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Opinion

Why the UK must proscribe the IRGC before it’s too late

Proscription would have meaningful consequence on the IRGC’s ability to operate on British soil

May 7, 2025 13:29
Iranian drone GettyImages-2193282985.jpg
Iranian drone on display during manoeuvres in Tehran in January this year (Photo: Getty Images)
3 min read

Unelected bureaucrats are once again playing politics with British national security: this time in relation to the threat emanating from Iran’s regime.

The message needs to be clear to Prime Minister Keir Starmer: intervene now and take back control from Whitehall or on your head be it if and when the Ayatollah successfully carries out a terrorist attack on British soil. And any intervention must begin with the proscription of the regime’s terror arm – the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Forgive me for my frank tone, but the arrests of seven Iranian nationals allegedly plotting an attack by counter-terrorism police over the weekend shows how pressing this threat is.

Dare I say it – and I truly hope I am wrong – but the Iranian regime’s successive attempts to plot terror on British soil in the past few years bears an uncomfortable resemblance to the period that preceded 9/11 in the United States. In other words, we are just one intelligence failure away from a major Iranian regime terrorist attack in the UK. MI5 itself has declared that it has foiled more than 20 Iranian regime-linked terror plots on British soil since 2022.