• Pedestrians wear protective masks and surgical gloves while walking in central Tehran, Iran, March 15, 2020. Bloomberg
    Pedestrians wear protective masks and surgical gloves while walking in central Tehran, Iran, March 15, 2020. Bloomberg
  • A pedestrian wears a protective face mask while walking in central Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
    A pedestrian wears a protective face mask while walking in central Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
  • A public bus driver wears a protective face mask while working in central Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
    A public bus driver wears a protective face mask while working in central Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
  • A pedestrian wears a protective face mask while travelling down a walkway escalator in Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
    A pedestrian wears a protective face mask while travelling down a walkway escalator in Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
  • A woman wearing a face mask inspects clothes at a store in Bamland shopping mall, in Western Tehran, March 15. AP Photo
    A woman wearing a face mask inspects clothes at a store in Bamland shopping mall, in Western Tehran, March 15. AP Photo
  • A pedestrian wears a protective face mask in Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
    A pedestrian wears a protective face mask in Tehran, March 15. Bloomberg
  • People queue in line to receive packages for precautions against coronavirus by the Basij, a militia loyal to Iran's Islamic republic establishment, from a booth outside Meydane Valiasr metro station in the capital Tehran, March 15. AFP
    People queue in line to receive packages for precautions against coronavirus by the Basij, a militia loyal to Iran's Islamic republic establishment, from a booth outside Meydane Valiasr metro station in the capital Tehran, March 15. AFP
  • A man wearing a protective mask carries boxes containing disinfectants, March 15. AFP
    A man wearing a protective mask carries boxes containing disinfectants, March 15. AFP
  • People queue in line to receive packages for precautions against coronavirus disease, March 15. AFP
    People queue in line to receive packages for precautions against coronavirus disease, March 15. AFP
  • Iranian firefighters prepare to disinfect streets in an effort to halt the spread of coronavirus in Tehran on March 13, 2020. EPA
    Iranian firefighters prepare to disinfect streets in an effort to halt the spread of coronavirus in Tehran on March 13, 2020. EPA
  • Firefighters disinfect streets in an effort to halt the spread of coronavirus in Tehran, March 13. EPA
    Firefighters disinfect streets in an effort to halt the spread of coronavirus in Tehran, March 13. EPA
  • An Iranian firefighter disinfects a street in the capital Tehran, March 13. AFP
    An Iranian firefighter disinfects a street in the capital Tehran, March 13. AFP
  • Firefighters disinfect streets in an effort to stop the spread of coronavirus in Tehran, March 13. EPA
    Firefighters disinfect streets in an effort to stop the spread of coronavirus in Tehran, March 13. EPA
  • A Revolutionary Guard member takes part in disinfecting the city in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
    A Revolutionary Guard member takes part in disinfecting the city in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
  • A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects an ATM in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
    A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects an ATM in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
  • A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects a bus station in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
    A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects a bus station in Tehran, Iran, March 4. AP
  • Members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard spray down streets and hospitals with disinfectants, March 4. AP
    Members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard spray down streets and hospitals with disinfectants, March 4. AP
  • Members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard spray down streets and hospitals with disinfectants, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP
    Members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard spray down streets and hospitals with disinfectants, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP
  • Revolutionary Guard members take part in disinfecting the city, in Sanandaj, western Iran, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP
    Revolutionary Guard members take part in disinfecting the city, in Sanandaj, western Iran, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP
  • A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects a truck in the city of Sanandaj, western Iran, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP
    A Revolutionary Guard member disinfects a truck in the city of Sanandaj, western Iran, March 1. Tasnim News Agency via AP

By battling coronavirus, Iran's IRGC hopes to find absolution


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Wearing gas masks and waterproof fatigues, members of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps spray streets and hospitals with disinfectant as the country faces one of the world's worst outbreaks of the new coronavirus.

Its commanders likely hope it also will wash away something else – the anger the public feels toward the powerful paramilitary force stained by its shooting down of a Ukrainian passenger jet in January. All 176 people on board – most of them Iranian citizens – were killed.

The push by the IRGC comes as the new virus has infected thousands and killed senior officials.

Ensuring the survival of the government – as well as its own place in power – remains paramount amid one of the world's deadliest virus outbreaks outside of China. The government has declared the fight against the virus a jihad, or holy battle.

Even today on March 7, another Iranian MP, Fatemeh Rahbar, has died from the Covid-19 coronavirus according to the country's Fars News Agency.

Fear over the virus and the government’s waning credibility has become a major challenge to Iran’s leaders, who already are reeling under the weight of American sanctions.

"We have prepared all our health care facilities and specialised cadres that will expand this sacred jihad," said Brig Gen Gholamreza Soleimani, who commands the IRGC's volunteer paramilitary Basij force.

That the IRGC is involved in the relief effort of a major catastrophe is not surprising in Iran.

The guard, whose forces include an estimated 125,000-plus soldiers and 600,000 mission-ready volunteers, routinely respond to the earthquakes that shake the country. Recent floods saw its troops mobilise as well.

Its forces, which include virologists, faced chemical weapons during Iran's eight-year war against Iraq in the 1980s. It expanded into private industry after the war years to help the country rebuild. And the guard has conducted polio and other immunisation drives in the past.

"The IRGC sees itself as the lead agency in any threat against the regime," said Afshon Ostovar, an assistant professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in the United States who wrote book on the guard.

“Whether it’s protests, a state adversary or a virus, the IRGC will position itself publicly as Iran’s frontline defender.”

Today, the guard controls broad parts of Iran's economy, including its powerful construction company Khatam Al Anbiya.

Exactly how much it controls is in dispute, with estimates ranging from below 10 per cent to as much as 40 per cent, but Iran's government needs the guard's economic muscle in times of crisis, especially as it faces crushing sanctions from the United States.

  • Health officials screen the temperature of workers on a Nile cruise ship near Luxor, Egypt. According to Egypt's Health Ministry, 12 people tested positive for coronavirus on a Nile cruise ship coming from Aswan and heading to Luxor. EPA
    Health officials screen the temperature of workers on a Nile cruise ship near Luxor, Egypt. According to Egypt's Health Ministry, 12 people tested positive for coronavirus on a Nile cruise ship coming from Aswan and heading to Luxor. EPA
  • People look at a man wearing a protective mask as a means of prevention against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Al Rahman mosque, after Friday prayers, in the southern suburb of Maadi, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt. REUTERS
    People look at a man wearing a protective mask as a means of prevention against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Al Rahman mosque, after Friday prayers, in the southern suburb of Maadi, on the outskirts of Cairo, Egypt. REUTERS
  • Revolutionary Guard members disinfect an ATM machine to help prevent the spread of the new coronavirus in Tehran, Iran. AP Photo
    Revolutionary Guard members disinfect an ATM machine to help prevent the spread of the new coronavirus in Tehran, Iran. AP Photo
  • Iraqi medical staff rest after checking passengers' temperature, amid coronavirus outbreak, at Najaf airport, Iraq. REUTERS
    Iraqi medical staff rest after checking passengers' temperature, amid coronavirus outbreak, at Najaf airport, Iraq. REUTERS
  • The outbreak map dashboard showing statistics on the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States during a briefing from Johns Hopkins University on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. AFP
    The outbreak map dashboard showing statistics on the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States during a briefing from Johns Hopkins University on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. AFP
  • A sanitation worker wears a protective face mask after a case of coronavirus was confirmed in the country, at Jorge Chavez International Airport in Lima, Peru. REUTERS
    A sanitation worker wears a protective face mask after a case of coronavirus was confirmed in the country, at Jorge Chavez International Airport in Lima, Peru. REUTERS
  • Children walk past an image of Mona Lisa with a protective face mask after further cases of coronavirus were confirmed in Barcelona, Spain. REUTERS
    Children walk past an image of Mona Lisa with a protective face mask after further cases of coronavirus were confirmed in Barcelona, Spain. REUTERS
  • Empty shelves at a Walmart as people have started to rush and stock first necessity products over fear of a coronavirus outbreak, in Los Angeles, California, USA. EPA
    Empty shelves at a Walmart as people have started to rush and stock first necessity products over fear of a coronavirus outbreak, in Los Angeles, California, USA. EPA
  • A couple wear face masks as they ride an escalator at a shopping mall in Beijing. AP Photo
    A couple wear face masks as they ride an escalator at a shopping mall in Beijing. AP Photo
  • Soldiers from The High Command of Chemicals under Vietnam's Ministry of National Defence spray disinfectant as a precaution against the coronavirus on Truc Bach street in Hanoi, Vietnam. A 26-year-old Vietnamese woman recently back from Europe has tested positive for coronavirus, the first confirmed case after weeks. Since the outbreak began, the country has reported only 17 cases of COVID-19, 16 of whom have been cured and released from hospital. EPA
    Soldiers from The High Command of Chemicals under Vietnam's Ministry of National Defence spray disinfectant as a precaution against the coronavirus on Truc Bach street in Hanoi, Vietnam. A 26-year-old Vietnamese woman recently back from Europe has tested positive for coronavirus, the first confirmed case after weeks. Since the outbreak began, the country has reported only 17 cases of COVID-19, 16 of whom have been cured and released from hospital. EPA
  • A camera operator wears a protective mask as British Columbia Premier John Horgan, Health Minister Adrian Dix, back right, and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, hidden, take questions during a news conference about the provincial response to the coronavirus, in Vancouver, British Columbia. AP
    A camera operator wears a protective mask as British Columbia Premier John Horgan, Health Minister Adrian Dix, back right, and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, hidden, take questions during a news conference about the provincial response to the coronavirus, in Vancouver, British Columbia. AP
  • US President Donald Trump (C) holds a picture of the coronavirus with US Health and Human Service Secretary Alex Azar (L), CDC Director Robert Redfield (2nd R), and CDC Associate Director for Laboratory Science and Safety (ADLSS) Dr. Steve Monroe (R) during a tour of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia. AFP
    US President Donald Trump (C) holds a picture of the coronavirus with US Health and Human Service Secretary Alex Azar (L), CDC Director Robert Redfield (2nd R), and CDC Associate Director for Laboratory Science and Safety (ADLSS) Dr. Steve Monroe (R) during a tour of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia. AFP

The IRGC's troops have moved into hard-hit cities such as Tehran, Rasht and Qom. Using modular construction, they've quickly built hospitals and created a headquarters called the Coronavirus Fight Base, staffed with so-called "modern warfare units" that focus on responses to chemical, biological and cyber attacks.

Wearing gas masks and suits designed to protect during chemical weapons attacks, IRGC members have been seen washing down areas to kill lingering traces of the Covid-19 virus. They've touted operations to target those hoarding desperately needed medical supplies.

“Their show of force regarding the coronavirus is as much political theatre as a public health effort,” Mr Ostovar said.

It comes as propaganda images created amid the outbreak have shown doctors and nurses in the foxhole with troops. That contrast also helps mock Iran's civilian government, whose standing among the public already is reeling since President Donald Trump's decision to unilaterally withdraw the US from Iran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

"Now hospitals are Iran's front line," one volunteer at an Iranian hospital said her mother told her, in a widely shared online video. "If you leave the front line, you'll be deserter and I do not welcome a draft dodger in my home."

That kind of spirit comes as a balm for Guard members, who have seen themselves widely criticised after shooting down Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 on January 8. That same day, the guard had launched ballistic missiles on US forces in Iraq.

That attack came as a response to the US drone strike in Baghdad killing Maj Gen Qassem Suleimani, a top commander responsible for the force's expeditionary operations across the wider Mideast.

Even before that, the Guard and security forces cracked down on protesters across the country in November, reportedly killing at least 300 people amid a nationwide internet blackout.

Some bitterly note the irony of the IRGC using the term “suppression” to describe their anti-virus operations in the wake of the crackdown.

"On Covid-19, it's clear that there's been a great deal of mismanagement and so the guards are now trying to present themselves as the saviours," said Ariane Tabatabai, an Iran analyst at the US-based Rand Corp.

“And of course, it doesn’t hurt to be able to change the conversation from the airliner episode – although, this will be a hard task to achieve given that both are examples of incompetence and mismanagement.”

The risks, however, are clear.

If Iran doesn’t get a handle on the virus outbreak, it’s more than just the IRGC’s reputation on the line.

Already, top officials in Iran’s civilian government and its Shiite theocracy have contracted the virus, with several deaths.

Given that the virus is sweeping through the upper-echelons of power in Tehran and its front-line operation in hospitals, guard members may too come down with Covid-19.

The IRGC also has trafficked in baseless conspiracy theories amid the outbreak, with its leader Gen Hossein Salami falsely suggesting the US created the virus amid the wider tensions with America.

“We will win in the fight against the virus, which may be the product of the American biological invasion, which it first spread to China and then to Iran and the rest of the world,” Gen Salami told a crowd in the Iranian city of Kerman. “The US must know that if it did it, [the virus] will return to it.”

Still, the IRGC's power means it will remain front and centre in any response to the virus crisis. The guard only will grow more powerful if the outbreak remains severe into July, the global analysis firm the Eurasia Group said.

“A broader role is likely for the Revolutionary Guard in all aspects of the economic, political and public-health response,” it said in an analysis on Thursday.