World | Iran protests US Begins to Think Iran Protesters Have a Chance Turns its focus to Revolutionary Guard By John Johnson Posted Jan 9, 2010 3:19 PM CST Copied Members of the Iranian Basij militia, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, march in Tehran in November. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi) The US appears to be coming around to the notion that Iran's protesters pose a genuine threat to the government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and are looking for new ways to support the opposition. This latest round of unrest in particular has Obama officials reaching out to Iran scholars to gauge the chances of a coup and writing economic sanctions that go after the sprawling business interests of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, reports the Wall Street Journal. The Washington Post also weighs in with a story about the Guard, noting that the group's vast political and economic power could actually complicate US efforts to punish the government. The Guard's private-sector arm controls so much business in the country—Tehran's airport, highway construction, weapons manufacturing, etc.—that any sanctions that go after it will hurt the general populace as well. Read These Next We now know what might send bedbugs scurrying. Their dad left them a nudist colony. Buyers are scarce. Back to the Future star is at the center of a shocking suit. Pete Hegseth has some academic news for military members. Report an error