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After Larijani’s death, Iran’s hardline parliament speaker appears to be leading war effort

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20.03.2026

PARIS, France (AFP) — Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, Iran’s parliament speaker and a veteran of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, has emerged as the highest-profile political figure in the Islamic Republic after the killing of its leaders.

A pillar of the Iranian establishment for some three decades and one of the Islamic Republic’s most prominent non-clerical figures, Qalibaf, 64, now appears to be playing a key role spearheading the war effort.

Whereas the son and successor of slain supreme leader Ali Khamenei, Mojtaba Khamenei, has not appeared in public and has issued just three written statements, Qalibaf has been unleashing regular posts on X and giving multiple interviews.

“We are in an unequal war, with an asymmetrical set-up, we must do something and use equipment with our own culture, design and creativity,” he told Iranian television on Wednesday.

In a post on X, he added that after attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure, “an eye-for-an-eye sum is in effect, and a new level of confrontation has begun.”

However, possibly aware of the threat to his own security, he did not, unlike the late Larijani, appear in public at pro-government rallies last week marking Al-Quds Day.

Larijani was killed in an Israeli air strike on Monday, which followed the killing of Khamenei at the start of the war on February 28.

Qalibaf’s varied experience, which spans military and civilian life, has seen him work as commander of the IRGC’s aerospace corps, Tehran police chief, Tehran mayor and now speaker of parliament.

Known to be fiercely ambitious, he has stood for the Iranian........

© The Times of Israel