Iran
is taking increasingly heavy casualties in Syria. A statement from the
Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) announced on Saturday that thirteen of the corps’ élite
forces were “martyred” in the escalating battle near Aleppo, Syria’s largest
city, which has become the front line in the five-year civil war. Another
twenty-one Iranians were wounded. It is, for Iran, the largest single casualty
toll since the country intervened to rescue the regime of President Bashar
al-Assad. The fighting took place in Khan Touman, a village nine miles south of
Aleppo.
There’s
no hiding the human costs in a war that is being played out graphically on
social media. Syrian rebels immediately posted grisly photographs and videos of
a pile of corpses dressed in camouflage, as well as photos of wallets with
Iranian documents, identity cards, and currency.
The
news has made front pages across Tehran. The newspaper Ghanoun compared the
fight for Aleppo with the Battle of Karbala, from the year 680—an event that
was pivotal in the Islamic world and has symbolized tensions between Shiites
and Sunnis ever since. In Karbala, a small group of Shiites were slaughtered by
Sunnis of the Umayyad dynasty. Since then, Sunnis have dominated Islam—in terms
of numbers, geographic range, resources, and power. Karbala also made martyrdom
integral to Shiite tradition—and to Tehran’s concept of modern warfare.
In
Syria last week, Iran’s Shiite forces were killed by an alliance of Sunnis
known as the Army of Conquest, or Jaish al-Fatah, which is made up of Islamic extremist
groups that includes the al-Nusra Front, Syria’s Al Qaeda franchise.
Tehran
continues to maintain that its forces serve only in advisory roles, but the
numbers dying on the battlefield challenge the claim. Between 2013 and
mid-2015, Iranian news agencies identified more than four hundred martyrs.
Since last September, another three hundred fighters have died in Syria,
according to the latest month-by-month tally published by the Levantine Group,
an independent Middle East risk-assessment firm. “Iran has suffered as many (or
even more) casualties in the past six months than in the first two years of its
operations,” the group reported. The two deadliest months were April (fifty
deaths) and February (sixty-four).
In
February, amid new peace efforts led by the United Nations, Iran withdrew a
“significant number” of its Revolutionary Guards, according to U.S. Secretary
of State John Kerry. “Their presence is actually reduced in Syria,” Kerry told
a congressional committee. “That doesn’t mean that they’re still not engaged
and active in the flow of weapons from Syria through Damascus to Lebanon. We’re
concerned about that.” But Iran has other forces in Syria. This spring, the
government announced the deployment of Special Forces from the regular Army, in
what was their first active engagement since the war with Iraq, in the
nineteen-eighties. Within a week, four fighters were killed.
Iran
has also deployed a large number of Afghan refugees, men who fled wars in their
own country and have been stranded in Iran for years, even decades. These
fighters are effectively stateless and mostly poor, with limited access to
education or social services. Iran has recruited them for the Fatemioun
Brigade, a largely Afghan unit organized under the Revolutionary Guards. (The
name is derived from the Fatamid dynasty, which ruled a large chunk of the
Middle East from 909 until 1171.)
The
Afghans began showing up in Syria in 2013, initially to protect Shiite shrines.
Iran calls them “volunteers,” but they were promised residence permits, better
jobs, and other perks if they joined the equivalent of a foreign legion—and
were threatened with deportation if they refused, according to Human Rights
Watch. The BBC Persian Service reported that Iran is now deploying thousands of
Afghans to fight alongside Syria’s own forces.
The
Afghans—mainly drawn from ethnic Hazaras, who are Shiites and speak Persian—are
now undeniably deployed on the front lines. Fatemioun’s two top commanders,
both Afghans, died in battle late last year. More than half of the sixty-four
Iranian fighters killed in April were Afghan auxiliaries, according to the
Levantine Group. A year ago, Iranian media reported that at least two hundred
fighters from the Fatemioun Brigade had died in Syria. The dead are given military
funerals back in Iran, and the numbers keep mounting.
On Friday, Ali Akbar
Velayati, a foreign-policy adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, flew to Damascus, where he told reporters, “Our assessment is that
Syria is in a position of strength more than any other time.” He also praised
Assad, saying, “I believe the Syrian President has shown that he can manage the
country with prudence and bravery.” On Saturday, Velayati met with Assad and
renewed his government’s pledge of support. “Iran will use its entire means to
fight against terrorists who are committing crimes in the region,” Velayati
vowed. This promise clearly includes the martyrdom of even more Iranians and
their Afghan proxies.
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