Ayatollah Khamenei's funeral has been postponed indefinitely. The three-day state ceremony, originally planned for 4–6 March in Tehran, was deferred. Iranian authorities cited "unprecedented turnout" logistics and security concerns. Burial is now planned at the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad — Iran's holiest site and the resting place of the eighth Shia Imam. No new date has been announced. The earlier report that Mojtaba's formal public announcement might slip to "next week" now extends into an undefined period.
The delay creates overlapping constitutional and religious crises the Islamic Republic's 1979 framework was not designed to handle. Article 111 of Iran's constitution requires the Assembly of Experts to designate a successor "at the earliest possible time." The Assembly held its emergency online session from a location near the Fatima Masumeh shrine in Qom — chosen because Israel struck the Assembly's Qom headquarters during the succession vote. But under Shia tradition, Iran does not formally announce a successor until the predecessor is interred. The Assembly has voted; the predecessor is unburied; the successor exists in legal and religious limbo simultaneously. In Shia Islam, burial should occur as soon as possible — traditionally within 24 hours. The three-day state funeral was already an extension. Further postponement is religiously exceptional and signals that security requirements have overridden religious obligation.
Khamenei's funeral would draw millions to Tehran or Mashhad. The IRGC's decentralised mosaic structure can defend dispersed military assets across 31 provinces; it cannot defend a mass civilian gathering against an air campaign that has struck more than 2,000 targets in a week. Any ceremony on the scale Khamenei's burial demands concentrates population in ways that current conditions make indefensible. The practical reality is that Iran cannot safely bury its Supreme Leader while the bombing continues.
Iran is therefore prosecuting the most serious military confrontation in the Islamic Republic's history without a formally announced head of state. Acting President Mokhber holds executive authority, but The Supreme Leader's constitutional role — commander-in-chief, final authority on foreign policy, arbiter between state institutions — is vacant in practice. The IRGC's devolution of launch authority to 31 provincial commanders was framed as a doctrinal counter to decapitation strikes. It also reflects something the doctrine was not designed for: the absence of a central authority that The Supreme Leader's office is constitutionally mandated to provide.
