Iran’s interim leadership has issued a chilling warning to America and Israel. Ayatollah Alireza Arafi says the time for talking is done.
Arafi was appointed to Iran’s temporary Leadership Council on March 1. The 67-year-old hardliner stepped up after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in US-Israeli strikes on Tehran. Now he’s promising revenge.
“The United States has chosen to cross the red line,” Arafi declared in a fiery address circulating online. “They have signed their own death warrant.”
He dismissed American nuclear threats as empty scare tactics. “They brandish the nuclear specter like a scarecrow, blinded by their arrogance,” he said. “They have no idea of the true extent of our power.”
Israel got the same treatment. Arafi warned its “fate is sealed” and promised every Israeli strike would “come back to haunt them.” He added: “They will remain in our sights, exposed, vulnerable, hunted.”
The speech ended with a defiant rallying cry: “Iran does not bend. Iran wins. Always.”
Arafi isn’t technically the new Supreme Leader. He’s one of three officials sharing power until the Assembly of Experts picks a permanent replacement. The council also includes President Masoud Pezeshkian and Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i.
But that hasn’t stopped viral posts calling him the “new Supreme Leader.” Some accounts even shared edited or amplified versions of his statement for maximum drama. Iranian state media hasn’t fully verified the exact wording yet.
Arafi is a Khamenei loyalist with serious hardline credentials. He’s on the Guardian Council, leads Iran’s seminaries, and has previously called for Israel’s destruction. Analysts reckon he’s a top contender for the permanent top job.
The appointment comes as US and Israeli jets keep hammering Iranian military and nuclear sites. Reports suggest casualties are mounting on all sides. Nobody expects this war to end soon.
Iran’s response so far includes missile barrages and activating proxy forces across the region. The regime is betting on asymmetric warfare to wear down its enemies despite taking heavy losses.
Global markets are spooked. Alliances are being tested. And with Iran’s leadership in flux, the situation could get even messier.