#1673: The 1989 Template: How the IRGC Seized Power

How a 1989 power vacuum transformed Iran's Revolutionary Guards from a militia into a state-within-a-state.

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The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps was never meant to be Iran's dominant power center. Founded in April 1979 by Ayatollah Khomeini's decree, it was created as a parallel force to the regular military with a single mission: guard the revolution from internal and external threats. Its institutional DNA was paranoia and political loyalty above all else.

The Iran-Iraq War transformed this small militia of roughly ten thousand fervent believers into a formidable military organization. Over eight years of brutal conflict, the IRGC expanded to over one hundred thousand personnel, developed its own command structure and logistics, and created the Basij volunteer network that would become a mass mobilization tool and social control mechanism. The war also gave the Guards their first taste of economic power as they built roads, supply lines, and weapons systems, laying the groundwork for what would become the Khatam al-Anbiya conglomerate.

By the late 1980s, the IRGC had evolved into a military-economic complex with a hundred thousand troops, an intelligence wing, and a massive informal economic footprint. When Khomeini died in June 1989, the regime faced its first existential test: transferring supreme authority without its founding charismatic leader. The Assembly of Experts had no clear successor—Khomeini had disowned his chosen heir years earlier.

This created a forty-eight-hour power vacuum where the IRGC's loyalty became the ultimate currency. Senior commanders signaled that they would accept the clerical establishment's choice, but only if that choice protected the Guards' newly won autonomy. Ali Khamenei, then a mid-level cleric serving as president, emerged as the compromise candidate. He was known to the IRGC from wartime cooperation, lacked the religious stature to dominate them, and offered continuity.

The symbiotic deal was sealed: Khamenei's legitimacy would be underwritten by IRGC military power, and in return, the 1989 constitutional revisions enhanced the Supreme Leader's authority while creating structures that gave the IRGC direct pipelines into the state's core. The Supreme Leader's Representative Office within the IRGC was strengthened, blurring the line between command and oversight.

From this point, the expansion was staggering. Through the 1990s and 2000s, former IRGC commanders took governorships and parliamentary seats. The Khatam al-Anbiya conglomerate grew from a wartime engineering unit into a sprawling empire controlling construction, oil and gas, telecommunications, and finance. By 2020, its assets exceeded one hundred billion dollars, creating a feedback loop of money, power, and loyalty. Key contracts for strategic resources like the South Pars gas field were awarded to IRGC-linked firms, ensuring their interests became inseparable from the national economy.

The Quds Force evolved into a shadow diplomatic service, managing proxy networks across the Middle East while sometimes blindsiding Iran's official foreign ministry. This external reach projected power and created business opportunities for IRGC firms in conflict zones.

The 2009 election protests revealed the template in action. The IRGC's brutal suppression of the Green Movement wasn't an aberration—it was a replay of their founding mandate to guard the regime from internal threats. After 2009, the political takeover accelerated as the IRGC purged rival power centers and placed veterans in key judicial, media, and cultural positions.

The recent passing of Khamenei activates the 1989 template again, but with a crucial difference: the IRGC is no longer just the kingmaker. It is the kingdom.

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Episode #1673: The 1989 Template: How the IRGC Seized Power

Corn
Alright, Herman Poppleberry, we've got a good one today from Daniel. He wants us to trace the evolution of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, specifically that first critical power transition from Khomeini to Khamenei.
Herman
Oh, that's a fascinating pivot point. Most analysis focuses on the Guards' current influence, but the DNA of their political dominance was coded in that 1989 succession. It's the original template.
Corn
And a template that's looking rather relevant again lately, wouldn't you say?
Herman
It's directly relevant. The mechanisms they built then are the ones being leveraged now. By the way, fun little meta-note—today's script is being generated by DeepSeek v3.2.
Corn
A friendly AI writing about power transitions. How perfectly recursive. So, let's set the scene. April 1979, the revolution is fresh.
Herman
Right. The I-R-G-C, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, is founded by Ayatollah Khomeini's decree on April twenty-second. It's crucial to understand its founding charter: it was not meant to be a replacement for the regular military, the Artesh. It was a parallel force, reporting directly to Khomeini, with one job—guard the revolution.
Corn
Guard it from whom?
Herman
From everyone. From external threats, sure, but more importantly from internal counter-revolutionaries, from the old military establishment they didn't fully trust, and eventually from the Iranian people themselves. Its institutional DNA was paranoia and political loyalty above all. Think of it this way: if the Artesh was the shield of the nation, the IRGC was the shield of the regime. That distinction is everything.
Corn
So they start as this small, ideologically pure militia. What, about ten thousand strong?
Herman
Roughly, yes. Poorly equipped, more fervor than firepower. They were essentially Khomeini's personal praetorian guard. Then, in September of 1980, Saddam Hussein invades. The Iran-Iraq War becomes this eight-year crucible that forges the IRGC into something entirely different.
Corn
This is where the institutional evolution kicks into high gear.
Herman
Completely. They couldn't just be a militia anymore. They had to become an army. They went from ten thousand to over one hundred thousand personnel by the war's end in 1988. They developed their own command structure, their own logistics, their own asymmetric warfare doctrine. And critically, they created the Basij.
Corn
The volunteer militia.
Herman
More than a militia—a mass mobilization tool. They mobilized over a million Basij volunteers during the war. This wasn't just about manpower; it was about building a vast, decentralized network of loyalty that permeated every town and village. It gave them a social control mechanism that lasted long after the trenches. But let's not gloss over the war's impact. It was a brutal, grinding stalemate. How do you think that shaped the IRGC's worldview?
Corn
I'd imagine it forged a deep sense of both siege mentality and institutional pride. They were the ones holding the line, often with human wave tactics. That creates a powerful narrative: "We saved the revolution."
Herman
And that narrative became a source of immense political capital. They weren't just soldiers; they were martyrs-in-waiting, the true believers. This gave them a moral authority that rivaled, and in some circles, surpassed, that of the clerics who stayed in Qom. The war also gave them their first taste of real economic power. They had to build roads, supply lines, weapons. They couldn't rely on the old, often suspect, industrial base. So they started their own companies.
Corn
Which brings us to the economic foothold, even before Khomeini dies.
Herman
A key point. By the mid-1980s, the IRGC wasn't just a military force; it was a major contractor. This is the embryonic stage of what would become the Khatam al-Anbiya conglomerate. They were learning how to run a parallel economy out of necessity. And all this happens while Khomeini is alive. He's the spiritual founder, the commander-in-chief. But by the late eighties, he's aging. The war is ending in a stalemate. The IRGC has grown into this beast, but it's still theoretically Khomeini's beast.
Corn
Until June third, 1989. Khomeini dies. And this is the moment. The regime faces its first real existential test: can it transfer supreme authority without the founding charismatic leader?
Herman
And the IRGC is sitting there with a hundred thousand troops, an intelligence wing that had been formally established just a couple years prior, and a massive, if still informal, economic footprint from wartime contracting. They are the most organized, most armed faction in the country.
Corn
The constitutional crisis was real. The Assembly of Experts had to select a new Supreme Leader. But there was no clear successor. Khomeini had disowned his own chosen heir, Ayatollah Montazeri, a couple years earlier. The field was open.
Herman
Right. Montazeri was under house arrest, a reformist critic. So who was left? There were senior clerics like Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Mahdavi Kani, or the more politically active Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. But the process was shrouded in secrecy. How does it play out? The popular narrative often simplifies it to Khamenei just being the next guy.
Corn
That's the big misconception. Ali Khamenei was not a predetermined, obvious choice. He was a mid-level cleric, not a top-ranking Marja, or source of emulation. He had political experience as president, but religiously, his credentials were thin. The selection by the Assembly of Experts was contentious. And this is where the IRGC's influence became decisive.
Herman
Their loyalty was the currency.
Corn
Precisely. In that forty-eight-hour power vacuum after Khomeini's death, the regime needed stability above all. The IRGC, with its guns and its networks, was the only institution that could guarantee a peaceful transition. They signaled, very clearly, that they would accept the choice of the clerical establishment—but only if that choice was agreeable to them. Khamenei was agreeable. He was a known quantity, he'd worked with them during the war, and he wasn't powerful enough to threaten their newly won autonomy. But let's be concrete. What did that "signal" actually look like? Was it backroom meetings, public statements?
Herman
Both. Senior IRGC commanders, like Mohsen Rezaei who was their top commander at the time, were in constant contact with the interim leadership council. There were no overt threats, but the message was understood: any succession that destabilized the country or marginalized the Guards would be... problematic. Their sheer presence was the argument. And Khamenei was a compromise candidate who wouldn't rock the boat. Rafsanjani, who was a political kingmaker at the time, likely saw Khamenei as someone he could work with—or perhaps manage.
Corn
So they backed him, and in return…
Herman
In return, he cemented their role. The 1989 constitutional revisions that happened right around the succession are key. They formally enhanced the Supreme Leader's power—making him the ultimate arbiter of all state matters—and created structures that gave the IRGC a direct pipeline into the core of the state. For example, the Supreme Leader's Representative Office within the IRGC was strengthened, blurring the line between command and oversight. The IRGC didn't just get a friendly Supreme Leader; they got a Supreme Leader whose legitimacy was, in part, underwritten by their military power. It was a symbiotic deal.
Corn
A deal with the devil, or in this case, with the devil you know. But I'm curious about the internal IRGC dynamics during this. Were they a monolith? Was there a faction that wanted a different outcome, maybe a more clerical leader?
Herman
That's an excellent question. The IRGC wasn't, and isn't, a single mind. There were certainly ideologically rigid elements who might have preferred a more prominent marja. But the institution's primary interest, forged in war, was survival and autonomy. Khamenei offered continuity and a guarantee against being sidelined by a more powerful clerical figure. The institutional consensus favored stability, and Khamenei was the stability candidate. The pragmatists won out.
Corn
And from that point on, the expansion is staggering. We're talking about a state-within-a-state being built in plain sight. Through the nineties and two-thousands, their political power grows—former IRGC commanders take governorships, parliamentary seats. Their economic power explodes.
Herman
Through the Khatam al-Anbiya conglomerate.
Corn
Which started as a wartime engineering and logistics unit. By the two-thousands, it's this sprawling empire. Construction, oil and gas, telecommunications, finance. Estimates by twenty-twenty put its assets at over one hundred billion dollars. It's not just a business; it's a mechanism for patronage, for funding off-book operations, and for making the IRGC's interests inseparable from the national economy. Can you give us a tangible example of how this works? Like, a specific project or sector?
Herman
Sure. Take the South Pars gas field, one of the world's largest. For years, key development contracts weren't given to international oil companies or even fully civilian Iranian firms. They were awarded to Khatam al-Anbiya. This accomplishes several things: it funnels billions into IRGC coffers, it gives them control over a strategic national resource, and it employs thousands of people whose livelihoods depend on the Guards. It's a perfect feedback loop of money, power, and loyalty. And it started in earnest in the 2000s, under President Ahmadinejad, a former Basij member himself.
Corn
And their military reach extends far beyond Iran's borders.
Herman
That's the Quds Force evolution. Formally established in the late eighties, it really comes into its own under Qasem Soleimani in the two-thousands. It moves from advising to directly managing proxy networks across the region—Hezbollah in Lebanon, Shia militias in Iraq, the Houthis in Yemen, Assad's forces in Syria. This external arm serves a dual purpose: it projects power and it gives the IRGC a foreign policy portfolio independent of, and sometimes in tension with, the diplomatic corps.
Corn
That tension is fascinating. There have been reports of the Foreign Ministry being blindsided by Quds Force actions. It's like having a shadow diplomatic service with its own army.
Herman
Precisely. And this isn't just about ideology; it's about institutional turf. Every conflict zone where the Quds Force operates is also a business opportunity for IRGC-linked firms—rebuilding Syria, for instance. So by the time we get to, say, the two thousand nine election protests…
Corn
The template is set. The IRGC's role in crushing the Green Movement protests wasn't an aberration; it was a replay of their founding mandate to guard the regime from internal threats. They were the enforcers. And by then, they weren't just taking orders—they were partners in power with Khamenei, who had by fully evolved from the tentative successor of 1989 into a leader whose authority was deeply intertwined with theirs.
Herman
And here's a crucial follow-up: after 2009, the political takeover accelerated. The IRGC didn't just suppress dissent; they used it to purge rival power centers. Reformists and even pragmatic conservatives were sidelined. The intelligence ministry was brought under tighter control. The system became more securitized, with IRGC veterans placed in key judicial, media, and cultural positions. It was a consolidation phase, directly following the playbook of securing the regime from within.
Corn
Which brings us to the present day. The recent… upheavals.
Herman
Right. With the recent passing of Khamenei himself, we're seeing the 1989 template activated again, but with a crucial difference.
Corn
The IRGC is no longer just the kingmaker. It's the kingdom.
Herman
That's the acceleration analysts are talking about. In 1989, they were a powerful institution that helped select the king. Today, evidence suggests they are effectively selecting from within their own ranks or elevating figures like Mojtaba Khamenei, whose power base is entirely dependent on them. The constitutional veneer is there, but the center of gravity has decisively shifted toward the IRGC as an institution. The clerical establishment is now often secondary. Think about it: who holds the real power? The 85-year-old cleric in the Supreme Leader's office, or the commanders of the IRGC, the Basij, and the intelligence apparatus who control the streets and the economy?
Corn
It's like they've completed the inversion. The body formed to guard the revolution now is the revolutionary state. The tail is not just wagging the dog; the tail has grown a new head. But is there any pushback? From within the clerical establishment, or even from more traditionalist elements within the IRGC itself?
Herman
There are tensions, certainly. Some senior clerics in Qom quietly bemoan the militarization of the state. But they have no lever of power to pull. Within the IRGC, there are debates over strategy—how confrontational to be with the West, how much to spend on foreign adventures versus domestic needs—but not over the fundamental principle of their dominance. The system has become self-reinforcing. And that has profound implications. It means Iran's strategic decisions, its foreign adventures, its repression at home—these are increasingly driven by the institutional interests of a military-economic complex, not by clerical ideology or even conventional diplomatic strategy. It's more pragmatic in some ways, more brutal in others, and far more resilient.
Corn
Resilient because?
Herman
Because it's decentralized and economically self-sustaining. You can't decapitate this structure by removing one leader. It's a network. The Quds Force, the Basij, the cyber command, the economic conglomerates—they all have their own leadership and can operate semi-autonomously. This makes the regime incredibly tough to pressure or topple. Sanctions hurt the Iranian people, but the IRGC's empire is designed to evade them through black markets, smuggling networks, and front companies. It's an octopus; you can cut off a tentacle, but the body survives.
Corn
Which brings us to a practical takeaway for anyone trying to understand Iran today. You can't just look at the Supreme Leader's office. You have to follow the money and the guns, and they both lead back to the IRGC's sprawling empire.
Herman
A hundred percent. Monitoring their economic holdings—who's getting the construction contracts, which sectors they're moving into—is a better indicator of internal power shifts than parsing clerical statements. Same with the Basij mobilization patterns. They're the regime's nervous system. Here's a fun fact, or rather, a grim one: the Basij's organizational structure is often mapped onto Iran's postal code system. That's how deeply integrated they are into the social fabric—they can mobilize at a neighborhood level based on zip codes.
Corn
That's chillingly efficient. And for future transitions? This 1989 model suggests it's an internal IRGC consensus process, not a popular or even a purely clerical one. The next leader will be whoever the commanders' council can agree on, someone who protects their interests.
Herman
Which makes the whole system more predictable in one sense—it will act to preserve itself—and less predictable in another, because the internal calculus of a military junta is always opaque. The wildcard is whether the Iranian people, after all these years, will continue to accept a future decided by military men in closed rooms. The 2022 protests showed a society increasingly willing to chant against the entire structure, Guards and all. The 1989 bargain may be reaching its expiration date with the public, even as the institution itself has never been stronger.
Corn
A question for another day, perhaps. For now, the lesson from 1989 is clear: the revolution created its own guardian, and the guardian eventually inherited the revolution.
Herman
It's the ultimate institutional coup, played out over decades, not in a single night. And it offers a case study in how revolutionary movements can be captured by their own security apparatuses—a story with echoes far beyond Iran's borders.
Corn
Thanks for diving into that with me, Herman. And thanks as always to our producer, Hilbert Flumingtop. Big thanks to Modal for providing the GPU credits that power this show.
Herman
This has been My Weird Prompts. If you're enjoying the show, a quick review on your podcast app helps us reach new listeners.
Corn
We'll catch you next time.

This episode was generated with AI assistance. Hosts Herman and Corn are AI personalities.