Iran's remaining constitutional apparatus named a three-person interim council on Saturday to assume The Supreme Leader's powers, less than 24 hours after state media confirmed Khamenei's death . The speed carried its own message: the Islamic Republic's institutions are damaged but not dissolved.
The council draws its legal basis from Article 111, which provides for collective leadership when The Supreme Leader dies or is incapacitated. Its members: Ayatollah Alireza Arafi, 67 — a Guardian Council member, deputy chair of the Assembly of Experts, and head of the Qom seminary. A Khamenei loyalist who survived the strike on the Assembly's headquarters because he was not in Qom when it was hit. President Masoud Pezeshkian, who had positioned himself as a reformist counterweight to the clerical establishment. Chief Justice Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei, a hardliner who served as intelligence minister from 2005 to 2009.
The triumvirate is constitutional. It is not equivalent to what it replaces. Khamenei held sole command authority over the armed forces, final say over foreign policy, and personal loyalty networks built across 35 years that bound the IRGC to the state. Three men sharing that authority cannot replicate it — particularly when the Assembly of Experts, the 88-member clerical body constitutionally tasked with selecting a permanent successor, cannot convene because its Tehran headquarters was destroyed . No provision exists for the simultaneous loss of both The Supreme Leader and the body designed to replace him. The interim council is a constitutional workaround, not a succession.
The question that determines the Islamic Republic's near-term trajectory is whether the IRGC accepts direction from a civilian committee. The corps' top commanders — Pakpour and Shamkhani — are dead . The IRGC has operated with substantial autonomy for decades, running an economic empire that the Brookings Institution has estimated at roughly a third of Iran's economy, maintaining parallel military structures, and conducting foreign operations through the Quds Force.
Iran's 1989 transition from Khomeini to Khamenei required weeks of backroom negotiation among a small circle of clerics, and it happened in peacetime. This transition is happening under active bombardment, with an organisation that answered to one man now being told to answer to three.
