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New Ayatollah

What to Know About New Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei

by Jazz Hostetler
March 9, 2026
  • Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, was named Iran’s third Supreme Leader on March 8, 2026, just ten days after U.S.-Israeli strikes killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
  • The Assembly of Experts announced his selection in a “decisive vote,” though the process was marked by significant IRGC pressure and internal dissent among clerical members.
  • Mojtaba holds only the mid-level clerical rank of hojjatoleslam — not ayatollah — a legitimacy issue his father resolved by having the law changed; a similar workaround is expected.
  • President Trump openly called the selection “unacceptable,” warned Mojtaba would “not last long” without U.S. approval, and characterized him as a “lightweight.”
  • Mojtaba has deep ties to the IRGC dating back to his service in the Iran-Iraq War, and is widely believed to have personally supervised the violent crackdown on Green Movement protesters in 2009.
  • A year-long Bloomberg investigation revealed Mojtaba controls a global real estate and financial empire worth hundreds of millions of dollars, structured through shell companies and intermediaries across London, Dubai, and Europe.
  • Analysts expect Mojtaba to be more hardline than his father, more reliant on the IRGC, and unlikely to pursue meaningful compromise with the West in the near term.

Iran has a new Supreme Leader, and by virtually every expert assessment, he is more dangerous, more ideologically extreme, and more deeply entangled with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps than the father he just replaced. Mojtaba Khamenei, named to the position in the early hours of March 8, 2026, takes power at the most chaotic and vulnerable moment in the Islamic Republic’s 47-year history — and that context matters enormously for what comes next.

His father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed on February 28 during the opening salvo of joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran. The attack also killed several members of the Khamenei family, including Mojtaba’s wife, Zahra Haddad Adel, and his mother. Mojtaba himself was reportedly wounded in a separate Israeli operation and was not present at his father’s compound when the fatal strike landed. That survival now carries symbolic weight inside the Islamic Republic — echoing his father’s own near-death experience in 1981, which elevated Ali Khamenei’s status as a “living martyr” and helped propel him into the presidency and eventually into the supreme leadership itself.

The announcement from Iran’s 88-member Assembly of Experts was brief and pointed: “By a decisive vote, the Assembly of Experts appointed Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Hosseini Khamenei as the third Leader of the sacred system of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

The word “decisive” is doing considerable work in that sentence. Behind the scenes, the process was anything but unified. According to Iran International, IRGC commanders applied relentless pressure on Assembly members through in-person meetings and phone calls in the days leading up to the vote. Eight members threatened to boycott a second electoral session over what they described as “heavy pressure” from the IRGC. Several clerics raised objections about Mojtaba’s limited religious credentials and the optics of the Islamic Republic essentially becoming a dynasty.

Those concerns are legitimate on their face. Mojtaba holds the clerical rank of hojjatoleslam, a mid-level designation, rather than the higher rank of ayatollah. His father faced the same problem when he was elevated to Supreme Leader in 1989, and the elder Khamenei had the law changed to make himself an ayatollah essentially overnight — a source of tension that never quite went away during his brutal reign of nearly 37 years. A similar legal accommodation is now expected for the son. The regime’s willingness to bend its own rules twice in order to keep the Khamenei name on the top seat should tell the world something about how power actually works in Tehran.

President Trump did not hold back. In an interview with ABC News, he made clear that Washington views the selection as unacceptable: “He’s going to have to get approval from us. If he doesn’t get approval from us, he’s not going to last long. We want to make sure that we don’t have to go back every 10 years, when you don’t have a president like me that’s not going to do it.”

Earlier in the week, Trump had called Mojtaba a “lightweight” and declared his candidacy a waste of time, drawing a parallel to his administration’s handling of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. In an almost darkly comic twist, Trump’s public denunciations may have actually strengthened Mojtaba’s case within the Assembly. One cleric cited the fact that “even the Great Satan has mentioned his name” as a qualification — specifically because a candidate hated by the enemy fits the ideological criteria set by the late Khamenei himself.

Who, exactly, is Mojtaba Khamenei? Born in Mashhad on September 8, 1969, he was nine years old when his father emerged as a leading figure in the Iranian Revolution. He received his early education in Sardasht and Mahabad before graduating high school in Tehran. He later joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in 1987 and served in the Iran-Iraq War, fighting in the Habib Battalion.



That military service turned out to be more than an obligation — it became a networking operation. The Habib Battalion enabled Mojtaba to forge relationships with men who would move on to become leading members of the Iranian security services, including Hossein Taeb, the future head of the IRGC’s Intelligence Organization. Those relationships, cultivated over decades, form the foundation of his current power base.

After the war, Mojtaba pursued clerical studies in Tehran and later at the Qom Seminary. He studied under the late Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, who called for killing Iranian youths who promoted “Western immorality.” This is not a footnote — it is a window into the theological framework Mojtaba absorbed during his formative years. His mentor was not a moderate figure seeking dialogue. He was among the most ideologically extreme voices in the clerical establishment, and Mojtaba sat at his feet.

His real influence, however, was never primarily theological. U.S. diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks began referring to the younger Khamenei as “the power behind the robes.” One cable alleged that Mojtaba actually tapped his own father’s phone, served as his “principal gatekeeper,” and had been quietly building his own power base within the country for years.

A 2008 cable described him as “a capable and forceful leader and manager” while also noting his lack of theological qualifications and relative youth. Another assessed that he was seen by regime insiders as a “plausible candidate for shared leadership” upon his father’s eventual death, based on his “skills, wealth, and unmatched alliances.”

The wealth is worth examining on its own terms. A year-long investigation by Bloomberg, citing assessments from people familiar with the matter, reported in January 2026 that Khamenei is linked to an offshore financial network used to hold and move assets outside Iran. The reported holdings include high-value real estate in London and Dubai, as well as interests connected to shipping, banking relationships, and hospitality assets in Europe. Among the properties: two luxury apartments in London overlooking the Israeli Embassy, and 11 mansions in Hampstead, North London, held through a front man and a shell company registered in the Isle of Man.

The funds for the London purchases reportedly came from Iran’s oil program. The total portfolio has been estimated at hundreds of millions of pounds. None of these assets are held in Mojtaba’s name directly — they are layered through intermediaries and corporate structures across multiple jurisdictions.

This is a man preparing to lead a theocratic government that publicly preaches anti-Western austerity while privately accumulating real estate on Billionaire’s Row. The contradiction is not incidental. It reflects a pattern of behavior — the use of ideological posturing as cover for the accumulation of power and wealth — that has defined the Khamenei family’s relationship with the Islamic Republic for decades.

On the domestic political front, Mojtaba’s record is one of manipulation and violence. He also allegedly engineered the 2005 election that installed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president. In the 2009 election, protesters flooded the streets to insist Ahmadinejad didn’t win again, and Mojtaba reportedly personally supervised how the IRGC crushed these demonstrations. The Green Movement of 2009 was one of the largest popular uprisings in the history of the Islamic Republic, and Mojtaba Khamenei’s name has been linked for over a decade to its violent suppression. That is his domestic governing philosophy in practice.

The U.S. sanctioned him in 2019 under Executive Order 13867. The Treasury Department found that he had been “representing the supreme leader in an official capacity despite never being elected or appointed to a government position aside from work in the office of his father.” It also cited his work to “advance his father’s destabilizing regional ambitions and oppressive domestic objectives.”

He has never held a formal government office. He has never run for election. He has never delivered a major public speech. He has not given public lectures, Friday sermons, or political addresses — to the point that many Iranians have not heard his voice, despite knowing for years that he was a star rising within the theocratic establishment. The man who now commands the IRGC and holds supreme authority over 90 million people is, to most of his own countrymen, a voice they have never heard.

That opacity is itself a kind of power. For decades Mojtaba operated in the shadows, cultivating alliances, controlling access to his father, and building a financial empire that Western governments are still mapping. Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem described Khamenei as his “father’s gatekeeper.” Now he is no longer the gatekeeper. He is the gate. And based on everything known about his ideology, his alliances, and his record, the gate is not opening anytime soon toward the West.

What does this mean geopolitically? The Daily Telegraph predicted that he would view the United States as an “implacable enemy” and would be likely to escalate the conflict and unlikely to make any compromises. Analysts widely expect him to lean more heavily on the IRGC than his father did — and his father already leaned heavily on them. The IRGC, after all, is the organization that pushed through his election against clerical objections. That is not a relationship of equals. It is an arrangement, and arrangements have terms.

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Iran is also navigating this transition under active bombardment. U.S. and Israeli strikes have killed multiple senior Iranian military and security figures, including Ali Shamkhani, IRGC commander Mohammad Pakpour, and Defense Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh. The institutional infrastructure of the Iranian state has been badly disrupted. Mojtaba Khamenei ascends to supreme leadership not from a position of strength but from the rubble of an ongoing war — inheriting a regime that is militarily degraded, financially squeezed, and facing the most serious threat to its survival since its founding.

Whether that pressure will be enough to force a change in course is the central question facing the Trump administration now. Trump has made clear he views Mojtaba as neither legitimate nor permanent. The question is whether Washington follows words with action, and what form that action takes. One scenario involves continued military pressure combined with diplomatic openings to elements within Iran seeking a different path. Another involves treating Mojtaba’s selection as a final rejection of negotiations and intensifying operations accordingly. The language from both sides — “decisive vote” from the Assembly, “not going to last long” from Trump — does not suggest a warm diplomatic opening is imminent.

For Americans trying to understand what just happened, here is the short version: Iran just named, under military and political duress, a man with no formal democratic mandate, limited religious credentials, a hidden financial empire, a documented history of brutally suppressing his own people, and a deep ideological commitment to opposing the United States and Israel. He was chosen largely because the most powerful paramilitary force in Iran wanted him chosen. And the world now has to figure out what to do about it.

The answer to that question will shape the Middle East for a generation.

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