Opinion | Inside Iran's Military Mosaic
Opinion | Inside Iran's Military Mosaic
Iran always knew this day would come. For two decades it built a warfare architecture that could not be centred, could not be decapitated, could not be won from the air
On the morning of March 8, 2026, black rain fell on Tehran. The Iranian capital was engulfed in a cloud of toxic smoke that unleashed oil-tainted rainfall dozens of miles away after overnight Israeli strikes hit several fuel depots, causing fires to burn for hours.
Four oil depots and a petroleum products transfer centre in the Tehran and Alborz provinces were under Israeli fire and damaged, and four personnel, including two oil tanker drivers, were killed. By 10:30 in the morning, cars on Valiasr Street, Tehran’s main north-south artery, still needed their headlights on to navigate the darkness. It was a catastrophic image, and it was designed to be one.
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But here is what the architects of this air campaign may be miscalculating: Iran was not built to survive this war from the top. It was built to survive it from the bottom. This is the Mosaic Defence, and it is arguably the most consequential military framework to emerge from the Middle East in the past two decades.
Its origins trace back to 2009, when then-IRGC Commander Mohammad Ali Jafari formally reorganised the Revolutionary Guards around a single, haunting lesson drawn from watching American........
