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23APR

Iran's new leader wounded, sources say

2 min read
09:21UTC

Reuters sources say Mojtaba Khamenei, installed as Supreme Leader in March and unseen since, was disfigured and badly hurt in the strike that killed his father, reframing four months of silence as possible incapacity.

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Key takeaway

Iran's unseen Supreme Leader may be incapacitated, not merely hiding, leaving the IRGC in effective control.

Mojtaba Khamenei was disfigured and suffered a serious injury to one or both legs in the 28 February airstrike that killed his father, sources close to his inner circle told Reuters 1. No photograph or public sighting of Iran's Supreme Leader has been released in the four months since. On the second day of the state funeral in Tehran, three of his brothers, Mostafa, Meysam and Masoud, prayed beside the coffin while Mojtaba stayed away and clerics led the rites in his place . For four months that silence looked like a man choosing not to be seen; the account, unconfirmed and resting on anonymous sources, suggests he may be a man who cannot be.

The New York Times attributed his no-show to a fear that Israel would try to kill him at the ceremony, days after defence minister Israel Katz called him 'a dead man' . The Reuters account points at something harder to reverse than caution: a leader installed only on 7 March, who has governed through sealed handwritten notes and has not been seen since 8 March, may be physically unable to appear at all. Tehran offers only the assassination-risk reading; the medical reading stays unconfirmed.

If the man the Assembly of Experts named Supreme Leader cannot show his face, day-to-day authority sits with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Major General Ahmad Vahidi, who folded the military and negotiating tracks into one command in April. Both readings can be true at once, and neither produces a Supreme Leader able to stand in public and govern. That turns a question of Mojtaba's security into a question of who actually runs Iran.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's most powerful person is its Supreme Leader, a religious and political post that sits above the elected president. Mojtaba Khamenei took the job in March 2026 after his father was killed in an Israeli strike. Nobody outside his inner circle has seen or heard him in four months, unusual for a head of state during a war his own country is fighting. Reuters now reports, through unnamed sources, that he was hurt badly enough in the same strike that killed his father to explain the silence. Nothing has been confirmed with a photograph, a video, or his own voice, so the report should be read as one account among several, not as settled fact.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's constitution gives the Assembly of Experts sole authority to remove a Supreme Leader for incapacity under Article 111, but only after a public determination process. Any confirmation of Mojtaba's injuries would trigger that mechanism, so the IRGC has a structural incentive to keep his condition unconfirmed rather than to deny it outright.

The Assembly's own Qom headquarters was destroyed in the February strikes that installed him, hollowing out the very body that would have to certify any incapacity in the first place.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A confirmed incapacity would force the Assembly of Experts to reopen a succession question it currently has no functioning quorum to resolve, given its Qom headquarters remains destroyed.

  • Meaning

    The persistence of unverified medical claims four months on suggests information control has replaced formal succession planning as Iran's crisis-management tool.

First Reported In

Update #146 · Iran's new leader wounded, not just hiding

The Jerusalem Post· 5 Jul 2026
Read original
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