Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
13APR

Israel kills Larijani, last negotiator

4 min read
17:09UTC

The overnight Tehran strike killed Iran's most senior surviving official — the nuclear negotiator, parliament speaker, and SNSC secretary whose institutional memory spanned four decades of Iranian statecraft.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Larijani's death eliminates Iran's sole viable backchannel negotiator at the moment succession is already compromised.

An overnight Israeli strike on Tehran killed Ali Larijani — secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council — alongside Gholamreza Soleimani, 62, commander of the Basij paramilitary force, and Soleimani's deputy Seyyed Karishi 1. Larijani is the most senior Iranian official killed since Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on 28 February. Soleimani and Karishi were located in a makeshift tent encampment rather than their headquarters 2, evidence that senior Iranian commanders have abandoned fixed installations after eighteen days of strikes across 178 cities in 25 provinces 3.

Larijani served as Iran's chief nuclear negotiator and SNSC secretary from 2005 to 2007, then as Parliament speaker from 2008 to 2020, before returning to lead the SNSC — accumulating institutional relationships across the clerical establishment, the security apparatus, and the diplomatic corps. Iran's backchannel diplomacy — from the Omani mediation role that dates to the 1979 hostage crisis through the secret talks that produced the 2015 nuclear deal — has depended on figures who could speak with The Supreme Leader's authority while maintaining deniability. Larijani was the last such figure.

His death landed at the moment Iran's diplomatic position showed its first movement. FM Araghchi declared on 15 March that Iran "never asked for a ceasefire" ; by 16 March he shifted to "this war must end, in a way that our enemies never again think about repeating such attacks" — the first Iranian formulation describing an end-state rather than refusing to discuss one. Larijani was the figure most plausible as an interlocutor had that shift become an opening. Whether Araghchi speaks for the IRGC or only for Pezeshkian's civilian government remains unresolved; Larijani could have bridged that gap. No one remaining in Tehran's leadership structure can.

Soleimani's killing carries a separate consequence. He commanded the Basij — the volunteer paramilitary force responsible for internal security and the enforcement arm behind the crackdowns Amnesty International documented during the 2022 protests . The Basij's top two officers are now dead while the force is expected to maintain civil order across a country under sustained aerial bombardment, with military units relocating into civilian spaces including schools and mosques 4. The tent encampment where Soleimani and Karishi died tells its own story: Iran's command structure is adapting to the targeting campaign, but dispersal degrades the centralised control that holds a paramilitary force of several hundred thousand together.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Larijani was not primarily a military target — he was the person foreign governments and intelligence services used when they needed to talk to Iran without making it official. Over 40 years he served as parliament speaker, judiciary chief, nuclear negotiator, and security council secretary. That breadth meant he could speak credibly to every faction inside Iran and be trusted by interlocutors outside it. With Mojtaba Khamenei unable to appear in public, Larijani was arguably the only figure who could have quietly opened a path to ending the war. He is gone. The Basij commander killed in the same strike ran a paramilitary force of roughly 100,000 active members; the fact that he was found in a tent encampment rather than his headquarters tells us senior Iranian commanders have already abandoned fixed locations — which makes future targeting harder and future command-and-control more fragile.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The simultaneous removal of a diplomat-negotiator and a paramilitary commander in a single strike creates a structural paradox: the more successful Israel's decapitation campaign becomes, the fewer Iranian interlocutors remain for any eventual settlement. Israel is simultaneously making the war easier to prosecute and harder to end.

Root Causes

Israel's targeting logic has shifted from deterrence-through-punishment to deterrence-through-denial — specifically denying Iran the human capital needed to reconstitute negotiating capacity and paramilitary command. This is structurally different from the 2020 Qassem Soleimani killing, which targeted operational military capability; Larijani's value was institutional and diplomatic, making his killing a move against Iran's state capacity rather than its military power.

Escalation

The Basij dispersal to tent encampments indicates Iran has already moved into a degraded-command posture, which historically increases the risk of autonomous or disproportionate action by field commanders who lack real-time political guidance. Escalation risk rises not from deliberate Iranian policy but from command fragmentation.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Iran loses its most credible backchannel interlocutor at the precise moment the new Supreme Leader cannot appear publicly, leaving no trusted figure to quietly explore ceasefire terms.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Basij commander succession contest may trigger internal Iranian security competition that produces unpredictable domestic repression or factional violence.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Israel has demonstrated willingness to kill figures with primarily diplomatic and institutional rather than military value, expanding the implied target set for future operations.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The structural absence of negotiating interlocutors on the Iranian side may extend the conflict beyond what either party's stated positions require.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #40 · Larijani dead; Israel hunts the new leader

Washington Post· 18 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Israel kills Larijani, last negotiator
Larijani's death removes Iran's institutional memory for diplomacy and its last figure with the cross-institutional authority required for backchannel negotiation, at the moment the new Supreme Leader cannot appear in public and FM Araghchi's diplomatic position was showing its first movement.
Different Perspectives
ASML / European tech industry
ASML / European tech industry
ASML's Q2 2026 guidance came in €300m below consensus as China DUV revenue collapsed 17 percentage points; the company's CEO wrote US export-control outcomes directly into 2026 guidance. European tech firms named on the USTR retaliation list alongside SAP, Siemens and Spotify face the same calculus: US trade exposure constrains what Brussels can legislate on their behalf.
France / Anne Le Henanff
France / Anne Le Henanff
Le Henanff chaired the G7 Digital Ministerial at Bercy on 29 May with CAIDA off the agenda, pivoting France's presidency to AI safety principles it had not designed the week around. France backs CAIDA but cannot override Berlin's tariff calculus, so the ministerial produced no new French-led commitment.
Germany / Federal government
Germany / Federal government
Berlin's automotive sector faces up to $200bn in threatened US tariffs, a commercial exposure that dwarfs any benefit CAIDA's public-sector cloud rules would deliver to German digital firms. Federal silence inside the College of Commissioners functions as a block under consensus adoption rules without requiring a formal veto.
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
Puzder's public warning on 25 May that CAIDA is inconsistent with the EU-US trade framework was the first time Washington made its bilateral pressure visible before a Commission adoption vote rather than after. The USTR Section 301 determination on 24 July provides the enforcement backstop.
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
Virkkunen framed the third slip as a procedural delay in finalising a 400-page text without addressing Puzder's trade-framework red line publicly. The Commission enforces existing law against Google while losing the legislative timeline on CAIDA, exposing an asymmetric position: enforcement holds; new sovereignty legislation does not.
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.