
Washington, D.C. , 17 March (H.S.): The Trump administration has launched a diplomatic blitz, directing U.S. envoys worldwide to press allies into designating Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Hezbollah as terrorist organizations amid soaring threats from Tehran and its proxies. This cable, penned by Secretary of State Marco Rubio on March 16 and disseminated to every U.S. diplomatic outpost, mandates high-level advocacy coordinated with Israeli diplomats by March 20, underscoring a pivotal shift toward collective pressure on the Iranian regime.
Escalation Amid Iran Conflict
The push arrives against the backdrop of a U.S.-Israeli air campaign unleashed two weeks ago, which has strained alliances reluctant to join without prior consultation and prompted Iran's retaliatory risks across the Middle East .
Diplomats are armed with stark talking points: Iran's sensitivity to unified action outweighs tolerance for unilateral moves, and blacklisting these groups would crimp Tehran's capacity to bankroll global terror. A State Department spokesperson affirmed President Trump's commitment to Middle East stability, lambasting the IRGC, Hezbollah, and their affiliates as architects of regional chaos.
Reluctant Allies Signal Resistance
Complicating the effort, key partners rebuffed Trump's call to deploy naval assets for reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a vital artery for global oil flows now imperiled by hostilities. The IRGC, tasked with safeguarding Iran's clerical rulers and dominating swaths of its economy, alongside Hezbollah's Shi'ite militancy in Lebanon, already bear U.S. terror labels—but broader international adoption could amplify sanctions and isolation.
This cable's urgency reflects intelligence of imminent attacks, invoking Iran's history of regional aggressions to rally a fractured coalition.
---------------
Hindusthan Samachar / Jun Sarkar