Iranian state media began referring to Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei with the title 'janbaz' on 1 April, a designation reserved for disabled veterans of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, never before applied to a sitting supreme leader. Khamenei had been absent for 17 days without explanation as of Day 17 , his absence confirmed again at Day 32 .
The 'janbaz' designation is not accidental in Iran's highly controlled state media. It is a specific term with precise legal and social meaning: a disabled veteran of the 1980-88 war who carries permanent physical injuries. Applying it to a supreme leader 33 days into a conflict, when that leader has been completely absent from public view, is an extraordinary signal. IRGC sources had already been telling Iran International that Khamenei was losing authority over the Guards ; the 'janbaz' title extends that signal from internal sources to official state media.
Russia's ambassador confirming Khamenei is in-country but 'refraining from making public appearances for understandable reasons', combined with sources indicating leg and abdominal surgery and possible facial injuries, suggests physical incapacity significant enough that appearances are impossible rather than merely inadvisable. The Islamabad Four talks had ended without a statement partly because the question of who speaks with genuine authority for Iran remained unanswered.
The institutional consequence is what matters. The IRGC has been managing state functions for over a month. A supreme leader designated a disabled veteran by state media is functionally symbolic. Araghchi speaks, but the IRGC decides: this changes the negotiating counterparty in any potential deal, and makes the 'deal talk and denial' dynamic structurally harder to resolve.
