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Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

IDF names Mojtaba Khamenei as target

3 min read
14:57UTC

An Israeli brigadier general names Iran's Supreme Leader as an assassination target on camera — the first time Israel's military has publicly declared a sitting head of state marked for killing.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Publicly naming a sitting head of state as an assassination target is without modern interstate precedent.

IDF spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin stated on camera: "He is not immune. We will pursue him, find him, and neutralise him" — referring to Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran's Supreme Leader 1. This is the first time an Israeli military official has publicly named a sitting head of state as an assassination target. Defrin is the same officer who disclosed operational plans extending through Passover and beyond , and who has emerged as the IDF's most forward-leaning public voice on the war's scope and duration.

The declaration carries operational weight because of what preceded it by hours. Netanyahu and Defence Minister Katz granted the IDF and Mossad advance authorisation to carry out targeted killings of senior Iranian and Hezbollah figures without prior political sign-off when time-sensitive intelligence emerges 2. A senior Israeli official told Ynet: "This has never happened before." The killing of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July 2024 required cabinet-level approval. That political check has been removed. Two days before the Larijani strike, the Israeli Air Force destroyed an aircraft used by the late Ali Khamenei and senior officials at Mehrabad Airport in Tehran 3. The pattern — destroy transport infrastructure, eliminate surrounding leadership, publicly declare intent against the principal target — is systematic.

Israel's history of targeted killings is extensive, but the targets have been leaders of non-state armed groups: Hamas's Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi in March and April 2004, separated by twenty-six days; Hezbollah's Imad Mughniyeh in 2008; Haniyeh last year. Publicly declaring the head of state of a sovereign nation with 88 million citizens as a personal target has no precedent in Israeli operations. The closest parallel — coalition strikes on Saddam Hussein's palaces in 2003 — was never accompanied by a named, on-camera commitment from a military spokesman to hunt and kill the leader individually.

For Iran, Defrin's words transform Khamenei's absence from a medical question into a survival imperative. If the leaked audio's account is accurate — that he survived by seconds, with injuries preventing any public appearance — the IDF is publicly hunting a wounded man whose location may be unknown even to some Iranian officials, per Iran International 4. Iran faces a forced choice: keep Khamenei hidden indefinitely, which erodes his domestic authority and feeds speculation about whether The Supreme Leader can govern, or produce him publicly, which may expose his location to the intelligence apparatus that killed Larijani, Soleimani, and Karishi within the past 48 hours.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Israel's military spokesman said, on camera, that it intends to hunt down and kill Iran's supreme leader by name. This is not how states usually conduct such operations — even when they pursue them. The public declaration serves a different purpose from the operation itself: it is meant to create psychological pressure, force Khamenei's circle to choose between appearing in public (confirming his location) and staying hidden (undermining his authority). It also signals to Iran's population and to Iranian commanders that proximity to the supreme leader may be fatal.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The public threat functions simultaneously as a psychological operation and a legal-operational construction. Read alongside the advance authorisation granted to the IDF and Mossad (Event 1), the public designation creates a documented record of intent that Israeli law and IDF targeting doctrine require before certain covert operations — the announcement may be procedurally necessary, not merely rhetorical.

Escalation

The public naming closes diplomatic space: any Iranian move toward talks can now be framed domestically as negotiating under an assassination threat, strengthening IRGC hardliners who oppose Araghchi's conditional end-state framing (Event 7). The body records the declaration but not this constraint on Iran's internal politics.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    First documented instance of a state military publicly designating a sitting foreign head of state as a named assassination target in an active interstate conflict.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Public commitment makes a failed attempt a significant credibility defeat; if Israel cannot execute, the signal inverts — demonstrating limits rather than reach.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Iranian domestic opinion may consolidate around Khamenei's person, increasing public support for retaliation and narrowing Pezeshkian's government's room to pursue Araghchi's conditional end-state.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Risk

    The declaration locks Khamenei into continued absence — re-emergence confirms his location — further degrading Iranian command authority at the strategic level.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #40 · Larijani dead; Israel hunts the new leader

Times of Israel· 18 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
IDF names Mojtaba Khamenei as target
First public Israeli military declaration naming a sitting head of state as an assassination target. Combined with the removal of cabinet-level approval for targeted killings, this transforms Israel's decapitation campaign from covert operations to declared policy and forces Iran to choose between hiding its leader and producing him.
Different Perspectives
Shipping and war-risk insurers
Shipping and war-risk insurers
War-risk premiums for Hormuz transits reached 3 to 10 per cent of hull value on 17 July, against 0.25 per cent before the war, as Brent cleared $87 and daily transits fell to eight vessels. Underwriters are pricing the confirmed UKMTO mine near the Traffic Separation Scheme, not the IRGC's unconfirmed 18 July mining claim, which CENTCOM called false.
Oman
Oman
Abbas Araghchi led an Iranian delegation to Oman-hosted talks in Muscat on 18 July, an agenda confined to reopening the Strait of Hormuz and nothing else. Oman's decades of studied neutrality make it the one channel neither Washington nor Tehran needs to be seen initiating, and that narrowness is what lets it survive the bombing.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's electricity ministry asked residents to ration water and power after the IRGC set Shuaiba's generating units alight on 17 July, the second Kuwaiti site struck in two days. The country draws 90 per cent of its drinking water from plants sharing power infrastructure, so one strike reaches every tap in the hottest weeks of the year.
Jordan
Jordan
Amman still reports no casualties or damage of its own from the 17 July attack even as CENTCOM confirmed two American dead on the same runway, a line it has not amended since. Hosting the base that produced the war's first US fatalities puts Jordan's decades-old defence arrangement with Washington under a domestic scrutiny it has not faced before.
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation called the alleged Darkhovin strike a violation of international law, while the Artesh put Operation Saeqeh, its campaign against Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, at phases 14 and 15 by 18 July. Domestic outlets Fars and Tabnak claim 16 Americans dead since February, a toll no source outside Iran supports.
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM confirmed two dead and one missing at Muwaffaq Salti on 17 July, when Jordan says its air defences intercepted eight of ten incoming missiles, against five of five stopped on 10 June. Its own strikes stay aimed at Iran's coast, interior and navy, not the Artesh campaign that killed them.