The assassination of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and over forty senior officials in coordinated United States-Israeli military strikes on February 28, 2026, has precipitated the most severe leadership crisis in the Islamic Republic since its founding in 1979. This article provides a comprehensive scholarly analysis of the power vacuum that has emerged, examining the constitutional mechanisms for succession, the formation of the Interim Leadership Council, and the competing scenarios for future governance. Drawing upon established theoretical frameworks from political science—including power transition theory, decapitation strategy literature, and regime change studies—this analysis situates the Iranian crisis within broader patterns of state transformation. The study evaluates three primary succession scenarios: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps military consolidation, constitutional succession through the Assembly of Experts, and an opposition-led democratic transition. Furthermore, the article assesses the dual nature of the current instability, examining both the significant risks of regional conflagration and the potential opportunities for Middle Eastern peace and Iranian democratization. Historical precedents from the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the 2003 Iraq invasion, and the 2011 Libya intervention are analyzed to contextualize potential transition pathways. The findings suggest that while the decapitation strategy has created unprecedented regime vulnerability, the path forward remains contingent upon the interplay between institutional resilience, civil society mobilization, and international engagement.
Laszlo Pokorny (Mon,) studied this question.