The assassination of Iran’s ayatollah – and fears for a wider conflict – podcast

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He survived imprisonment, assassination attempts, decades of protests and exerted a brutal iron grip on Iran’s 90 million people. Now, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is dead. He was killed by US and Israeli air strikes that levelled the compound where he and some of the most senior regime leaders were sheltering.

As news of the ayatollah’s death emerged, there was public mourning on the streets of Iran. There were also ecstatic celebrations, inside Iran and around the world, explains Patrick Wintour. Iran has launched retaliatory strikes and vows vengeance, and it is still unclear whether his assassination will bring about the regime change that Donald Trump so clearly desires. It is also unclear what will happen next for Iran, where the air strikes continue and the death toll is spiralling.

With the prospect of a new regional war across the Middle East on a knife-edge, Annie Kelly hears that a new era has arrived. One that is controlled by the military might and whims of one man who demands – and expects – complete capitulation from his adversaries – no matter the cost.

Iraqis mourn Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's death after US-Israeli strikesepa12787872 Iraqi Shiite mourners carry portraits of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a symbolic funeral procession in the Sadr City district of Baghdad, Iraq, 01 March 2026. Following the official confirmation of Khamenei's death in a joint US-Israeli airstrike on 28 February, the Iraqi government declared a three-day period of national mourning.  EPA/CEERWAN AZIZ
Photograph: Ceerwan Aziz/EPA
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