Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei’s Son Emerges as Leading Choice to Be His Successor
If
Mojtaba Khamenei is chosen by Iran’s senior clerics, it may signal a victory
for hard-liners, an analyst said.
Farnaz
Fassihi
By Farnaz
Fassihi
Farnaz
Fassihi has lived and worked in Iran, has covered the country for three decades
and was a war correspondent in the Middle East for 15 years.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/03/world/middleeast/iran-mojtaba-khamenei-successor.html
March 3,
2026
The
senior clerics responsible for selecting Iran’s next supreme leader met on
Tuesday to deliberate, and the son of the slain former leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, emerged as the clear front-runner, according to three Iranian
officials familiar with the deliberations.
The
officials said that the clerics were considering announcing that the son,
Mojtaba Khamenei, would be his father’s successor as early as Wednesday morning
but that some had expressed reservations, fearing that it could expose him as a
target for the United States and Israel. They spoke on the condition of
anonymity to discuss sensitive internal deliberations.
The
clerics, known as the Assembly of Experts, held two virtual meetings one in the
morning and one in the evening, according to the officials. Israel struck a
building in Qum, one of Shia Islam’s main seats of power, where the assembly
was scheduled to meet and elect the new supreme leader, but the building was
empty, according to the Fars News agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps.
Vali
Nasr, an expert of Iran and Shia Islam at Johns Hopkins University, said that
Mr. Khamenei would be a surprising choice — and a potentially telling one.
“He was
slated to become the successor for a long time,” Mr. Nasr said, “but for the
past two years, it seemed to have dropped off from the radar. If he is elected,
it suggests it is a much more hard-line Revolutionary Guard side of the regime
that is now in charge.”
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Mojtaba
Khamenei, 56, is an influential if reclusive figure who has operated in the
shadows of the empire of his father, who was killed on Saturday in the
U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Mr.
Khamenei is known for having close ties to the Revolutionary Guards. The
Guards, according to the three officials, pushed for his appointment, arguing
that he had the qualifications needed to steer Iran in this time of crisis.
“Mojtaba
is the wisest pick right now because he is intimately familiar with running and
coordinating security and military apparatuses,” said Mehdi Rahmati, an analyst
in Tehran. “He was in charge of this already.”
Mr.
Rahmati said that, nevertheless, not everyone will be pleased.
“A
portion of the public will react negatively and forcefully to this decision,
and it will have a backlash,” he predicted.
Supporters
of the government would see him as a continuation of a ruler whom they view as
martyred and will back him swiftly, Mr. Rahmati said. But government opponents,
too, will see him as a continuation of the regime, which in recent months has
killed at least 7,000, a number that may well grow, rights groups say.
Other
candidates who have emerged as finalists are Alireza Arafi, a cleric and jurist
who is part of the three-person transition council of leadership named after
Ayatollah Khamenei was killed, and Seyed Hassan Khomeini, grandson of the
Islamic revolution’s founding father, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Both Mr.
Arafi and Mr. Khomeini are viewed as moderates, with the latter being close to
the sidelined reformist political faction in Iran.
Abdolreza
Davari, a politician close to Mojtaba Khamenei, said in public statements and
in interviews with The New York Times that if Mr. Khamenei did succeed his
father, he could emerge as a figure in the style of the Saudi Arabian leader
Mohammed bin Salman.
“He is
extremely progressive and will move to sideline the hard-liners,” Mr. Davari
said in a text message before the war. “See his appointment as a shedding of
skin.”
Earlier
on Tuesday, at a news conference in Washington, President Trump said that many
of the people his government had viewed as potential leaders of Iran had been
killed since Saturday. “Pretty soon we’re not going to know anybody,” he said.
Asked
about a worst-case scenario in Iran, he said: “I guess the worst case would be
we do this and somebody takes over who’s as bad as the previous person. Right,
that could happen. We don’t want that to happen.”
The
Assembly of Experts consists of 88 senior Shiite clerics who are picked in
public elections and under Iran’s Constitution are responsible for appointing,
supervising and discharging the supreme leader. This is the second supreme
leader the assembly will pick in the Islamic republic’s 47-year history.
In 1989,
the assembly picked Ayatollah Khamenei, handing him the reins of a newly
created theocracy. For more than four decades he ruled with absolute power and
little flexibility to change.
Mojtaba
Khamenei’s wife, Zahra Adel; his mother, Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh, and a
son were killed alongside his father in strikes on Saturday, the Iranian
government said.
Farnaz
Fassihi is the United Nations bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
the organization. She also covers Iran and has written about conflict in the
Middle East for 15 years.


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