve the desired goal of thwarting terror and yesterday's announcement is simply a political manoeuvre to deflect attention from the Government’s inaction with respect to using the strongest legal tool available to them in exercising its duty to protect the public – proscribing the IRGC in accordance with the Terrorism Act 2000.

As the IRGC has been easily evading UK sanctions for years and has continued to grow, MPs have consistently called upon the Government to take stronger measures against them and proscribe the IRGC. 

Proscription carries a much stronger force of law as it criminalises even mere associations with terror groups.