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European Tech Sovereignty
17MAY

Assembly confirms Mojtaba Khamenei

3 min read
14:28UTC

Three Assembly of Experts members confirmed a successor has been chosen, but announcing his identity under sustained bombardment would make him Israel's next target — leaving Iran without the one authority the IRGC is constitutionally obligated to obey.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran has selected a successor it cannot legally install without a constitutional amendment it cannot safely convene, while Israeli threats make announcement itself potentially fatal — a triply locked succession crisis with no constitutional precedent.

Three Assembly of Experts members — Ayatollah Mirbagheri, Ahmad Alamolhoda, and Mohsen Heidari Alekasir — confirmed publicly on Sunday that a "majority consensus" has been reached on who will succeed Ayatollah Khamenei as Supreme Leader. The selection criterion: Khamenei's own counsel that his successor should be "hated by the enemy." That description points at Mojtaba Khamenei, whose selection under IRGC pressure on 3 March has been widely reported but never officially confirmed. Iran's consulate in Mumbai denied Israeli media reports naming Mojtaba, calling them "without official source." The Assembly has not published a name.

The Assembly may not be able to. Members disagree on whether the final investiture requires an in-person session — a question that is constitutionally untested, because no previous Supreme Leader succession has occurred during sustained bombardment of the capital. Khamenei's funeral, postponed indefinitely since 4 March , compounds the impasse: under Shia jurisprudential tradition, a successor is not formally announced until the predecessor is interred. Tehran is under continuous air attack. No ceremony — funeral or investiture — can be held safely. Trump's characterisation of Mojtaba as "unacceptable" and "a lightweight" has already signalled that Washington claims a veto over the outcome.

Iran's constitutional architecture requires a functioning Supreme Leader. The IRGC's chain of command runs to The Supreme Leader alone — not the president, not the Parliament, not the Interim Leadership Council. Pezeshkian's halt order on Saturday, ignored by the IRGC within hours , demonstrated this in practice. Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf publicly attributed continued Gulf strikes to the late Supreme Leader's standing directives , bypassing the elected president entirely. Without a new Supreme Leader formally installed, no individual in Iran holds the constitutional authority to issue binding military orders or negotiate on behalf of the state.

The paradox is self-reinforcing. The absence of a Supreme Leader prevents command unity, which produces uncontrolled escalation across Gulf States, which makes the security environment too dangerous to install a Supreme Leader. Israel's assassination threats — issued within hours of the Assembly's announcement — ensure the loop cannot break from within. Each day the office remains vacant is a day in which no Iranian authority can credibly accept a ceasefire, restrain the IRGC, or respond to the Egypt-Turkey-Oman mediation effort . The Assembly has reached consensus. Whether consensus can become governance is the question Iran's constitutional system was never designed to answer.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's system requires a Supreme Leader to function — he alone can lawfully command the military. Religious tradition says you cannot officially name the new leader until the old one is buried, but the funeral is on hold because of the bombing. If they name someone anyway, Israel has promised to kill him. And the leading candidate may not technically qualify under the constitution without a rule change that requires a national vote Iran cannot safely hold right now. They have secretly picked someone but are trapped: announcing him makes him a target, the formal ceremony cannot proceed, and the legal fix used in 1989 may be impossible to execute under current conditions.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The 'hated by the enemy' selection criterion has created a recursive trap: Israeli hostility validates the candidate's revolutionary credentials domestically, but that same hostility makes public announcement potentially fatal. Iran has effectively granted Israel a structural veto input into its own constitutional succession — not through coercion but through the internal logic of its own legitimacy framework.

Root Causes

The Velayat-e Faqih doctrine requires continuous occupancy of the Supreme Leader position for IRGC command authority to function constitutionally. Shia funerary tradition is not written into the constitution but hardened into succession practice through the single 1989 precedent — creating a timing constraint the constitutional text never anticipated being weaponised by an adversary conducting sustained bombardment of the capital.

Escalation

The succession vacuum means the IRGC currently has no legitimate constitutional commander — it is operating on standing directives from a dead Supreme Leader with no living authority capable of issuing or countermanding orders. This condition maximises the risk of autonomous IRGC escalation precisely because there is no single node capable of issuing a credible stand-down order.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The IRGC is operating under standing orders from a deceased Supreme Leader with no living authority capable of issuing new directives — creating maximum institutional autonomy in which escalatory actions face no constitutional check.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    If the Assembly convenes to amend the constitution and announce a successor, Israel has explicitly threatened to target the participants — making the constitutional mechanism itself a declared military objective.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    A second amendment lowering clerical qualification requirements would permanently weaken the religious legitimacy of the Supreme Leader institution, accelerating the structural shift from theological to security-state governance in Iran.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

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

Al Jazeera· 8 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Assembly confirms Mojtaba Khamenei
Iran's constitutional architecture requires a Supreme Leader to function — the IRGC answers to no other authority. The Assembly has reached consensus but cannot safely disclose the name, install the successor, or hold the predecessor's funeral. The command vacuum that prevents a binding ceasefire or coherent military strategy is locked in place by the conditions the war itself creates.
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