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Supported by EvidenceForeign Policy

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in US-Israeli strikes

Published March 2, 2026Updated March 2, 2026

Summary

Multiple major news organizations reported in March 2026 that Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in coordinated US-Israeli military strikes. Reports indicate the CIA provided intelligence that helped Israel target a gathering of Iranian leaders, resulting in Khamenei's death.

Primary Sources

CNN report on Iran's supreme leader killed in strikesNews Report

Major news organization reported that Iran's supreme leader was killed in US-Israeli strikes

Associated Press report on reactions to supreme leader's deathNews Report

Reported that some celebrated in Iran after the supreme leader's death while others expressed fear and uncertainty

New York Times report on CIA intelligence roleNews Report

Reported that the CIA helped pinpoint a gathering of Iranian leaders before Israel conducted strikes

Associated Press photograph documentationNews Report

Published photograph showing motorcycle passing picture of the late Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Evidence Supporting the Claim

  • CNN reported that Iran's supreme leader was killed in US-Israeli strikes
  • Associated Press referred to Khamenei as 'the late Iranian Supreme Leader' in photo caption documentation
  • New York Times reported CIA involvement in providing intelligence that enabled Israel to target Iranian leadership gathering
  • Associated Press reported on public reactions inside Iran following the supreme leader's death

Evidence Against / Context

  • No contradicting evidence identified in available source material

Timeline

  • US-Israeli strikes reportedly killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

  • CIA intelligence reportedly helped pinpoint location of Iranian leadership gathering prior to strike

  • Public reactions in Iran included both celebrations and expressions of fear and uncertainty

What This Means

Structured interpretation — not opinion

  • Key takeaway 1

    Multiple independent major news organizations reported the death of Iran's Supreme Leader, providing corroborating accounts of the event

  • Key takeaway 2

    The reports indicate coordination between US intelligence agencies and Israeli military forces in conducting the operation

  • Key takeaway 3

    The death of a sitting supreme leader represents a significant change in Iranian leadership structure and regional dynamics

Related Claims in Foreign Policy

Mixed Evidence

Afghanistan says 400 people were killed in a Pakistan airstrike on a Kabul hospital treating drug users

Afghanistan's Taliban government claims Pakistan conducted an airstrike on a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kabul that killed approximately 400 people. Pakistan has not confirmed conducting such a strike, and independent verification of the casualty figures and attack details remains limited. The incident occurs amid ongoing tensions between the two countries over cross-border security issues.

Not Supported by Evidence

Iranian drones have repeatedly hit Dubai International Airport since the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran

No credible evidence exists of Iranian drone strikes on Dubai International Airport following any U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran as of March 2026. Dubai International Airport has not reported any drone strikes, and neither the UAE government nor international aviation authorities have documented such attacks. While regional tensions exist, this specific claim lacks verification from authoritative sources.

Not Supported by Evidence

President Trump claimed the U.S. had 'destroyed 100% of Iran's Military capability'

President Trump claimed the U.S. destroyed 100% of Iran's military capability following strikes in 2026. Available evidence indicates U.S. military strikes targeted specific Iranian military assets, but no official U.S. military assessments support the claim of complete destruction of Iran's military capability. Iran continues to maintain active military forces, infrastructure, and operational capabilities.

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