Ali Larijani – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 28 Mar 2026 17:29:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Ali Larijani – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Mohammad Bagher Zolqadr | Ascent of the Guardsman https://artifex.news/article70797250-ece/ Sat, 28 Mar 2026 17:29:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70797250-ece/ Read More “Mohammad Bagher Zolqadr | Ascent of the Guardsman” »

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Illustration: Sreejith R. Kumar

When Hamas launched its cross-border attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, killing at least 1,200 people, Mohammad Bagher Zolqadr, then Secretary of Iran’s Expediency Council, called it a “turning point” for Palestinians. “This operation is the starting point of the fall of the Zionist regime,” he said. The chain of events triggered by the attack has now led to a full-blown Israeli-American war on Iran. The conflict has brought the 72-year-old former commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to the centre of Iran’s security decision-making.

After the U.S. and Israel launched the war on February 28, by killing Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, and several other leaders, Ali Larijani, Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, emerged as the face of the Iranian state and defiance. Larijani was already one of the most powerful men in the Islamic Republic. A ‘principalist’ himself who had close ties to Ali Khamenei, Larijani was an inflluential ink between Iran’s military establishment and its political class. On March 17, Larijani was assassinated by an Israeli air strike. Seven days later, President Masoud Pezeshkian appointed Mr. Zolqadr as Larijani’s successor. As Secretary of the Security Council, he is expected to play a significant role in key security decision-making at a time when the state is fighting a war of survival.

Mr. Zolqadr belongs to a generation of Guardsmen associated with the ‘Mansouroun’ network, an Islamist militant organisation which contributed influential figures to the IRGC such as Mohsen Rezaei, Ali Shamkhani and Gholam Ali Rashid.

After the 1979 revolution which overthrew the Shah’s monarchy, Mr. Zolqadr joined one of the revolutionary committees. After Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, backed by Persian Gulf monarchies, invaded Iran in 1980, Mr. Zolqadr, like many of his comrades in Mansouroun, joined the Ramadan Headquarters, which was in charge of the IRGC’s external operations, particularly coordinating with Iraqi Kurdish and Shia groups that were opposed to Saddam’s rule.

The Ramadan Headquarters later became the Quds Force, the external arm of the Guards.

By the time the war ended in 1988, the IRGC had emerged as one of the most powerful institutions of the Islamic Republic. When Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani became President (1989-1997), Mr. Zolqadr headed the IRGC Joint Staff. Rafsanjani was followed by Mohammad Khatami, a reformist President. Mr. Zolqadr was among the IRGC commanders who wrote a letter to Mr. Khatami, asking him to take action against student-led protests in the late 1990s. The protests were crushed.

The General’s threat

In the 2005 Presidential election, Mr. Zolqadr aligned with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. “We carried out a multilayered plan to help Ahmadinejad win,” Mr. Zolqadr later said. Mr. Ahmadinejad appointed Mr. Zolqadr, who was the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC, as a Deputy Interior Minister. He then warned that if the U.S. were to attack Iran, Tehran would “fire tens of thousands of missiles at American targets every day and threaten Israel as America’s backstop”.

In 2010, Mr. Zolqadr was appointed as a senior aide to Iran’s judiciary chief Sadegh Larijani, the brother of Ali Larijani. Since September 2022, he had been serving as the Secretary of the Expediency Council, an administrative assembly appointed by the Supreme Leader. While its constitutional responsibility is to resolve any differences between the Majles and the 12-member Guardian Council, which has a veto over bills passed by the Assembly, the Expediency Council also acts as an advisory body to the Supreme Leader.

In March 2024, Mr. Zolqadr had said that the Guards should exert greater control over the country. In Iran’s complex power structure, the military establishment, the clerical leadership and elected politicians all wield influence. While the IRGC has long been the backbone of Iran’s armed forces, other branches of the state have also played key roles in running the country.

The war, however, appears to have shifted the balance further towards the Guards, who report directly to the Supreme Leader. Larijani was a politician with links to the IRGC, but Mr. Zolqadr is a Guardsman with political reach. With his ascent to the post of the Secretary of the Security Council, the IRGC has further tightened its grip on Iran’s state machinery.



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Strait of Hormuz could be a ‘Strait of defeat’ for U.S.: Larijani https://artifex.news/article70727563-ece/ Tue, 10 Mar 2026 15:23:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70727563-ece/ Read More “Strait of Hormuz could be a ‘Strait of defeat’ for U.S.: Larijani” »

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Iran’s Security Council Secretary Ali Larijani. File | Photo credits: WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters

Iran’s Security Council Secretary Ali Larijani responded to U.S. President Trump’s threat of hitting Iran “20 times harder” if the flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz is stopped, saying the chokepoint could be a “Strait of defeat” for the U.S.

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“Strait of Hormuz will either be a Strait of peace and prosperity for all or will be a Strait of defeat and suffering for warmongers.” Mr. Larijani posted in social media in English, Arabic, Persian, Mandarin, Russian and French.

He had earlier reposted Mr. Trump’s post, saying “the Iranian people do not fear your hollow threats; for those greater than you have failed to erase it… So beware lest you be the ones to vanish.”

Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump threatened Iran with “death, fire and fury”.

“If Iran does anything that stops the flow of Oil within the Strait of Hormuz, they will be hit by the United States of America TWENTY TIMES HARDER than they have been hit thus far. Additionally, we will take out easily destroyable targets that will make it virtually impossible for Iran to ever be built back, as a Nation, again — Death, Fire, and Fury will reign upon them,” Mr. Trump wrote in a post. “But I hope, and pray, that it does not happen! This is a gift from the United States of America to China, and all of those Nations that heavily use the Hormuz Strait,” he added.

About 20–21 million barrels of oil move through the strait every day. Around 20% of global LNG trade also passes through the strait, which connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf Oman that joins the Arabian Sea. Traffic through the strait has been disrupted since the U.S. and Israel started the war on February 28.





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Ali Larijani — the philosopher who seeks vengeance https://artifex.news/article70715797-ece/ Sat, 07 Mar 2026 13:12:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70715797-ece/ Read More “Ali Larijani — the philosopher who seeks vengeance” »

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On March 1, a day after the U.S. and Israel started bombing Iran, U.S. President Donald Trump said in an interview that the Iranian leaders wanted to resume negotiations. “I have agreed to talk,” he said. A response came swiftly from Ali Larijani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council. “We will not negotiate with the Americans,” he wrote in a social media post. “You have set ablaze the hearts of the Iranian people,” he said in an interview, referring to the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader. “We will burn the hearts of our enemies.” In the days that followed, the U.S. and Israel stepped up their bombing campaign across the country. Iran retaliated by launching missiles at American bases in the Persian Gulf, and Israel. “The martyrdom of Imam Khamenei will exact a heavy price from you,” Mr. Larijani said on March 4. On March 6, both President Masoud Pezeshkian and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Iran was not immediately seeking a ceasefire. Mr. Trump then demanded “an unconditional surrender” from Iran’s rulers.

As the war unfolds with regional implications, Mr. Larijani has emerged as a defiant face and voice of the Iranian state. The Security Council he leads is one of the most important institutions of the state, especially during wartime. Founded in 1989 under the revised Constitution, the Council’s main responsibility is to define defence and national security policies. The secretary of the Security Council is roughly the equivalent of the National Security Adviser of India.

West Asia on fire: On the Israeli-American war against Iran

Mr. Larijani came of age during the tremulous years of pre-revolutionary Iran. His father, Grand Ayatollah Hashem Amoli, a renowned Shia cleric, fled to Iraq in the 1930s to avoid persecution under the Shah. Ali Larijani was born in Najaf, the central Iraqi city which hosts the tomb of Imam Ali, in 1958. The Larijanis moved back to Iran in 1960. Ali Larijani studied in a religious seminary in Qom and got a bachelor of science degree in computer science from Aryamehr University of Technology, Tehran. For his Master’s and Ph.D., he switched to Western philosophy.

According to a profile of Mr. Larijani on the University of Tehran website, he has published three books on Immanuel Kant (all in Farsi) — The Mathematical Method in Kant’s Philosophy, Metaphysics and the Exact Sciences in Kant’s Philosophy, and Intuition and Synthetic A Priori Judgments in Kant’s Philosophy. He has also written a book on Descartes’ Discourse on the Method. He has additionally published on Saul Kripke — the American philosopher of language and modal logic — and David Lewis, the analytical metaphysician.

A member of the elite

Like many of his generation, who were inspired by the 1979 revolution, Mr. Larijani joined the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the paramilitary organisation founded by Ayatollah Khomeini soon after the revolution. The IRGC grew into one of the most formidable institutions of the Islamic Republic during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. Many of the veterans of the war emerged as future leaders of the country. During the administration of President Hashemi Rafsanjani (1989-97), Mr. Larijani was appointed as Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance. In 1994, he became the director general of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), an arm of the Office of the Supreme Leader. This role brought him closer to the leader (rahbar), Ayatollah Khamenei. By the turn of the century, Mr. Larijani had become one of the key figures of the elite of the Islamic Republic, with close ties with the country’s conservative establishment.

Mahomud Ahmadinejad, the conservative who became President in 2005, appointed Mr. Larijani as the head of the Security Council and chief nuclear negotiator. As a nuclear negotiator, he had sent mixed signals. He once likened European incentives to abandon Iran’s nuclear programme to “exchanging a pearl for a candy bar”. But the same Mr. Larijani quit the Security Council in 2007 amid disagreements with Mr. Ahmadinejad, whose hardline policies had deepened Iran’s isolation in the world. It was a rare public rupture in the conservative camp.

After falling out with Mr. Ahmadinejad, Mr. Larijani moved to parliamentary politics. In 2008, he got elected to the Majles and became Speaker, a position he would hold till 2020. So when Hassan Rouhani pursued nuclear talks with the U.S. and signed a deal in 2015 with world powers, Mr. Larijani, as speaker, provided the much-needed legislative support for Mr. Rouhani. When the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the nuclear deal, was put to debate in the Majles, Mr. Larijani gave just 20 minutes to discuss it for Parliament’s 290 members, before pushing it through.

In domestic politics, he has been associated with the principalist (hardline) camp. He was supported by the Islamic Society of Engineers, a principalist political organisation. In 2005, when he stood for the presidential elections for the first time, his bid was supported by the Council for Coordination of the Forces of the Revolution, an umbrella group of conservative organisations. He ranked sixth, winning only 5.94% of votes, but became the Security Council Secretary. In 2021 and 2024, he registered for the presidential election, but his nomination was rejected by the powerful Guardian Council. But Masoud Pezeshkian, who won the 2024 presidential election, brought Mr. Larijani back as the Security Council chief.

Security czar

For years, Iran had built a sprawling network of allies in West Asia, both as a deterrent and as an offensive strategy. Iranians called it the “forward defence” doctrine. The champion of forward defence was Qassem Soleimani, the Quds Force general who was assassinated by the U.S. in January 2020. When General Soleimani was killed, Mr. Larijani warned that the killing would alter the political balance of the region and that the U.S. “will be held accountable” for this “brutal act”.

“The response to Haj Qassem Soleimani’s blood should be measures to make American forces flee from the region,” he said, according to Tehran Times. But the Iranian response was a token strike at a U.S. military base in Iraq. U.S. troops continued to stay in the region.

In April 2025, amid rising tensions between Israel and Iran, Mr. Larijani said if attacked, Iran would have “no choice” but to get nuclear weapons. “We are not moving towards nuclear weapons, but if you do something wrong in the Iranian nuclear issue, you will force Iran to move towards that because it has to defend itself,” he said. In two months, Israel started bombing Iran, triggering the 12-day war. The U.S. joined Israel on June 22 in bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities. In the months that followed the June war, Mr. Larijani, as a confidant of the Supreme Leader, emerged as the go-to man in the system. While President Pezeshkian’s role was limited to running the day-to-day matters of the country, Mr. Larijani became the security czar.

He endorsed the nuclear talks that opened in January following protests in Iran. The U.S. and Iran held three rounds of talks. On February 27, Oman’s Foreign Minister, who was mediating the talks, said a deal was within reach. Within hours the U.S. and Israel launched the war, killing Khamenei and several other top leaders. Amid war and a political vacuum, a furious Iran responded with its drones and ballistic missiles. “The brave soldiers and the great nation of Iran will deliver an unforgettable lesson to the hellish international oppressors,” Mr. Larijani said in the middle of the war. Eight days into the war, Iran has been hit hard by the U.S. and Israel. Tehran has also retaliated by escalating its attacks. Donald Trump has demanded an unconditional surrender. But the IRGC, the revolutionary organisation where Mr. Larijani cut his teeth, has warned of a “prolonged war”.

Published – March 07, 2026 06:34 pm IST



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