12-year-olds in uniform, top brass in penthouses
2026-03-28 - 20:55
While rage over the cruel massacre of January 8th still burns in the hearts of Iranians, the Iranian regime has this week pulled another card from its arsenal: 12-year-old children. The announcement of opening the ranks to young children to join and support the "war effort" is not merely evidence of operational desperation; it is a showcase of the moral decay that divides Iran into two parallel worlds that have never been further apart. On one side of the abyss is the portrait of the new recruit. This is a child arriving primarily from the social and geographical periphery of Iran. His profile is clear: he comes from a family crushed under the wheels of runaway inflation, a family where the Iranian Rial has become worthless paper. This child likely belongs to one of the peripheral regions that the regime has deliberately neglected throughout its entire reign. For that young boy, the uniform of the IRGC or the Basij is not an ideological garment; it is a simple ticket to a meal. The regime, with boundless cynicism, exploits the poverty and hunger into which more and more families are being pushed to buy loyalty. It seeks to place this child at checkpoints, granting him a false sense of power, and sends him to stand as a buffer against citizens demanding a better future. But while this child stands in the cold "Azadi" square at a checkpoint in, the sons and daughters of high-ranking regime officials live in a completely different universe. A mother and her children in the western Iranian city of Ahvaz. Photo: AP While their fathers deliver speeches on "resistance" and "sacrifice," these children flaunt a life of eye-popping luxury- completely detached from the reality of the average Iranian's life. They drive Porsches through the streets of North Tehran, celebrate at private parties in London, the U.S., and Canada, and invest in real estate in Dubai with money looted from the Iranian people's resources. For them, the "Revolution" is not an ideology; it is a cash cow. They are the direct beneficiaries of the IRGC's economic monopolies, those that stifle the private market and push the parents of the young recruit below the poverty line. And if you wondered, they aren't ashamed of it. Everything is documented and uploaded to social media with shameless bravado. This gap is the true fuel of the current protest. The Iranian citizen in 2026 is no longer willing to buy the heroic stories like "keys to heaven"- the same narrative told to children recruited during the Iran-Iraq War. Especially not when the children of the elite hold the keys to penthouses in London. They see how the regime sacrifices the future generation of the weaker classes to protect the bank accounts of the ruling class. The recruitment of 12-year-olds is the final move of a government that has lost the ability to persuade or meet the people's needs and has chosen instead to trade in hunger. It is a desperate attempt to incite conflict between the poor and the poor- between a hungry child in uniform and a student hungry for freedom. Yet, when the gap between the checkpoint and the penthouse becomes so blatant, even the regime's strongest weapons- fear and hunger, begin to lose their power against a united public fury. History will remember 2026 not as the year the regime grew stronger thanks to its young recruits, but as the year the mask of a regime that supposedly championed itself as the "protector of the underprivileged" was finally torn away. It revealed an underlying, cruel oligarchy willing to burn its own children just to gain one more day of rule. Dana Sameah is a researcher and lecturer on the voice and protest of citizens in Iran from the Revolution to the present day.