Kremlin Ghost? Iran’s Mystery Ayatollah Vanishes
Is he alive, recovering… or already a political ghost?
The internet rumor mill is spinning at full speed after explosive reports suggested that Mojtaba Khamenei, the powerful and controversial son of Iran’s late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, may have secretly fled Tehran — possibly to Moscow — after suffering serious injuries during a recent airstrike.
According to claims published by the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Jarida, the 56-year-old cleric was quietly evacuated from Iran aboard a military aircraft following a February 28 air raid that struck near the complex housing the Supreme Leader’s residence and offices in Tehran. Sources cited by the paper say Khamenei was badly injured on the left side of his body when falling debris crashed around him during the bombardment.
If true, the escape sounds like something straight out of a geopolitical thriller.
The report claims Russian President Vladimir Putin personally offered medical assistance to Iran’s leadership. Khamenei was allegedly flown to Moscow under extreme secrecy and rushed into surgery by specialist doctors. Since then, insiders claim he has been recovering in a secure hospital facility located inside one of Russia’s heavily guarded presidential compounds.
But here’s where things get murky.
Some pro-reform voices inside Iran say a brief speech attributed to Khamenei and aired on Iranian media may not have been recorded by him at all. Instead, they speculate the message may have been assembled or delivered by Ali Larijani, the influential secretary of Iran’s Security Council.
Translation: the man believed to be Iran’s next Supreme Leader may not have appeared publicly at all.
That possibility has only fueled speculation across the Middle East and social media: Is Mojtaba Khamenei actually recovering in Moscow — or is Tehran carefully managing the narrative?
Adding fuel to the intrigue, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted Israel may know more than it’s saying. When asked about Khamenei’s condition this week, Netanyahu delivered a line worthy of a spy movie:
“I will not give him life insurance.”
No independent confirmation has surfaced regarding Khamenei’s location or medical status. Iranian officials have stayed largely silent, while regional intelligence chatter continues to swirl.
For now, the question hanging over Tehran — and possibly Moscow — remains deliciously mysterious:
Is Iran’s would-be Supreme Leader healing in the Kremlin’s shadow… or hiding in plain sight?