Share and Follow
Mojtaba Khamenei, son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has allegedly ascended to the role of Iran’s new Supreme Leader. This significant development has surfaced amidst reports suggesting that his appointment was influenced by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
The 56-year-old Mojtaba, who is the second eldest son of Ali Khamenei, holds deep connections with the IRGC. According to Iran International, an opposition outlet, the decision was driven by pressure from the Revolutionary Guards, leading Iran’s Assembly of Experts to select him for the prestigious position.
Despite his influential associations, Mojtaba stands out for his lack of formal clerical rank or any official government role. His resume does include service in the Iranian armed forces during the Iran-Iraq war, which has contributed to his behind-the-scenes sway and long-standing speculation about his potential to succeed his father.
Interestingly, last year, his name did not appear on a list of three senior clerics that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reportedly earmarked as potential successors. This makes the recent reports of his appointment even more intriguing.
However, he was not included in a list of three senior clerics Ali Khamenei reportedly identified last year.Â
And his father is said to have indicated opposition to his candidacy because it would resemble the hereditary rule enacted by the US-backed Shah monarchy before it was overthrown in the Iranian Revolution in 1979.
Father-to son succession is also viewed negatively in the Shiite Muslim clerical establishment in Iran.  Â
But much of Iran’s top brass has been decimated in the latest conflict and Mojtaba has close ties with the powerful IRGC and the Basrji volunteer paramilitary force.
Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has reportedly been appointed Iran’s new Supreme Leader
Mojtaba (pictured with his father), is not a high-ranking cleric and has no official role in the regime
Despite being sanctioned by the US in 2019, Mojtaba is said to oversee an investment empire of over £100 million, with access to luxury properties in north London and bank accounts in the UK, Switzerland, UAE and Liechtenstein.
Mojtaba is said to own 11 properties on The Bishops Avenue – an exclusive street in Hampstead, north London, also known as ‘Billionaires’ Row’.Â
The Ayatollah’s second son owns the properties through a network of shell companies, one of which is registered in the tax haven of the Isle of Man.Â
Under Iran’s Islamic guardianship system, the Supreme Leader must be a senior leader with significant political authority.Â
While Mojtaba has not held senior political roles, he studied under religious conservatives in Islamic seminaries in the Shi’ite holy city Qom.Â
Unlike Ali Khamenei’s wife, daughter, grandchild, daughter-in-law and son-in-law, he survived the US-Israeli attacks.Â
The regime’s 88-person assembly is tasked with appointing, supervising and potentially dismissing the supreme leader.Â
It met on Tuesday in Qom to find a successor to Ali Khamenei, who was killed on Saturday by joint US-Israeli strikes.
Israeli and US strikes flattened the building where the assembly met. There was no information on any potential casualties.
Separate air strikes also hit Ferdowsi Square in central Tehran this afternoon with images showing injured people staggering through rubble.
In recent years, a favorite to succeed the 86-year-old Supreme Leader had been the hardline President Ebrahim Raisi, but he was killed in a helicopter crash in May 2024.Â
The latest bombing campaign comes after Donald Trump told Iran’s surviving leaders it’s ‘too late’ to talk.Â
Mojtaba, 56, Ali Khamenei’s second oldest son, has strong links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps
Khamenei, who presided over a brutal regime which slaughtered thousands of his own citizens, repressed women and funded terror organisations, was killed on Saturday morning
Trump warned the ‘hardest hits’ are yet to come as the fighting entered its fourth day and promised to retaliate after the US embassy in Saudi Arabia was attacked by drones.
The President also claimed the initial wave of strikes wiped out Washington’s preferred successors to Khamenei.
He said the White House had shortlisted several preferred successors – but insisted the military campaign was ‘so successful’ it eliminated not only the primary options but also the ‘second or third’ choices.
‘The attack was so successful it knocked out most of the candidates,’ Mr Trump told ABC News.
Among the dead are one of the regime’s top advisers Ali Shamkhani, commander of the Revolutionary Guard General Mohammad Pakpour and hardline former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
In a separate interview with the New York Times, Mr Trump said he had ‘three very good choices’ for the next potential leader for Iran, but did not reveal who these were.
On Monday night Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi told state TV that the killing of the supreme leader was a ‘religious crime’ that will have serious consequences.
Iran has continued to rock the Middle East with an a series of attacks across the region.Â
On Tuesday the US Consulate building in Dubai was struck by a drone.
Smoke billowing into the sky above Khamenei’s compound on Pasteur Street in the heart of Tehran
Israel struck and destroyed the Ayatollah’s compound (pictured) in an early morning raidÂ
Videos posted to social media on Tuesday evening showed a huge plume of smoke rising from the building, which local authorities revealed was hit by a missile.Â
No one was injured in the strike, the Dubai Media office said, and the fire was extinguished.
A statement read: ‘The competent authorities in Dubai succeeded in extinguishing a limited fire in the vicinity of the U.S. Consulate in Dubai resulting from a drone targeting operation, and the incident did not result in any injuries.’
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the drone is understood to have struck a car park adjacent to the consulate building, which is situated close to Dubai’s British embassy.