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Trump says he’s ‘hearing’ Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei not alive — Israel launches strikes

Trump says he’s ‘hearing’ Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei not alive — Israel launches strikes

Trump says he’s ‘hearing’ Iran’s supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei not alive — Israel launches strikes

Key points


What’s happened — the concise narrative

In the days since the U.S.–Israeli strikes that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Tehran named his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, as successor. The new leader’s public footprint has been minimal: his first message was read on state TV rather than delivered in person, and Iranian officials have offered limited detail about his health. That lack of on-the-record appearances has produced a swirl of claims, intelligence briefings and media reports about whether he is capable of exercising authority — and whether the Revolutionary Guard is effectively running day-to-day operations.


Trump’s public comments and their effect

President Donald Trump has made several public remarks suggesting uncertainty about the supreme leader’s status — telling broadcasters he believes the leader is “damaged” in one interview and later saying he’s “hearing he’s not alive.” Those statements quickly reverberated through the news cycle, increasing diplomatic friction and accelerating speculation inside Tehran and in allied capitals. Reuters and other outlets carry the on-the-record quotes that drove much of the coverage.


Israel’s new wave of strikes — what officials say

The Israeli military says it has begun “new waves” of strikes inside Iran, targeting a range of military and infrastructure sites as part of a campaign it says is needed to remove threats to Israel. Israeli spokespeople have said strikes will continue until operational goals are met; Iran has continued to retaliate with missile, drone and proxy activity across the region. These back-and-forth moves are the proximate reason energy markets and regional governments are on heightened alert.


Who’s really in charge inside Iran?

With contradictory public signals about Mojtaba Khamenei’s condition, analysts point to an important practical reality: the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — and its senior commanders — already exercised large policy influence before the strikes and likely play a central role now. That means operational decisions (maritime harassment, proxy mobilization, missile strikes) may reflect institutional IRGC strategy as much as any single cleric’s wishes. Several outlets report that the IRGC’s regional commands and hardline cadres have been the most active actors since the escalation began.


Russia and succession dynamics

Observers watching Tehran’s internal politics note that outside patrons — including Russia — may play a diplomatic or logistical role during a succession that looks brittle on paper. Moscow has publicly issued cautious statements of support for Iran’s sovereignty in some briefings, and reports of medical transfers or contacts between Iranian and Russian facilities have circulated in some media — all of which feed speculation about succession options and external influence. (Reporting on this topic remains fluid and often sourced to intelligence or diplomatic leaks; treat claims that involve foreign medical aid or transfers as unconfirmed unless multiple high-quality sources corroborate them.)


Why the “is he alive?” line matters

When a country’s top leadership is opaque, two immediate risks arise:

  1. Decision-making shock: Ad hoc or highly centralized institutions (like the IRGC) can make faster, more aggressive operational choices without the usual checks, increasing the risk of rapid escalation.
  2. Misinformation and strategic signaling: Public claims from rivals (or from leaders like the U.S. president) about a leader’s health can be used as pressure or to induce confusion — but inaccurate public claims also complicate diplomacy and crisis management.

That combination explains why allies, neutral states and markets are watching both statements and concrete signals (ship movements, command briefings, and credible medical confirmations).


What to watch next — concrete signals


Practical takeaways for readers

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