Profile
Ali Khamenei
Supreme Leader of Iran
Head of State; Commander-in-Chief; Ideological Authority
Islamic Republic of Iran; Office of the Supreme Leader
1939–2026
Died aged 86
Status:
Summary
Iran’s Supreme Leader from 1989 until his death in 2026. Central authority in the Islamic Republic’s political, military, security, and ideological system. His tenure spanned the Twelve-Day War with Israel (June 2025), the 2025-26 protest wave, and the US-Israel strikes of February 2026, in which he was killed.
Legacy
Architect of the Islamic Republic’s second phase: a militarised, security-driven, regionally assertive state. His death in the February 2026 strikes opened a succession crisis and left the regime’s future contested.
Resume & Resources
Personal Timeline
  • 1939-07-17 — Born
    Born in Mashhad, Iran.
  • 1981 — President of Iran
    Served as President until 1989.
  • 1989-06-04 — Supreme Leader
    Elevated to Supreme Leader after Khomeini's death.
  • 2022 — Mahsa Amini protests
    Oversaw the state's response to the Woman, Life, Freedom uprising.
  • 2025-06 — Twelve-Day War
    Israel and the US waged a twelve-day air war on Iran; ceasefire followed.
  • 2025-12 — Protest wave
    Mass protests over economic collapse and repression spread across Iran.
  • 2026-02-28 — Killed
    Killed in US-Israeli strikes on the leadership compound in Tehran.
Relational Overview
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Publications
Citations
Biographic content

1. Origins & Formation

Born in Mashhad into a clerical family, Khamenei was shaped by revolutionary activism under the Shah. His imprisonment and exile before 1979 strengthened a worldview built on resistance, religious legitimacy, and distrust of foreign influence.

2. Rise to Influence

After the 1979 Revolution, Khamenei held roles within the IRGC leadership, Friday prayer establishment, and ultimately became President (1981-1989). Following the death of Ayatollah Khomeini, he was elevated to Supreme Leader despite not being a marja. He consolidated his authority by aligning with the IRGC and restructuring state institutions around the Leader’s Office.

3. Worldview & Inner Logic

Fear driver: Foreign penetration, regime collapse, cultural deviation. Ego driver: Guardian of revolutionary purity and national sovereignty. Belief driver: Absolute necessity of velayat-e faqih as political-theological anchor. Identity driver: Custodian of the revolutionary state and its transnational networks.

4. Exercise of Power

Khamenei controlled key appointments in the judiciary, military, media, and economic foundations. He oversaw strategic decisions through the Supreme National Security Council and relied heavily on IRGC structures for internal and regional projection.

5. Conflicts & Opponents

He navigated power struggles with reformist presidents, technocratic elites, clergy in Qom, and protest movements (1999, 2009, 2019, 2022, 2025-26). The presidency and the IRGC’s growing influence complicated the balance of power.

6. Achievements & Failures

Achievements: consolidation of the Supreme Leader’s institution; expansion of Iran’s regional axis through IRGC and proxy networks; survival of sanctions, wars, and protests. Failures: economic stagnation, generational alienation, deepening reliance on coercion.

7. Final Phase & Death

In June 2025, Israel and the US waged a twelve-day air war on Iran’s nuclear and missile infrastructure; Khamenei oversaw the response and the fragile ceasefire that followed. Late 2025 and early 2026 saw mass protests over economic collapse and repression. On 28 February 2026, US and Israeli strikes hit the leadership compound in Tehran; Khamenei was killed, along with senior security figures. His death marked the end of his 37-year rule and triggered a high-stakes succession process.