Iran International reported, citing unnamed IRGC sources, that Aerospace Force commander Majid Mousavi faces internal criticism for "being absent from the front" and "leaving his forces without leadership" 1. Families of IRGC personnel have reportedly filed formal complaints. Subordinates allege mismanagement of missile-strike data and describe launch operations as "near-suicidal" 2.
The sourcing requires scrutiny. Iran International is a London-based Persian-language broadcaster — Saudi-funded until 2023, NOW independently operated — whose IRGC sourcing has produced both corroborated reporting and unverified claims. This report relies entirely on unnamed insiders from a single outlet. It should be read as a signal of internal fracture, not a confirmation.
What is independently confirmed is the scale of officer losses. Israel killed four senior IRGC figures in a single week: spokesman Brig. Gen. Ali Mohammad Naeini , Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib , Basij intelligence deputy Esmail Ahmadi, and intelligence commander Mehdi Rostami Shomastan. Some 300 Basij field commanders died in overnight strikes. The corps has lost its top intelligence and communications leadership alongside hundreds of mid-tier officers who managed ground-level operations.
The IRGC has not stopped fighting. The 70th wave of Operation True Promise 4 was announced this week , and the corps continues to manage both daily missile operations and the Hormuz toll system. But daily missile waves demand coordination: target acquisition, launch sequencing, damage assessment, resupply logistics. When the officers who run those processes are killed faster than they can be replaced, operational quality degrades even if tempo holds. The "near-suicidal" characterisation from subordinates, if accurate, describes the predictable result — junior personnel managing complex weapons systems without experienced oversight.
The political stakes compound the military ones. The Jerusalem Post previously reported, citing unnamed sources, that the IRGC controls new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei rather than the reverse . An institution that functions as both the de facto government and the war's primary fighting force faces a recursive problem: the political authority rests on military coherence, and that coherence is what sustained Israeli targeting is systematically dismantling. The IRGC can absorb individual losses. Whether it can absorb the simultaneous destruction of its senior leadership, the erosion of mid-level command, and the reported disillusionment of the personnel who actually fire the missiles is a different question — and one the war's trajectory may answer within weeks.
