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13APR

IDF vows to kill Iran succession picks

3 min read
17:09UTC

Hours after the Assembly announced consensus, Defence Minister Katz declared the successor 'a certain target for assassination' — turning the act of constitutional succession into a trigger for lethal force.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Israel is not targeting an individual but the constitutional mechanism of Iranian succession itself — using the credible threat of assassination to make the office of Supreme Leader functionally unoccupiable.

The IDF posted a statement in Farsi within hours of the Assembly's consensus announcement: Israel would "pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor" and the successor himself. Defence Minister Israel Katz was explicit: whoever is selected will be "a certain target for assassination, no matter his name or where he hides." The language targeted two audiences simultaneously — the Assembly members considering whether to publicly name their candidate, and the Iranian public watching the succession unfold.

The threat extends the trajectory Netanyahu set on Saturday evening, when he declared Regime change an explicit Israeli war aim and stated Israel has "an organised plan with many surprises to destabilise the regime" . Saturday's declaration was strategic framing. Sunday's was operational specificity: the IDF is not threatening a military commander or a weapons facility, but the person chosen through Iran's own legal process for transferring supreme authority, and the body that chooses him. IRGC Quds Force officers have already fled Beirut in the past 48 hours fearing Israeli targeting . The calculus for a newly named Supreme Leader — whose constitutional role requires public visibility, formal ceremonies, and the capacity to issue orders — is considerably worse.

The practical effect is to weaponise the announcement itself. If the Assembly names its candidate, he becomes a target. If it does not, Iran remains without the one authority the IRGC is constitutionally obligated to obey — the condition that produced the command vacuum visible in Pezeshkian's failed halt order and the subsequent uncontrolled strikes across Gulf States. The Assembly faces a choice between two forms of paralysis.

Israel's position contains its own contradiction. A Supreme Leader is the only Iranian authority capable of ordering the IRGC to stand down. Washington has demanded Iran "cry uncle" ; Defence Secretary Hegseth has called for dismantling Iran's security apparatus. But there is no one authorised to surrender, accept terms, or enforce compliance on the IRGC — and Israel is threatening to kill whoever assumes that role. The assassination doctrine ensures the office remains vacant, and the fighting continues without any authority positioned to end it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Israel has killed senior Iranian and allied commanders before, and followed through. What is different now is the threat to kill whoever becomes Iran's next head of state before they even take the job, and to pursue the clerics making the appointment. This is not a threat against one person for specific actions; it is a threat against the position itself and against those exercising constitutional functions. The statement being posted in Farsi confirms it is aimed at the Iranian domestic audience — specifically the Assembly members — not at international observers.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Broadcasting the threat in Farsi transforms it from deterrence into psychological warfare against the Assembly itself: each member now calculates personal physical risk in participating in the succession vote. This represents a qualitative shift in Israeli strategic objectives from degrading Iran's military capacity to disrupting its governmental continuity — targeting the constitutional function rather than any specific military capability.

Escalation

The Farsi-language framing, directed personally at Assembly members, may compress the succession timeline — forcing rapid announcement followed by deep concealment — or alternatively push indefinite postponement. Either outcome extends the period during which the IRGC operates without a legitimate constitutional commander. There is no visible pathway that simultaneously satisfies Israeli deterrence objectives and Iranian constitutional requirements.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Assembly members now face personal physical risk for exercising constitutional functions, which may produce a self-censoring effect that either delays succession indefinitely or forces a clandestine process with reduced deliberative legitimacy.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If Israel acts on this threat and assassinates a designated Supreme Leader before investiture, it establishes that a state's head of government can be killed pre-emptively before taking office — a precedent with no modern parallel that could be invoked by other states against leadership transitions they oppose.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    The Farsi-language framing signals an Israeli intelligence assessment that the Assembly is operating inside Iran rather than in exile, implying Israel believes it has actionable targeting options against the succession process itself.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #29 · New leader kept secret; Bahrain water hit

The National· 8 Mar 2026
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