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Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistic
Founded c.1982 as forces of Islamic Republic
Service branches '
Headquarters Tehran
Leadership
Supreme Commander Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
Commander-in-Chief of the Army
Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC
General Ataollah Salehi

General Mohammad Ali Jafari
Manpower
Active personnel 945,000 personnel
Expenditures
Budget $7.31 billion (2007)[1]
Percent of GDP 2.6% (2007)
Industry
Domestic suppliers Defense Industries Organization

Iran Aviation Industries Organization
Iran Electronics Industries (IEI)

Related articles
History Military history of Iran

Anglo-Soviet Invasion of Iran
Dhofar Rebellion
Siege of Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs
Iran–Iraq War
Operation Praying Mantis Operation Prime Chance

Ranks Air Force Ranks Insignia

Army Ranks Insignia
Navy Ranks Insignia
IRGC Ranks Insignia

The Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran (Persian: نيروهای مسلح جمهوری اسلامی ايران) include the IRIA (Persian: ارتش جمهوری اسلامی ایران) and the IRGC (Persian: سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی).

These forces total about 945,000 active personnel.[2] All branches of armed forces fall under the command of General Headquarters of Armed Forces (ستاد کل نیروهای مسلح). The Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics is responsible for planning logistics and funding of the armed forces and is not involved in in-the-field military operational command.

  • The Basij is a paramilitary volunteer force controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards. Its membership is a matter of controversy. Iranian sources claim a membership of 12.6 million, including women, of which perhaps 3 million are combat capable. There are a claimed 2,500 battalions of which some are full-time personnel.[3] Globalsecurity.org quotes a 2005 study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies estimating 90,000 active-duty full-time uniformed members, 300,000 reservists, and a total of 1 million men that can be mobilized if need be. [4]

Iran's military was called the Middle East's most powerful by General John Abizaid chief of United States Central Command (U.S. forces' commander in the region). However General Abizaid said he did not include the Israel Defense Forces as they did not fall into his area of operations. [5]

Contents

[edit] Modern History

When the Pahlavi dynasty took power in 1925, following years of war with Russia, the standing Persian army was almost non-existent. The new king Reza Shah Pahlavi, was quick to develop a new military. In part, this involved sending hundreds of officers to European and American military academies. It also involved having foreigners re-train the existing army within Iran. In this period the Iranian Air Force was established and the foundation for a new Navy was laid.

The British and Russians invaded Iran in 1941. Following World War II, 1500 Iranian troops supported the Sultan of Oman against the Dhofar Rebellion from 1962-1975. In 1971, Iranian forces besieged Abu Musa and the Tunb islands. Before the Islamic revolution of 1979, Iran contributed to United Nations peacekeeping operations. Iran joined ONUC in the Congo in the 1960s, and ten years later, Iranian troops joined UNDOF on the Golan Heights. Several years later Revolutionary Iran was taken by surprise by the Iraqi invasion that began the Iran–Iraq War of 1980-1988. During this conflict, there were several confrontations with the United States. From 1987, the United States Central Command sought to stop Iranian mine-laying vessels from blocking the international sea lanes through the Persian Gulf in Operation Prime Chance. The operation lasted until 1989. On April 18, 1988, the U.S. retaliated for the Iranian mining of the USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58) in Operation Praying Mantis.

A former military-associated police force, the Iranian Gendarmerie, disbanded in 1990.

In 1991, the Iranian armed forces received a number of fleeing Iraqi aircraft which were incorporated into the Air Force. From 2003, there have been repeated U.S. and British allegations that Iranian forces have been covertly involved in the Iraq War. In 2007, Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces also took prisoner Royal Navy personnel when a boat's party from HMS Cornwall was seized in Iran waters.

Iran has launched no wars of choice in modern history, and its leadership adheres to a doctrine of "no first strike."[6] The country's military budget is the lowest per capita in the Persian Gulf region besides the UAE.[6]

[edit] Commanders

Iran has 29 Tor-M1 mobile air defense systems.
Iran has 3 Russian-built kilo class submarines patrolling the Persian gulf waters.
  • Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (Supreme Leader and the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, in Persian: فرمانده کل قوا)
  • Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi (Minister of Defense)[7]
  • Major General Hassan Firouzabadi (Head of the Armed Forces General Command Headquarters, in Persian: رئیس ستاد کل نیروهای مسلح)
  • Major General Yahya Rahim Safavi (Senior Advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution)[8]
  • Brigadier General Mohammad Hejazi (Deputy Chief of the Armed Forces)[9]
  • Iranian Police
    • Brigadier General Esmaeil Ahmadi-Moghaddam (Commander-in-Chief of the Police, in Persian: فرمانده کل نیروی انتظامی)

[edit] Budget

Military expenditures (% GDP)

Iran's 2007 defense budget was estimated to be $7.31 billion by London's International Institute for Strategic Studies and quoted as so by Center for Strategic & International Studies in its 2008 publication Cordesman: Conventional Armed Forces in the Gulf authored by Anthony Cordesman, the Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy. This was $102 per capita, a lower figure than other Persian Gulf nations and lower as a percentage of gross national product than all other Persian Gulf states. (2.6% of GDP in 2007) This makes Iran's ranking the 25th largest defense expenditure globally.

[edit] Defense industry

The United States delivered 79 F-14 Tomcat fighter jets to Iran before 1979. This particular Tomcat is an American aircraft from the United States Navy Fighter Weapons School painted to resemble an Iranian F-14 for use in an aggressor squadron.

Under the last Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Iran's military industry was limited to assembly of foreign weapons. In the assembly lines that were put up by American firms, such as Bell, Litton and Northrop, Iranian workers put together a variety of helicopters, aircraft, guided missiles, electronic components and tanks. [17]

In 1973 the Iran Electronics Industries (IEI) was established. [18] The company was set up in a first attempt to organize the assembly and repair of foreign-delivered weapons. [19] The Iranian Defense Industries Organization was the first to succeed in taking a step into what could be called a military industry by reverse engineering Soviet RPG-7, BM21, and SAM-7 missiles in 1979. [19]

Nevertheless, most of Iran's weapons before the Islamic revolution were imported from the United States and Europe. Between 1971 and 1975, the Shah went on a buying spree, ordering $8 billion in weapons from the United States alone. This alarmed the United States Congress, which strengthened a 1968 law on arms exports in 1976 and renamed it the Arms Export Control Act. Still, the United States continued to sell large amounts of weapons to Iran until the 1979 Islamic Revolution. [20]

After the Islamic revolution, Iran found itself severely isolated and lacking technological expertise. Because of economic sanctions and a weapons embargo put on Iran by the United States, Iran was forced to rely on its domestic arms industry for weapons and spare parts since there were very few countries willing to do business with Iran. [21] The Islamic Revolutionary Guards were put in charge of creating what is today known as the Iranian military industry. Under their command Iran's military industry was enormously expanded, and with the Ministry of Defense pouring investment into the missile industry, Iran soon accumulated a vast arsenal of missiles. [17]

Since 1992, it also has produced its own tanks, armored personnel carriers, radar systems, guided missiles, submarines, military vessels and fighter planes.[22][23]

In recent years, official announcements have highlighted the development of weapons such as the Fajr-3 (MIRV), Hoot, Kowsar, Fateh-110, Shahab-3 missile systems and a variety of unmanned aerial vehicles, at least one of which Israel claims has been used to spy on Israel. [24] In 2006, an Iranian UAV acquired and tracked the American aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan for 25 minutes without being detected before returning safely to its base.[25][26]

[edit] Ballistic Programs

Ghadr-110 with a range between 2,000 and 3,000 km.[27]

On November 2, 2006, Iran fired unarmed missiles to begin 10 days of military simulations. Iranian state television reported "dozens of missiles were fired including Shahab-2 and Shahab-3 missiles. The missiles had ranges from 300 km to up to 1300 km. Iranian experts have made some changes to Shahab-3 missiles installing cluster warheads in them with the capacity to carry 1,400 bombs." These launches come after some United States-led military exercises in the Persian Gulf on October 30, 2006, meant to train for blocking the transport of weapons of mass destruction [28]. Iran is also believed to have started the development of an ICBM/IRBM missile project [27], known as Ghadr-110 with a range of 3000 km; the program is paralleled with advancement of a satellite launcher named IRIS.

[edit] Weapons of mass destruction

Although Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,[6] Israel has alleged that Iran is developing nuclear weapons. [29] The United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency, in its February 2006 report on Iran's nuclear program, said it had no evidence of this. Recently, the United States of America released an intelligence report that the Islamic Republic of Iran is not developing a nuclear detonation device. Iran is currently attempting to create the radioactive fuel for energy purposes that could potentially be used in a nuclear weapon;[30][31] however, as long as Iran's centrifuge plants are being actively inspected, they cannot be used to make a bomb.[6][32]

Iran ratified the Chemical Weapons Convention in 1997. Iranian troops and civilians suffered tens of thousands of casualties from Iraqi chemical weapons during the 1980-88 Iran–Iraq War. As a result, Iran has publicly stood against the use of chemical weapons, making numerous vitriolic comments against Iraq's use of such weapons in international forums.

Even today, more than eighteen years after the end of the Iran–Iraq War, about 30,000 Iranians are still suffering and dying from the effects of chemical weapons employed by Iraq during the war. The need to manage the treatment of such a large number of casualties has placed Iran’s medical specialists in the forefront of the development of effective treatment regimes for chemical weapons victims, and particularly for those suffering from exposure to mustard gas. [33]

Iran ratified the Biological weapons Convention in 1973.[34] Iran has advanced biological and genetic engineering research programs supporting an industry that produces world-class vaccines for both domestic use and export.[35]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ CSIS, Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy, [1], Cordesman: Conventional Armed Forces in the Gulf released on June 23, 2008
  2. ^ a b c IISS Military Balance 2006, Routledge for the IISS, London, 2006, p.187
  3. ^ IISS Military Balance 2008, p.244
  4. ^ GlobalSecurity.org, [2]
  5. ^ Iran Favors Asymmetric Strategy In Joust With US
  6. ^ a b c d Cole, Juan (2009-10-02). "The top ten things you didn't know about Iran: The assumptions most Americans hold about Iran and its policies are wrong". Salon. http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2009/10/01/cole/. 
  7. ^ [3]
  8. ^ [4]
  9. ^ [5]
  10. ^ [6]
  11. ^ [7]
  12. ^ [8]
  13. ^ a b [9]
  14. ^ Iran to hold large-scale naval war games
  15. ^ Iran Revolutionary Guards expect key changes in high command
  16. ^ [10]
  17. ^ a b Dar Al Hayat
  18. ^ [11]
  19. ^ a b NTI: Country Overviews: Iran: Missile Chronology
  20. ^ A Code of Conduct for Weapons Sales Video Transcript
  21. ^ Procurement: November 3, 2004
  22. ^ FOXNews.com - Iran Launches Production of Stealth Sub
  23. ^ PressTv: Advanced attack chopper joins Iran fleet Retrieved May 24, 2009
  24. ^ British Broadcasting Corporation, Hezbollah drone flies over Israel, 7 December 2004
  25. ^ RIAN, Iranian drone plane buzzes U.S. aircraft carrier in Persian Gulf, May 30, 2006
  26. ^ Iran Uses UAV To Watch US Aircraft Carrier On Gulf Patrol
  27. ^ a b http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8606310435
  28. ^ [12][dead link]
  29. ^ BBC NEWS | Middle East | Q&A: Iran and the nuclear issue
  30. ^ 'No proof' of Iranian nuclear weapons programme | World news | guardian.co.uk
  31. ^ [13]
  32. ^ Beam, Christopher (2009-10-01). "This Means War: How do inspectors know whether a nuclear facility is being used for peaceful purposes?". Slate. http://www.slate.com/id/2231162/. 
  33. ^ Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
  34. ^ Signatories of the Biological Weapons Convention
  35. ^ "Razi Institute produces dlrs 100 m worth of vaccines, serums a year". http://www.payvand.com/news/00/oct/1067.html. Retrieved 2006-04-22. 

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