Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Photo courtesy Iran International   In every failed state, every destabilized country, and every major conflict across the Middle East, one pattern emerges with striking consistency: Iranian fingerprints. From the Houthis disrupting global shipping in Yemen to militias attacking American forces in Iraq, from Hezbollah’s arsenal threatening Israel to networks supporting extremists in Afghanistan, Iran has systematically built the region’s most extensive proxy empire. Since the 1979 revolution, Iran has exported Islamic Jihadi revolutions, building built a network of proxies across the Middle East, with Tehran’s allies among more than a dozen major militias that challenged local and neighboring governments, operating in at least six countries: Bahrain, Iraq, Lebanon, the Palestinian Territories, Syria and Yemen. Though speculation about the…

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