Iran on Tuesday confirmed the death of Ali Larijani, secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, saying he was killed in an Israeli air strike alongside his son and bodyguards, in a major blow to one of the Islamic republic’s most influential power brokers.
Israeli forces also said they had killed Basij paramilitary commander Gholamreza Soleimani and carried out fresh strikes on more than 10 Basij positions across Tehran, targeting a force long accused by rights groups of helping suppress anti-government protests.
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Larijani’s killing removes a veteran insider who had played an increasingly visible role during the current war, emerging as a key figure in Iran’s security decision-making and a prominent public face of the regime.
A former Revolutionary Guards member, ex-parliament speaker, and longtime nuclear negotiator, Larijani was widely seen as a pragmatic conservative trusted by the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and central to the state’s efforts to navigate both confrontation and diplomacy.
Reappointed in June 2025 to head the Supreme National Security Council, Larijani oversaw defense strategy and nuclear policy and later took on a more prominent diplomatic role in outreach to Gulf states. His influence grew further after Israeli and US strikes killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei at the start of the war. He was also tied to the regime’s internal repression, having been sanctioned by Washington in January over the crackdown on anti-government protests in which rights groups say thousands were killed.
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