Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Naval Doctrine”
The IRGC's Naval Doctrine Is Built Around One Assumption: Hormuz Is Worth More Closed Than Open
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy does not train to defeat the United States Navy in open water. It trains to make the cost of operating in the strait prohibitive. These are different strategic problems with different solutions, and the IRGCN has spent four decades refining the second one while ignoring the first.
The doctrine that has emerged from this period is sometimes called asymmetric maritime warfare, which is accurate as far as it goes. What the label understates is the geographic specificity of the strategy. The IRGCN is not a general-purpose force. It is a Hormuz force. Every element of its order of battle — the fast attack craft, the anti-ship missile batteries, the submarine fleet, the mine warfare capability, the shore-based artillery — is oriented around the same twenty-one-mile problem.