Israel confirmed and Iran has now acknowledged that Ali Larijani, Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, was killed in overnight strikes. Gholamreza Soleimani, commander of the Basij paramilitary force, was also killed. These are the most senior Iranian figures eliminated since the war began on 28 February.
Larijani was not merely a bureaucrat. He was a former IRGC brigadier general, former speaker of parliament, former nuclear negotiator, and had served as head of state broadcasting. He was reappointed to lead national security in August 2025 and was considered one of the few Iranian figures capable of building consensus across factions while maintaining channels to the West. American officials had negotiated with him in the past. His loss removes a pragmatist from the inner circle at a moment when pragmatism is in short supply.
Netanyahu framed the killings in characteristically personal terms, saying Israel had "erased two names on the punch card" with "many more to follow." He called on Iranians to rise against their government, claiming the strikes were creating conditions for regime change. This rhetoric contradicts what Israeli officials are telling American counterparts in private. A State Department cable reviewed by the Washington Post reveals Israeli officials assessed that if Iranians took to the streets, they would be "slaughtered" by the IRGC, which maintains the "upper hand." Israeli officials conceded the Islamic Republic is "not cracking" and is prepared to "fight to the end." This gap between public messaging and private assessment suggests the decapitation strategy lacks a coherent theory of victory.
The killing of Soleimani — the Basij commander, not to be confused with Qassem Soleimani killed in 2020 — is tactically significant. Israel struck more than ten Basij posts across Tehran on Tuesday. The Basij is the regime's primary tool for suppressing internal dissent. Degrading its command structure may be intended to weaken the regime's ability to control unrest, but the immediate effect is to remove any restraining influence while hardening what remains. Saeed Jalili, Larijani's deputy and a noted hardliner, is the likely successor.