Leadership Uncertainty Grows After Reported Death of Iran’s Supreme Leader
Fresh US intelligence reports suggest that Iran’s late Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, harbored deep reservations about his son Mojtaba Khamenei’s suitability as his successor—a development fueling further questions about Iran’s leadership stability amid ongoing conflict.
Khamenei’s Succession Concerns Shared with US Officials
According to officials familiar with recent intelligence briefings circulated among top US policymakers, including former President Donald Trump, Khamenei was wary of passing the reins to his son. The elder Khamenei, who ruled Iran for over three decades, reportedly felt that Mojtaba lacked the necessary qualities and personal discipline to guide the Islamic Republic through turbulent times.
Leadership Transition After Missile Strike
These revelations come in the wake of a dramatic turn of events: Ali Khamenei was reportedly killed in an Israeli missile strike during the early phase of the latest US-Israel-Iran confrontation. In the aftermath, a council of senior Iranian clerics named Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, as the new supreme leader. However, since his appointment, Mojtaba has not appeared in public, spurring speculation about his health and the actual power structure in Tehran.
Reports of Injury and Leadership Vacuum
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth stated that Mojtaba may have been injured and disfigured in the same strike that killed his father. To date, the new leader has only issued a written statement, lauding Iran’s armed forces and vowing continued resistance against the US and Israel.
IRGC Stepping Into the Void?
With Mojtaba’s absence from the public eye, analysts and US officials are increasingly concerned that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) may have taken the reins of power. Such a shift would mark a major departure from the clerical leadership tradition that has defined Iran since the 1979 revolution.
Trump: Iran’s Leadership ‘Severely Disrupted’
In a recent Fox News interview, Donald Trump questioned whether anyone is currently in firm control in Tehran, suggesting Iran’s leadership structure has been “severely disrupted.”
Key Takeaway
As uncertainty swirls around Iran’s leadership, US intelligence indicates that even Ayatollah Ali Khamenei doubted his son’s fitness to rule. With Mojtaba’s continued absence and the IRGC’s apparent ascendancy, Iran’s direction in this volatile period remains unclear.



