
Iran’s IRGC exposes its own civilians to slaughter by deliberately hiding missiles in sports complexes and warehouses, according to a leaked war manual—raising urgent questions for President Trump’s America First policy amid escalating Middle East tensions.
Story Highlights
- Leaked 33-page IRGC directive details systematic embedding of missile launchers in civilian sites like warehouses and sports facilities to use as human shields.
- Document leaked by Iran International and activist group Adalat Ali Als amid US-Israeli strikes on Iranian targets in late 2025-early 2026.
- Analysts call it “data-driven missile deployment architecture,” countering media claims of indiscriminate strikes causing civilian deaths.
- Exposes IRGC tactics similar to those used by proxies Hamas and Hezbollah, justifying precision targeting while frustrating MAGA calls to avoid new wars.
Leaked IRGC Manual Details Civilian Shield Strategy
Iran International and activist group Adalat Ali Als released a 33-page internal directive from the IRGC missile command, marked “very confidential.” The document outlines site identification for warehouses, sports complexes, industrial sheds, and service facilities. It specifies maintenance protocols, launcher concealment methods, and mapping of entry and exit routes. IRGC planners catalog nearby roads, medical centers, and police stations to integrate missiles seamlessly into civilian zones. This structured approach protects assets during conflicts with US and Israeli forces.
Historical IRGC Tactics and Current Escalations
The IRGC, formed after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, runs Iran’s missile program as a parallel force focused on asymmetric warfare against Israel and America. Recent US-Israeli operations targeted Iranian missiles, drones, navy, air force, leadership, and energy sites. Legacy media reported civilian casualties near these strikes. The leak attributes deaths to IRGC’s deliberate embedding, mirroring precedents in Gaza by IRGC-backed Hamas and Hezbollah tunnels. Above-ground civilian integration marks this manual’s innovation over prior underground bunkers.
Expert Analysis Validates IRGC Doctrine
Defense analyst Fazin Nadmia describes the manual as “data-driven missile deployment architecture” with pre-mapped sites. Commentator Nikita Kapoor decodes its step-by-step human shield instructions. Dr. Steve Turley labels it a “smoking gun” proving Iran uses civilians as shields then blames America. Small Wars Journal ties it to the US-Israeli “coercive architecture” campaign dismantling Iranian power. These views frame the leak as structured doctrine, not improvisation, shifting narratives on strike precision.
Implications for Trump Administration and MAGA Base
President Trump’s second term inherits these revelations as MAGA supporters question endless regime-change wars and unfulfilled promises to keep America out. Short-term, the leak justifies strikes by undermining casualty blame on US forces. Long-term, it exposes IRGC vulnerabilities, potentially accelerating hits on civilian-embedded sites. Iranian civilians face heightened risks, while regime distrust grows domestically. Economically, industrial areas double as missile hubs face disruption. Politically, it bolsters pro-strike arguments but fuels base frustration over high energy costs and foreign entanglements.
Uncertainties and Broader Impacts
Document authenticity remains unverified without IRGC denial or independent confirmation like OCR scans. Sources treat it as genuine, consistent across reports, though from anti-regime outlets and YouTube analyses. No contradictions appear, but exile group origins raise propaganda concerns. Defense debates shift to urban warfare, affecting Middle East missile proliferation talks. For conservatives valuing limited government and no new wars, this underscores threats from IRGC aggression while validating targeted responses over ground invasions.
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