Iraqi President Nizar Amidi will personally receive Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's cortege at Najaf airport on 8 July, the first time a head of state has hosted a leg of the funeral on foreign soil 1. After rites in Tehran and Qom, the cortege flies to Najaf, where Amidi and senior officials meet it before a procession to the Imam Ali shrine and a helicopter transfer to the Imam Hussein shrine in Karbala. Those two shrine cities are among the holiest sites in Shia Islam, and hosting the coffin pulls Baghdad into Iran's succession for the first time.
Read as a guest list, the itinerary sorts Iran's standing into three tiers. Confirmed at senior level are Pakistan's prime minister Shehbaz Sharif in person, China's lawmaker He Wei, and now Iraq's head of state . Silent: not one Gulf Arab government has confirmed senior attendance at any leg. Excluded: Europe, which Iran struck off its 30-nation funeral delegation list entirely .
Baghdad has featured in this conflict as a tanker destination and a transit corridor, not as a political actor with a stake in who leads Tehran. Sending its president to receive the coffin plants Iraq inside the Shia axis at the moment that axis is choosing, or failing to show, its new figurehead. The Gulf Arab silence runs the other way: neighbours who still bargain with Iran over Hormuz will not be photographed mourning its leader.
