How the Iranian people are setting up house for survival
That “Black Rain” falling over Tehran this week—the soot of neutralized refineries—is more than an environmental disaster; it is a visual signal of the end of an evil theological era. While the international community watches the skies for the next wave of coalition strikes, a far more significant shift is occurring on the ground. This is no longer a protest movement, or even a divorce; it is a systemic annulment. The Iranian people are effectively evicting the Islamic Republic from their lives and “setting up house”—building a parallel, survivalist state from the ruins of the old one.
The Failure of the Samson Option
The IRGC is trying to maintain control through a “Samson Option”: the threat that if the regime falls, they will burn the house down. They have only checkmated themselves. By mining the South Pars gas fields and the Bushehr nuclear facility, the IRGC has revealed its true nature: not a national guard, but an occupying insurgency. This has only accelerated Artesh junior officer defections to the street. With the Rial collapsing to 1.45M/USD, the regime’s “Loyalty Budget” has vanished, and the Basij militias it was intended to bribe are returning home to protect their own families. The IRGC can no longer buy the streets. It cannot even buy the barracks.
The Artesh-Shura Nexus
The most critical development of the last few days is the emergence of a sovereign node of stability. In over 42 cities, including Kermanshah, Tabriz, and Abadan, local neighborhood committees—Shuras—have emerged to manage the basics of survival. These Shuras represent the best of Islamic tradition—consultative and community-focused—standing in stark contrast to the merciless brutality of the regime.
Protecting these Shuras is the Artesh (the regular military). The Artesh 81st Armored Division in Kermanshah and the 92nd Armored in Khuzestan have parked their tanks with turrets oriented 180° away from civilian zones, effectively “caging” local IRGC units. This is not a classic “coup”; it is a Protective Custody arrangement. The Artesh provides the security perimeter, and the Shuras—connected via the “Dark Grid” of Starlink and Mesh networks—provide the governance.
Defining the Enemy: The Saberin
To understand the stakes, one must understand the primary antagonist: the Saberin. These are the elite “Special Forces” of the IRGC—the regime’s “true believers,” tasked with urban suppression and “scorched earth” sabotage. They are currently the force attempting to mine the loading arms at Kharg Island. They are not fighting for a country; they are fighting for a cult of personality that no longer has a head.
Signs of Success
- Hardware Verification: ISW/CTP (March 10) confirms the deployment of FV4201 Chieftain tanks by the Artesh 81st Armored in a “non-aggressive” posture in Kermanshah. Their distinct British silhouette serves as a “de-confliction” signal to Coalition air forces.
- Sociological Verification: GAMAAN (March 8) data indicates a 91% civilian trust rating for the Artesh “Caretaker” units, validating the “Great Annulment” as a movement of national consensus.[1]
- Logistical Verification: NetBlocks confirms high-bandwidth Starlink activity within the Abadan Refinery and Kermanshah Shura zones, facilitating localized economic stability.
The final proof of this successful nexus is not in the streets—it is in the shipping lanes.
The “Safe Passage” Precedent
In the last 96 hours, strategic vessel departures from Abadan have confirmed a terminal rupture in the regime’s command structure. These shipments were not authorized by the defunct Oil Ministry; they were managed by the Abadan Shura and protected by the “Sovereign Shield” of Artesh hardware.[2] When IRGC Saberin units attempted to interfere, the Artesh Navy provided the “Order 110” protocols to ensure safe passage. This is the first recorded instance of Artesh-enforced sovereign protection against the IRGC in the maritime environment.[3]
Strategic Top Cover: The Silent Cordon
The United States and its regional allies have provided the “Top Cover” necessary for this annulment to finalize. By systematically neutralizing IRGC command centers and mine-laying vessels while pointedly sparing Artesh assets, the Coalition is getting out of the way of the Iranian people. The 5th Fleet has provided “silent top cover” for Shura-authorized tankers, identifying the Artesh-Shura nexus as the legitimate custodian of Iranian stability.[4]
The Abadan Sitrep
As the sun rose over Abadan Tuesday morning, the 92nd Armored Division completed a “Soft Handover” of the refinery’s outer security to the local Shura. Thermal satellite imagery confirms the Abadan Refinery remains fully operational, maintaining a steady “thermal bloom” that signifies active throughput. This ensures the local population retains the energy and revenue required for survival, effectively “air-gapping” the region from IRGC chaos.[5]
Conclusion
The IRGC is an aristocracy of ashes, trying to hold a match to a house they no longer own. The Iranian people have already started building a new house for the future. The “Great Annulment” is succeeding because it relies on the only two institutions Iranians still trust: the local Shura and the professional soldier. Our mission should be to protect that bridge. The only remaining question is how quickly the international community will recognize the new heads of the household.
CDR Jim Lowder (USN, Ret.) is a naval aviator, cattle rancher, and defense analyst.
Notes:
[1] GAMAAN Strategic Baseline Report, March 2026.
[2] The Abadan Five: Tracking confirms clearing of Fortune Gas (IMO 9471123) and NITC Forest (IMO 9283760), March 9–11, 2026.
[3] OSINT technical monitors recorded Artesh Frigate Alvand (71) at 29.93°N, 48.60°E issuing warnings to IRGC hulls.
[4] ISW/CTP Iran Update, March 11, 2026. Details destruction of 10 IRGC mine-layers; non-engagement of Artesh tankers.
[5] Copernicus Sentinel-2 SWIR Imagery (30.344, 48.274), March 11, 2026.