Home newsIranian loyalists vow to assassinate Trump during Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral

Iranian loyalists vow to assassinate Trump during Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral

by markoflorentino@icloud.com



Iranians loyal to the regime called for the assassination of President Trump during the funeral procession for slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Monday.

Footage from the streets of Tehran showed a group of sycophants honoring Khamenei by hurling stones at a billboard that showed Trump with a bullet aimed at his head — and the loyalists are demanding vengeance.

“The US killed our father,” the banner read. “We won’t let you go!”

Iranians holding up a banner that reads “Kill Trump” with a bullet going through the president’s last name at Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s funeral procession in Tehran on July 6, 2026. REUTERS
An Iranian holding up a sign threatening Trump with the message “There will be blood” at the funeral. Getty Images

Many on the streets could also be seen marching in the procession with placards that read, “KILL TRUMP,” in bold lettering with pictures of the American president.

Groups could also be seen marching with long banners that carried the same message against Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Others also held ominous boards depicting Trump, Netanyahu, Vice President JD Vance, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — all of whom had crosshairs of a gunsight on them with the words, “There will be blood.”

Calls for revenge for the slain Khamenei have grown in recent days, with Iran’s most senior clerics calling for the assassinations of both Trump and Netanyahu last week.

A large “wanted” sign calling for the assassinations of Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. REUTERS
A massive crowd of mourners for Khamenei in Tehran. REUTERS
Coffins on display at the funeral in Tehran. Anadolu via Getty Images

The 88-member Assembly of Experts issued a 10-point statement in which it said killing “the wicked prime minister of the Zionist regime” and “the criminal American president” was a religious duty that must be carried out “under any circumstances.”

The statement was issued just two days after hardliners in the assembly claimed it was a moral obligation for anyone with access to Trump to take revenge “on American soil.”

Iran and the US currently have a cease-fire in place for Khamenei’s six-day funeral procession, which began on Friday in a national procession led by the slain ayatollah’s casket.

Khamenei’s coffin, which was displayed in the holy city of Qom, will travel to two Shi’ite shrine cities near Iraq before returning for a burial in Mashhad, officials said.

The supreme leader was killed in Israel airstrikes within the first hours of the Iran War. The strikes also badly wounded his son, Mojtaba Khamenei and killed his family.

Mojtaba, whom US intelligence believes is “probably gay,” took over the top role from his dad and is believed to have strong ties to the hardline Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.

A banner calling for Trump and Netanyahu to be killed. AFP via Getty Images

He has not been seen in public since the war began.

Trump said over the weekend that peace talks with Iran had been delayed for a week by the funeral ceremonies. On Monday he reiterated that the US would either reach a deal with Iran or “finish the job,” renewing his threat of military action.

Israel’s defense minister, Israel Katz, said on Monday that the elder Khamenei had been killed because he led a program to destroy Israel.

“Any Iranian leader who will again try to pursue plans to destroy Israel will be killed as well,” Katz said.

While Tehran was filled with thousands of mourners on Monday, analysts — and even senior Iranian officials — cautioned that the crowd size cannot be equated to a popular endorsement of continued theocratic rule.

“If anyone’s thinking this is a litmus test for the popularity of the Islamic Republic, history tells us otherwise. It’s a funeral, and Iranians do funerals very well,” said Ali Ansari, professor of modern history at St. Andrews University in Scotland.

Reuters spoke to people attending the rallies who said they were only there as spectators or were motivated by a sense of religious duty in a country of strong Shi’ite Muslim tradition, rather than to display political allegiance.

A “wanted” sign offering a reward for the assassination of Netanyahu seen in the crowd. Getty Images
A group of Iranian women holding portraits of the late ayatollah. Behnam Tofighi/UPI/Shutterstock
Iranian mourners waving flags near a bridge in the funeral procession. REUTERS

“My attendance does not mean that I am pro-regime, this big event happened in my country and I wanted to witness history,” said Hamidreza, 63, a retired teacher in Tehran who said he always attends funerals of major national figures and asked to withhold his family name.

The authorities can count on a steady base of ideological support that analysts often put at around 15-20% of the population of 93 million, based on support for hardline candidates in elections. During the last presidential vote in 2024, the hardline candidate Saeed Jalili received around 13.5 million votes.

The funeral is a rare national event — the first of a supreme leader since 1989 when Khamenei’s predecessor Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the father of the 1979 revolution, was buried at a moment of high ideological fervor. His burial, two days after his death, drew millions of people in scenes that sometimes verged on chaos.

With Post Wires



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