Will IRGC losses drive Tehran out of Syria after commander Dabirian’s death?
Ferhad
Dabirian, a senior member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corp (IRGC) in
Syria, was announced killed in Damascus, adding to the list of killed
Khamenei’s men in the region, following the death of IRGC major general Qasem
Soleimani in Baghdad.
Iran's
semiofficial Fars news agency identified the commander as Farhad Dabirian and
said he was killed in the south Damascus suburb of Sayyida Zeinab. The area is
home to a holy shrine for Shiite Muslims.
There
was no immediate claim of responsibility for the killing and Fars reported no
additional details on how Dabirian was killed.
Fars
said Dabirian was a commander of the battle to retake the historic town of
Palmyra from Daesh.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor,
also reported that Dabirian was killed Friday night without saying how.
Dabirian’s
death comes two months after the targeted killing of Qods Force commander Soleimani
by a U.S. drone near Baghdad airport on January 3. This is the second IRGC
officer killed following Soleimani’s death. A month ago, Asghar Pashapour, a
senior commander was also killed in Syria.
Iran
had earlier announced that 400 of its soldiers had died on Syria’s battlefields
since 2011, later, Mohammadali Shahidi Mahallati, head of Iran’s Foundation of
Martyrs, said the number has exceeded 1,000.
The
reports of Dabirian’s death came as a ceasefire negotiated by Russia and Turkey
took hold in the Idlib province, where the Syrian regime launched an offensive
to take rebel-controlled areas.
Last
month, a top commander in Iran’s Quds Force who was close to its slain leader,
Qassem Soleimani, was reported to have died in battle in Syria.
Asghar
Pashapour, a senior member of the Revolutionary Guards’ extraterritorial force,
was killed in battle with Syrian opposition forces in Aleppo, reports in
Iranian and Arabic media said.
According
to calculations by Mansour Farhang, a United States-based scholar and former
Iranian diplomat, Iran has spent at least $30 billion on Syria in military and
economic aid.
Currently,
Iranian forces operate out of 11 bases around the country, as well as nine
military bases for Iranian-backed Shiite militias in southern Aleppo, Homs and
Deir Ezzor provinces, as well as about 15 “Hezbollah” bases and observation
points mostly along the Lebanese border and in Aleppo.
For
his part, researcher in Iranian affairs Dr. Mohamed Benaya, believes that
Iran's losses in Syria place many scenarios, most importantly is the rise in
popular pressure and the deterioration of the economic situation, which leads
to the exit of the IRGC from Syria while maintaining its economic interests.
He
added in an interview that another scenario might be that Iran’s militias will
spread in Syria and legalize their deployment to serve Iran’s interests and
encounter Russia’s existence, pointing out that Iran might completely pull out
of Syria, which is, however, the weakest possible scenario.