Tag: Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

  • Mojtaba Khamenei: The Shadow Prince Who Rose To Became Iran’s Supreme Leader

    Mojtaba Khamenei: The Shadow Prince Who Rose To Became Iran’s Supreme Leader

    Mojtaba Khamenei, long known as the discreet and powerful son of slain Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was announced early Monday as Iran’s new Supreme Leader at a time when the country is at war and Israel has openly vowed to target any successor to his father.

    Iran’s Assembly of Experts in a statement introduced Mojtaba Khamenei as the new leader of the Islamic Republic, five days after Iran International first reported that the body had selected him under pressure from the Revolutionary Guards.

    For decades Mojtaba operated largely out of public view while building deep ties across the Islamic Republic’s political and security apparatus. His rise marks the formal emergence of a figure who had already been widely regarded as one of the most influential actors behind the scenes of Iran’s ruling establishment.

    Mojtaba, the second son of Ali Khamenei, has long been considered the only member of his family with clear political ambitions. His younger brother, Masoud, worked only in administrative roles within their father’s office, while his other two brothers and two sisters are not known to have held political or bureaucratic positions.

    Born in 1969 in Mashhad, Mojtaba continued his education in Tehran at the prestigious Alavi High School, which produced many of the Islamic Republic’s elite, including former foreign minister Javad Zarif. The school’s dean, Kamal Kharrazi, later became one of Ali Khamenei’s senior political advisers.

    After graduating, Mojtaba began religious studies in Tehran before moving to Qom to pursue seminary education. In recent years, he has taught dars-e kharij — the highest level of jurisprudential instruction and a prerequisite for attaining the rank of mujtahid — at the Qom Seminary.

    Mojtaba married Zahra Haddad-Adel, daughter of former parliamentary speaker Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel. Zahra and one of their children were killed in the February 28 attack on Ali Khamenei’s residence. The couple had three children.

    Because Mojtaba operated almost entirely behind the scenes under strict security, official information about him remained scarce, and unofficial reporting has often been fragmentary.

    He held no formal executive or elected position for much of his career, yet he was widely believed to wield significant influence within the Office of the Supreme Leader and to oversee parts of his father’s administrative network.

    Political orientation and policy views

    A devoted pupil of Mohammad-Taqi Mesbah-Yazdi, the ideological architect of the ultraconservative Paydari Party, Mojtaba has long been aligned with Iran’s hardline faction. Analysts describe him as an advocate of a “unified state” in which appointed institutions overshadow elected bodies.

    This model was implemented most clearly during the presidency of Ebrahim Raisi, when moderate conservatives such as Ali Larijani were marginalized and gradually pushed out of the political arena. Mojtaba has also been widely regarded as a key supporter of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s rise in 2005 and his continuation in power after the disputed 2009 election.

    Mesbah-Yazdi, a fierce opponent of republicanism who died in 2021, argued that the Supreme Leader should be appointed without regard for public consent. Mojtaba has embraced this worldview, supporting strong clerical authority and the exclusion of moderates from power.

    He has also been widely viewed as the principal political and financial patron of the Paydari Front, whose members see him as the guarantor of the Islamic Republic’s revolutionary identity after his father.

    His foreign-policy outlook is deeply distrustful of the West, particularly the United States, and rooted in the doctrine of “resistance.” He strongly supports expanding Iran’s regional influence and strengthening the so-called “Axis of Resistance,” opposing compromise with Western governments.

    Position on protests

    Although Mojtaba has rarely spoken publicly, political reporting has consistently portrayed him as favoring a forceful, security-driven response to domestic unrest.

    During the 2009 Green Movement protests, he was widely identified as one of the key figures overseeing the crackdown. Demonstrators chanted directly against him for the first time, shouting: “Mojtaba, may you die before you see leadership.”

    During the protests of 2022, media outlets close to the regime again depicted him as central to maintaining internal stability.

    His supporters—including segments of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the paramilitary Basij, hardline clerics in Qom, institutions linked to the Supreme Leader’s Office, and state-aligned media—describe him as devout, discreet, and deeply knowledgeable about security affairs.

    Opponents, including much of the public and the political opposition, view him as a symbol of hereditary succession and criticize both his role in crackdowns and his opaque political influence.

    IRGC networks

    Mojtaba has maintained extensive ties to Iran’s intelligence and military structures. His network dates back to his youth, when he served in the IRGC’s Habib Battalion during the Iran–Iraq War—a unit that later produced many senior commanders, including Esmail Kowsari.

    He has had a particularly close relationship with Hossein Taeb, former head of the IRGC Intelligence Organization, and has widely been believed to exert influence over its operations. Mohammad Sarafraz, the former head of state television, wrote that Mojtaba and Taeb pressured him to allocate a large share of the broadcaster’s advertising revenue to their networks.

    Many Iranian analysts believe Mojtaba has played a decisive role in shaping senior IRGC appointments and key security positions.

    Implications of his leadership

    With Mojtaba Khamenei now formally assuming the role of Supreme Leader, observers say his leadership could reinforce the dominance of Iran’s hardline institutions and deepen the role of the security establishment within the political system.

    His extensive ties to the IRGC and his long-standing influence within the Supreme Leader’s office have given him a unique power base even before holding the title. For years he operated as one of the most consequential figures in Iran’s political hierarchy without occupying a formal public position.

    Now, as Supreme Leader, the “shadow prince” of the Islamic Republic has stepped fully into the center of power.

    Iran International 

  • Who Is Ali Larijani, The Unofficial Strongman in Iran?

    Who Is Ali Larijani, The Unofficial Strongman in Iran?

    The airstrike on the Tehran residence of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — one of the opening salvos of the current US-Israeli war with Iran — killed the 86-year-old supreme leader together with large parts of the Iranian command structure.

    Iran has yet to decide on the next leader.

    Currently, however, the power vacuum appears to be filled by Iran’s top national security official Ali Larijani, reportedly one of the few people trusted by Khamenei to ensure the regime’s survival in case of the ayatollah’s death.

    Some 24 hours after the Tehran strike, Ali took to national television and social media to decry the US and Israel for setting “the heart of the Iranian nation ablaze.”

    “We will burn their hearts,” he said. “We will make the Zionist criminals and the shameless Americans regret their actions.”

    While such fiery comments are not exactly out of character for Ali, he has also built an international reputation as a pragmatist.

    During his decades-long political career, he has established himself both as a ruthless powerbroker within the regime and as a competent negotiator dealing with Russia, China, and even the US.

    But with the US and Iran in open war, the 67-year-old Ali has curtly shot down President Donald Trump’s claims that Iranian leaders “want to talk” and that talks will be coming, which Trump made to The Atlantic magazine on Sunday.

    “We will not negotiate with the United States,” Ali replied on X.

    Kennedys of Iran’

    Ali’s new position at the top of the Iranian hierarchy is somewhat unexpected considering he has no chance of formally succeeding Ali Khamenei. Both Khamenei and his predecessor Ruhollah Khomeini were senior clerics in Shiite Islam, appointed as supreme leaders of the theocracy established following the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

    The Iraqi-born Ali is not a cleric. However, he is part of a family with deep religious and political ties within the regime, once described by Time magazine as the “Kennedys of Iran.”

    Ali’s father was a grand ayatollah. Ali’s brother Sadeq Ardeshir Larijani has also reached the ayatollah rank while building a political career, and came to run Iran’s judiciary between 2009 and 2019.

    Another brother, Mohammad-Javad Larijani, is a senior foreign policy figure who served as adviser to late Ayatollah Khamenei. Even before the ayatollah’s death, there were rumors that the Ali clan was trying to position one of their own as the next supreme leader.

    Ali Larijani’s father-in-law, late Morteza Motahhari, was also close friends with Ruhollah Khomeini and his aide during the 1979 revolution.

    However, Ali Larijani officially secured his power through Iran’s political system.

    Born in 1958, he joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in 1981 and served as a commander during the early years of the Iran-Iraq war.

    He attended a religious seminary, but then obtained a degree in computer science and mathematics before moving on to secure both a master’s and a doctorate in Western philosophy from the University of Tehran. Larijani’s academic focus, including his 1995 PhD thesis, was on German philosopher Immanuel Kant.

    Pushed out by Ahmadinejad

    While pursuing his education in philosophy, Ali Larijani also used his war background and his family connections to build a political career, eventually becoming Iran’s culture minister in his mid-30s. In 1994, Ayatollah Khamenei appointed Ali as the new head of Iran’s state-funded broadcaster, where he stayed for the next decade.

    Ali Larijani notably wielded the broadcaster as a pro-government propaganda tool, overseeing programmes like Hoviat (Identity) which publicly branded Iran’s anti-regime intellectuals as traitors funded by the West.

    Ali Larijani first ran for president in 2005, but received less than 6 per cent of the votes in the first round and never made it to the runoff, with the election going to hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    Instead, Larijani went on to become the secretary-general of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) and Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator. He quit the position in 2007 over apparent differences with Ahmadinejad.

    Facing Tehran’s partners and enemies

    Clashes with Iran’s extreme hardliners continued to affect Ali Larijani’s political career. Still, he managed to secure a position as parliamentary speaker in 2008 and hold it for the next 12 years.

    During his time in parliament, Ali played a key role in securing legislative support for the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers — including the US, China, Russia, Germany, the UK, and France — which aimed to curb Iran’s nuclear programme in return for sanctions relief.

    The deal was torn up by Trump during his first term in 2018.

    In 2020, Ali was put in charge of overseeing a strategic 25-year cooperation deal with China, which was finalised the following year.

    Ali barred from 2021 and 2024 election

    Riding high on the China deal, which projected $400 billion (€345 billion) of Chinese investments into Iran’s energy sector, Ali Larijani tried to run for president again in 2021.

    Unexpectedly, he was banned from running by Iran’s Guardian Council. The body — which includes six Islamic clerics appointed by the Ayatollah and six lawyers approved by the Parliament — did not provide reasons for its decision.

    Some speculated that Ali Larijani was excluded because his daughter reportedly lives in the US and has a British passport, while others believe this was done to clear the way for the regime’s preferred candidate, Ebrahim Raisi.

    Ayatollah Sadiq Larijani publicly complained that his brother had been disqualified “based on false information from the secret service” and that “falsehoods” had been deliberately spread among the Guardian Council.

    The main reason for disqualifying Ali was that he “openly criticised Raisi and members of the Revolutionary Guard” and apparently never attacked opposition figures Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi who were placed under house arrest in 2010, Iran analysist Ali Afshar told DW at the time.

    Ebrahim Raisi went on to become president. However, his term was cut short after Raisi died in a helicopter crash in 2022.

    Ali Larijani then tried to run for president again, and was once again barred from the race, which was eventually won by moderate Masoud Pezeshkian.

    Khamenei’s man in Moscow

    Last summer, Pezeshkian reappointed Ali to his old position as head of the Supreme National Security Council, making him Iran’s top security official in the wake of the 12-day war with Israel. In the months since, Ali’s authority and access to Khamenei seems to have overshadowed Pezeshkian’s own.

    Ali was seen as the power behind the scenes driving the renewed nuclear talks between the US and Iran. He also repeatedly traveled to Moscow, acting like Khamenei’s envoy to Vladimir Putin — presumably with the help of Iran’s ambassador Kazem Jalali, who is also Larijani’s close aide.

    Talking to Al Jazeera just days before the US-Israeli attack, Ali said Iran used the recent months to get “ready” for war.

    “We found our weaknesses and fixed them,” he said. “We are not looking for war, and we won’t start the war. But if they force it on us, we will respond.”

    DW News

  • Netanyahu Says Assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Would End, Not Escalate, Conflict

    Netanyahu Says Assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Would End, Not Escalate, Conflict

    The assassination of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei would “end” the ongoing conflict between Tehran and Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday as he refused to rule out taking the action amid the highly volatile regional conflict.

    “It’s not going to escalate the conflict, it’s going to end the conflict,” Netanyahu said during an interview with ABC News. “The ‘forever war’ is what Iran wants, and they’re bringing us to the brink of nuclear war. In fact, what Israel is doing is preventing this, bringing an end to this aggression, and we can only do so by standing up to the forces of evil.”

    Earlier reports suggested that President Donald Trump had vetoed an Israeli plan to kill Khamenei.

    Asked if Israel would target the Iranian leader, Netanyahu said Israel is “doing what we need to do.”

    “I’m not going to get into the details, but we’ve targeted their top nuclear scientists,” Netanyahu said.

    The State Department earlier Monday updated its travel advisory for Israel, the occupied West Bank, and Gaza, warning Americans not to travel to the region due to heightened security risks.

    Tensions have escalated since Friday when Israel launched coordinated airstrikes and drone attacks on multiple sites across Iran, including military and nuclear facilities, prompting Tehran to launch retaliatory strikes.

    Israeli authorities said that at least 24 people have been killed and hundreds injured in Iranian missile attacks since Friday.

    Iran, for its part, said that at least 224 people have been killed and over 1,000 others wounded in the Israeli assault.

  • Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei Moved To Secure Location Under Heightened Security, Reuters

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei Moved To Secure Location Under Heightened Security, Reuters

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has been transferred to a secure location inside the country with heightened security measures in place, two regional officials briefed by Tehran told Reuters.

    The sources said Iran was in constant contact with Lebanon’s Hezbollah and other regional proxy groups to determine the next step after Israel announced that it had killed Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in a strike on south Beirut on Friday.