Iran’s IRGC, Parliament, and Military Back New Supreme Leader in Unified Show

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Iran’s most powerful institutions closed ranks behind newly appointed Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei within hours of his formal announcement on Sunday, presenting a coordinated front of institutional loyalty designed to prevent any challenge to the new leadership. The Revolutionary Guards, the armed forces command, parliament’s speaker, and senior security officials all issued public statements of allegiance. The assembly urged citizens and scholars to follow suit and maintain national unity.
Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, succeeded his father Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in a joint US-Israeli strike on Tehran on February 28. The new supreme leader is a conservative cleric with deep ties to Iran’s security establishment despite having held no formal government office throughout his career. He is known for his role in managing access to his father’s inner circle and his close relationships with IRGC commanders.
The swiftness and unanimity of institutional support suggests the appointment was the result of a coordinated process rather than a contested deliberation. Security chief Ali Larijani said Mojtaba was capable of leading the country through the current sensitive conditions. The IRGC declared it stood ready to follow his orders. Parliament’s speaker described supporting the new leader as a religious and national duty. These statements were published by state media and broadcast nationally.
The external situation remained extremely volatile. Israel launched fresh strikes on Iranian territory on Monday, and Iranian forces attacked multiple Gulf states with drones and missiles. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE all reported incidents. The Saudi civil defense confirmed two deaths in Al-Kharj from an incoming projectile. The IRGC warned oil could exceed $200 a barrel if Israeli attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure did not stop.
Mojtaba Khamenei’s ability to command genuine authority beyond the formal endorsements will be tested in the coming months. Iran’s security, economic, and foreign policy challenges are interlinked and severe. The institutional backing he has received provides a stable foundation, but the legitimacy question — whether a population struggling under war and sanctions will accept a leader who inherited power rather than earned it — remains unanswered.

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