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Mojtaba Khamenei, the Iranian Supreme Leader, still invisible since his appointment

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The mystery persists since the strikes on February 28 at the family residence of the new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei. As of Friday, April 24, he has not appeared in public. The New York Times has provided new revelations in the past few hours.

This text is part of the transcription of the above report. Click on the video to watch it in full.


On paper, he is the most powerful man in Iran. But in reality, the Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, remains the most invisible man since his appointment in early March. If no one has seen or heard him, it is because he is severely injured according to the New York Times, which claims to have confirmed rumors about his health. Mojtaba Khamenei was injured in the strike that killed his father in Tehran (Iran) on the first day of the war. “He suffers from serious leg injuries. He has undergone several operations. There is a risk of amputation. His face and lips have been severely burned, making his speech difficult. But all my sources tell me that his mental faculties are intact,” reports Farnaz Fassihi, a journalist at New York Times.

So, does the Supreme Leader really have the capacity to govern and lead the war? According to the New York Times, he is not only weakened but out of fear of being eliminated in turn, he lives in hiding without access to the phone or the internet. He participates in decisions through messengers, by car, or motorcycle. It is nothing like the absolute power his father wielded. A guide relegated to a symbolic role.

Those who actually govern Iran today are the powerful generals of the Revolutionary Guards. “We are no longer in the Islamic Republic of the mullahs. There are no turbans. They are bureaucrats, military personnel, that is, the Revolutionary Guards. The problem is that this change has indeed led to radicalization, a form of military-Islamic junta,” analyzes David Rigoulet-Roze, a researcher at the French Institute for Strategic Analysis.

A marginalized Supreme Leader, and power in the hands of hardliners. Iran is far from the hopes of openness expressed by the majority of the population before the war launched by the United States and Israel.