IRGC Aerospace Force (Niruye Havafaza-ye Sepah-e Pasdaran)
Overview
The IRGC Aerospace Force is the branch of Iran's Revolutionary Guard that controls the country's entire strategic missile arsenal, military drone program, and space launch capability. Established as a separate force in 2009 by consolidating previously dispersed missile and air defense units, the Aerospace Force represents Iran's primary strategic deterrent and its most consequential military capability in the current conflict. This is the organization that fires ballistic missiles at Israel. With an estimated 3,000+ ballistic missiles ranging from short-range Fateh-110 tactical systems to the Khorramshahr IRBM capable of reaching 3,000 kilometers, the Aerospace Force commands the largest missile arsenal in the Middle East. Its missiles are dispersed across an elaborate network of underground facilities — so-called 'missile cities' — carved deep into Iran's mountainous terrain to survive air attack. The Aerospace Force also operates Iran's rapidly expanding drone program, including the Shahed-136 one-way attack drone that has become one of the most proliferated weapons in modern warfare, used by Russia in Ukraine, Houthis in the Red Sea, and Iraqi PMF against US bases. Under commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the Aerospace Force has transitioned from a deterrent-only posture to conducting direct strikes against Israel, fundamentally changing the strategic landscape of the Middle East.
History
Iran's ballistic missile program traces its origins to the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), when Iraqi Scud missile attacks on Iranian cities during the 'War of the Cities' created an existential imperative for an indigenous missile capability. Iran initially acquired Scud-B missiles from Libya and North Korea, then reverse-engineered them with North Korean technical assistance to develop the Shahab series. The Shahab-3, first tested in 1998, gave Iran the ability to strike Israel for the first time — a transformative strategic capability. Through the 2000s, Iran developed increasingly sophisticated variants: the Emad (first guided reentry vehicle), Sejjil (solid-fuel for rapid launch), and Khorramshahr (2,000kg payload). The decision to establish the Aerospace Force as a separate IRGC branch in 2009 reflected the growing importance of missile and drone capabilities in Iranian strategic doctrine. Under Hajizadeh's command since 2009, the force has pioneered the development of underground missile bases — tunnel complexes carved hundreds of meters into mountains — to ensure arsenal survivability against preemptive strikes. The January 2020 ballistic missile strike on Al Asad Air Base in Iraq (retaliating for Soleimani's death) marked the first IRGC Aerospace Force strike against a US military installation. The April 2024 Operation True Promise attack on Israel and the October 2024 follow-up established direct Iranian missile strikes against Israel as a new strategic reality.
Capabilities
Primary Capabilities
The Aerospace Force's primary capability is strategic ballistic missile strike. The inventory includes approximately 200+ Shahab-3 and Emad MRBMs (1,300-2,000km range), 50+ Sejjil solid-fuel MRBMs (2,000km, rapid launch), an unknown number of Khorramshahr IRBMs (3,000km, 1,800kg warhead), hundreds of Fateh-110/Zolfaghar tactical ballistic missiles (300-700km), and the new Fattah series claiming hypersonic maneuvering capability. The force can launch coordinated salvos from dispersed TEL (transporter-erector-launcher) vehicles and underground silo complexes designed to overwhelm missile defense systems through saturation.
Secondary Capabilities
The Aerospace Force's drone program has emerged as a globally significant capability. The Shahed-136 one-way attack drone — cheap ($20,000-50,000 per unit), mass-producible, and effective against soft targets — has been supplied to Russia, Houthis, and Iraqi PMF. Larger drones including the Mohajer-6, Shahed-129, and Shahed-149 Gaza (Iran's MQ-9 equivalent) provide ISR and precision strike capability. The force also operates Iran's space launch program using Simorgh and Qased rockets, which double as ICBM technology development platforms.
Notable Operations
Role in Conflict
The IRGC Aerospace Force is the tip of Iran's strategic spear in the current conflict, responsible for all ballistic missile and drone strikes against Israel and coalition forces. The force executes the combined ballistic missile, cruise missile, and drone salvos that represent Iran's primary offensive capability against technologically superior adversaries. Its underground missile cities serve as the survivable backbone of Iran's deterrent, ensuring that even after coalition air strikes destroy surface facilities, a residual strike capability remains. The Aerospace Force also supplies drone technology and missile components to proxy forces — Shahed-136 drones to the Houthis and Iraqi PMF, and Fateh-110 derivatives to Hezbollah — extending Iranian strike capability across multiple theaters without requiring direct IRGC launch. The force's ability to sustain operations depends critically on its production capacity and the survivability of its underground infrastructure.
Order of Battle
The Aerospace Force operates from dispersed locations across Iran designed to survive first strikes. The ballistic missile force is organized into brigades, each operating specific missile types from dedicated bases. TEL (transporter-erector-launcher) vehicles provide mobile launch capability, with an estimated 100+ TELs for medium-range missiles. Fixed underground launch facilities — the 'missile cities' — are concentrated in Iran's western mountain ranges, reportedly at depths that challenge even the GBU-57 MOP. Drone operations are conducted from multiple production and launch facilities, with the Shahed-136 manufactured in large quantities at facilities including the now-targeted Isfahan complex. The total missile inventory is estimated at 3,000+ weapons across all types, though the proportion of operationally ready missiles vs. those in storage or requiring maintenance is uncertain. The force maintains approximately 15,000 personnel including missile crews, maintenance technicians, drone operators, and facility security forces.
Leadership
| Name | Title | Status | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brig. Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh | Commander, IRGC Aerospace Force | active | Has commanded the Aerospace Force since 2009, making him one of the longest-serving IRGC branch commanders. Personally ordered Operation True Promise strikes. Known for aggressive public statements about destroying Israel. Controls Iran's most strategically consequential military capability. |
| Brig. Gen. Ali Balali | Deputy Commander, IRGC Aerospace Force | active | Oversees operational readiness and missile force modernization programs. Key figure in the development of solid-fuel missile technology and underground facility construction. |
| Gen. Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam | Former Head of Missile Development (Father of Iranian Missile Program) | killed | Killed in November 2011 explosion at Bid Kaneh missile base near Tehran. Widely regarded as the architect of Iran's ballistic missile program, personally overseeing development of the Shahab series. His death was initially attributed to accident but later suspected as sabotage. |
| Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami | Commander-in-Chief, IRGC (Aerospace Force oversight) | active | As overall IRGC commander, Salami provides strategic direction for Aerospace Force operations and coordinates with the Supreme Leader on employment of strategic weapons. Previously served as IRGC deputy commander. |
Strengths & Vulnerabilities
Relationships
The Aerospace Force operates under the direct authority of IRGC Commander-in-Chief Salami and ultimately Supreme Leader Khamenei, who must authorize strategic missile strikes. The force maintains critical supply relationships with North Korea (historically for missile technology) and China (for specialized materials and components). The Aerospace Force supplies drone and missile technology to Quds Force for distribution to proxies: Fateh-110 derivatives to Hezbollah, Shahed drones and ballistic missile components to the Houthis, and rocket/drone technology to Iraqi PMF. Russia's wartime purchase of Shahed drones created a new partnership dynamic, with Iran receiving Su-35 fighters and potentially advanced military technology in return. Domestically, the Aerospace Force competes with the regular military's air force for budgetary resources, invariably winning due to its superior political connections.
Analysis
Threat Assessment
The IRGC Aerospace Force represents the most acute offensive threat to coalition forces and Israeli security. While individual missiles can be intercepted with high probability, the force's ability to launch large salvos creates mathematical certainty that some projectiles will penetrate even the most advanced multi-layered defense. The October 2024 attack demonstrated improved salvo tactics and potentially improved accuracy with newer missile variants. The greatest risk is a mass salvo combining ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones that saturates defensive systems — if Iran launches 500+ projectiles simultaneously, even a 95% intercept rate means 25 warheads reach their targets. The drone proliferation to proxies extends this threat across multiple theaters.
Future Trajectory
The Aerospace Force is likely pursuing several critical development tracks. Hypersonic maneuvering reentry vehicles (Fattah series) aim to defeat BMD systems through speed and unpredictable flight paths. Extended-range missiles potentially reaching ICBM classification would threaten European capitals. Improved accuracy through satellite navigation and terminal guidance would transform the force from area bombardment to precision strike capability. However, coalition strikes on production facilities and supply chains constrain these ambitions. The force's long-term viability depends on its ability to maintain production capacity under combat conditions and whether Russian/Chinese technology transfers can offset sanctions-driven limitations.
Key Uncertainties
- The actual survivability of underground missile cities against repeated GBU-57 MOP strikes and whether coalition can effectively seal tunnel entrances without destroying the facilities themselves
- How many missiles remain operationally ready after multiple salvos and coalition strikes on production facilities — the true depth of the remaining stockpile
- Whether the Fattah hypersonic missile's claimed capabilities are real or propaganda, and if real, whether existing BMD systems can be adapted to counter it
- The extent to which the Aerospace Force can sustain production of Shahed drones and ballistic missiles under ongoing targeting of manufacturing facilities
Frequently Asked Questions
How many ballistic missiles does Iran have?
Iran's IRGC Aerospace Force maintains an estimated 3,000+ ballistic missiles, the largest arsenal in the Middle East. This includes hundreds of Shahab-3 and Emad medium-range missiles capable of reaching Israel (1,300-2,000km), Sejjil solid-fuel missiles for rapid launch, Khorramshahr IRBMs (3,000km), and hundreds of shorter-range Fateh-110 variants. The exact number fluctuates as missiles are expended in strikes and new ones are produced.
What are Iran's underground missile cities?
Iran's 'missile cities' are vast underground tunnel complexes carved into mountains across the country, designed to store and launch ballistic missiles while surviving air attack. The IRGC has publicly revealed several facilities showing missiles on ready-launch rails deep underground. These complexes reportedly extend to depths of 500+ meters, challenging the penetration capability of even the largest bunker-buster bombs. Access tunnels allow TEL vehicles to exit for surface launches.
Can Iran's missiles reach Israel?
Yes. Iran is approximately 1,600 kilometers from Israel, well within range of Iran's Shahab-3 (1,300km), Emad (1,700km), Sejjil (2,000km), and Khorramshahr (3,000km) ballistic missiles. Iran demonstrated this capability in April and October 2024 when the IRGC Aerospace Force launched hundreds of ballistic missiles at Israeli targets. The Khorramshahr can reach targets as far as southeastern Europe.
What is the Shahed drone and who uses it?
The Shahed-136 is a low-cost ($20,000-50,000) one-way attack drone manufactured by Iran's IRGC Aerospace Force. It carries a 40-50kg warhead over ranges of 2,000+ kilometers using a simple GPS guidance system and small jet engine. The Shahed has been supplied to Russia for use in Ukraine, to the Houthis for Red Sea attacks, and to Iraqi PMF for strikes on US bases, making it one of the most proliferated weapons in modern warfare.
What is Operation True Promise?
Operation True Promise was the IRGC Aerospace Force's first direct military attack on Israeli territory, launched on April 13-14, 2024. The combined salvo included 170+ Shahed drones, 120+ ballistic missiles, and 30+ cruise missiles. While 99% were intercepted by Israeli and coalition defenses, the operation established a precedent of direct Iranian strikes on Israel. A second, more ballistic-missile-heavy salvo (True Promise II) followed in October 2024.