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Mojtaba Khamenei has been named Iran’s new supreme leader, succeeding his father just more than a week after he was killed in U.S.-Israeli strikes.
A statement from the Assembly of Experts — the panel of Shia clerics responsible under Iranian law for choosing the country’s top leader — said Mojtaba Khamenei had been selected as the third leader of the Islamic Republic, according to reports from IRIB state TV and the Fars, Tasnim and ISNA news agencies.
The younger Khamenei had been considered a potential leader prior to the American-Israeli attack that killed his father, though the idea was not universally popular given the 1979 toppling of the U.S.-backed hereditary monarchy of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
The semiofficial Mehr News Agency confirmed last week that Khamenei’s son was alive and well after the deadly strikes launched by the U.S. and Israel that killed his father, his wife and other family members.
A politician and cleric, he is known to hold significant influence among regime administrators and the Revolutionary Guard, the paramilitary force leading Iran’s retaliatory campaign.
His father became supreme leader in 1989 and soon, Mojtaba Khamenei and his family had access to the billions of dollars and business assets spread across the globe.
Trump told Axios last week that the choice would be “unacceptable” and suggested he wanted to handpick a new supreme leader, a process usually overseen by Iran’s clerics.
“They are wasting their time. Khamenei’s son is a lightweight. I have to be involved in the appointment,” he said. “Khamenei’s son is unacceptable to me.”
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday about the selection of Mojtaba Khamenei as the new supreme leader.
The Israel Defense Forces warned Sunday that any successor to the late Khamenei would be considered a target.
But the regime will be eager to show Israel, the U.S. and the Iranian people that it isn’t collapsing, Javed Ali, a former senior counterterrorism official and now an associate professor of public policy at the University of Michigan, said before the appointment.
Aniseh Bassiri Tabrizi, an associate fellow in the Middle East and North Africa program at the London-based think tank Chatham House, said before the appointment that “the signal that such a nomination will give is that nothing will change.”
Despite what little support there might be for Iran’s new supreme leader, without regime change in Iran, leaders would presumably maintain the same “iron grip on control through the institutions of power,” Ali said.
The Assembly of Experts last convened to select a new leader in 1989, when it chose the elder Khamenei. The new leader is required to be a man and an Islamic cleric under Iranian law.
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