Rear Admiral Ali Azmaei surfaced as the new commander of the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) Navy by issuing a public message during Saturday's funeral proceedings in Tehran, Iranian state media revealed 1. He replaces Alireza Tangsiri, killed in the 26 March strike on Bandar Abbas, roughly four months after the post fell vacant. The IRGC Navy is the branch that patrols the Persian Gulf and the strait of Hormuz, so its commander holds one of the most consequential operational jobs in the Iranian military.
No appointment decree, the formal written order a Supreme Leader issues for a senior post, has been published. Without it, no outsider can confirm the posting the way a top IRGC appointment normally requires. Iran International, an anti-regime exile outlet, reads the omission as a pattern, arguing several senior military posts have changed hands since Khamenei's death without formal decrees 2. That reading is the outlet's analysis, not the documentary record; the checkable fact is Azmaei's public message alone.
What can be verified points the same way. IRGC commander-in-chief Ahmad Vahidi is reported to be taking military and political decisions alongside Mojtaba Khamenei 3, who has not been seen, heard or photographed since becoming supreme leader in March . Three of his brothers prayed beside the coffin in his place, and he skipped the entire Tehran leg 4. Reuters sources describe reported burns to his face, lips and upper body from the 28 February strike 5; Israel's defence minister Israel Katz called him "a dead man" days earlier and has not walked it back. His condition remains reported, not established.
Iran's succession is now moving by action rather than by instrument, the same pattern first tracked around Khamenei's casket arrival . For outside analysts, the practical cost is a lost paper trail: the decrees that normally make Iranian command authority legible are simply not appearing.
