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Targets hint at Trump's strategy
Los Angeles Times
|March 08, 2026
Deeper look suggests groundwork is being laid to overthrow Iran's government.
ATTA KENAREA AFP/Getty Images AN EXPLOSION near Tehran's Mehrabad International Airport on Saturday.
The Defense Department last week outlined a concise set of military objectives in President Trump's war against Iran, claiming its ultimate goal is to dismantle Tehran's ability to project power beyond its borders.
Yet it may be targets the Pentagon has largely left unacknowledged that offer the clearest insight yet into Trump's true intentions.
U.S. military strikes have focused on Iran's ballistic missile, drone and nuclear programs, as well as its naval assets, according to U.S. Central Command. But strikes have also increasingly targeted Iran's internal security forces, used by the Islamic Republic to suppress public dissent, according to an analysis from the Institute for the Study of War and the Critical Threats Project shared with The Times.
The strikes have targeted at least 123 headquarters, barracks and local bases operated by Iran's paramilitary organizations, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its Basij militia. Regional police forces, primarily in the capital region around Tehran and in western Iran, near areas dominated by Kurdish groups hostile to the Iranian government, have also been targeted.
Some of those groups are being armed and supported by the U.S. intelligence community, a U.S. official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to talk candidly.
Nicholas Carl, with the Critical Threats Project, said the pattern indicates the campaign is already underway to set the conditions for a revolution.
"As we are going after these repressive institutions, we are degrading the ability of the regime to monitor its population, to repress its population," Carl said. "And so it looks as though the strike campaign may be organized around trying to erode the ability of the regime to repress in those areas."
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