Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei remains completely absent from public view while his government insists he’s in “perfect health,” raising serious questions about who’s actually running a nation at war with the United States and Israel.
Unprecedented Leadership Crisis During Wartime
Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, assumed Iran’s highest political and religious authority following the assassination of his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Tehran. The same attack that killed the elder Khamenei after 37 years of authoritarian rule also severely wounded his son. What should have been a decisive succession during wartime has instead devolved into a bizarre spectacle that undermines the regime’s credibility. The new Supreme Leader’s complete absence from public view, combined with the regime’s insistence on his good health, reveals a government more concerned with propaganda than transparency during a critical moment for regional stability.
We'll never get over the carboard cutout of new Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei that had to be brought out because he was too busy being bombed. pic.twitter.com/cBmfeRbqXS
— Conservative Brief (@ConservBrief) March 10, 2026
Cardboard Cutout Substitutes for Injured Leader
The Iranian regime reached new levels of absurdity when it displayed a cardboard cutout of Mojtaba at his own inauguration ceremony in mid-March. This unprecedented move, which would be laughable if the stakes weren’t so high, demonstrates the regime’s desperation to maintain appearances while their Supreme Leader remains hospitalized. On March 13, state television broadcast what they claimed was Mojtaba’s first public message, but a news anchor read the statement rather than the Supreme Leader delivering it himself. The message threatened to continue the war and open “other fronts” against adversaries, yet the man supposedly issuing these threats couldn’t appear on camera to deliver them personally.
Conflicting Reports Paint Dire Picture
While government officials claim Mojtaba is “safe and sound,” multiple credible sources tell a drastically different story. Tehran-based sources report catastrophic injuries, with one stating “one or two of his legs have been cut off” and that “his liver or stomach has also ruptured.” Reports indicate he may be in a coma at Sina University Hospital, where a large section remains sealed off and heavily guarded. Iran’s own ambassador to Cyprus confirmed injuries to “legs, arms and hands,” directly contradicting the “perfect health” narrative. Most tellingly, senior Iranian military commanders reportedly have received no direct orders from their supposed Supreme Leader, creating a dangerous command vacuum during active combat operations.
Strategic Implications for Regional Security
President Trump assessed that Mojtaba is “damaged” but “probably alive in some form,” while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth characterized him as “wounded and likely disfigured.” The uncertainty surrounding Iran’s actual leadership during wartime creates risks not just for the Middle East but for global energy markets and international stability. An Iranian official anonymously admitted, “No one knows anything about Mojtaba, whether he is alive or dead or how badly injured. He has no control over the war because he is not here.” This admission from within the regime exposes the fundamental problem: a theocratic dictatorship at war cannot function when its Supreme Leader is incapacitated and the government prioritizes propaganda over operational reality.
Government Credibility Collapses
The Iranian regime’s contradictory statements have destroyed what little credibility it maintained. State media referred to Mojtaba as “janbaz,” meaning disabled war veteran, while simultaneously claiming he’s in perfect health. These mutually exclusive claims reveal a government that cannot keep its own propaganda straight. Yousef Pezeshkian, son of Iran’s president, claimed Mojtaba was “safe and in a secure location,” yet the Supreme Leader has missed funerals of senior military commanders killed in the initial strikes and produced no video messages, audio recordings, or recent photographs. Among younger Iranians, Mojtaba’s absence has become the subject of social media mockery, undermining the regime’s attempts to project strength and continuity during a leadership transition that appears increasingly illegitimate.
Sources:
Reports: Iran’s new Supreme leader is in a coma after Israeli airstrike
Missing in action: What we know about Mojtaba Khamenei’s condition
