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Hardline cleric Arafi joins wartime leadership as Iran juggles conflict, succession

By Michael Georgy
By Michael Georgy
Mar 4, 2026
FILE PHOTO: Pope Francis receives Ayatollah Alireza Arafi, president of Islamic Seminaries of Iran, and entourage in a private audience at the Vatican May 30, 2022. Vatican Media/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Pope Francis receives Ayatollah Alireza Arafi, president of Islamic Seminaries of Iran, and entourage in a private audience at the Vatican May 30, 2022. Vatican Media/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY/File Photo — VATICAN MEDIA

By Michael Georgy

DUBAI, March 4 (Reuters) - Ayatollah Alireza Arafi has emerged as a central figure in Iran’s power structure at a moment of unprecedented turmoil, propelled into a leadership role from the ranks of top clerics after the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Once known largely as a scholar‑administrator, the hardline cleric is now one of three senior officials entrusted with steering the state through its most volatile period since the 1979 revolution.

Arafi was appointed to an interim three-member leadership council to manage state affairs alongside President Masoud Pezeshkian and Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Ejei, following Khamenei's killing at the start of U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran on February 28.

The leadership's top priority, alongside responding to U.S.-Israeli attacks, is managing the leadership succession, a process subject to extraordinary pressure at a time of war: If a supreme leader is not named quickly, the clerical establishment risks being seen as weak and unable to guarantee continuity.

Arafi, in his late 60s, is lesser known abroad than other heavyweight clerics, but successive promotions by the fiercely anti-Western Khamenei have shaped his career and given him moments in the spotlight. Some clerics have even viewed Arafi as a potential successor to Khamenei.

LACKS POLITICAL EXPERIENCE, BUT ALIGNED WITH KHAMENEI

However, for Arafi to ascend to the role, he would need to clear several procedural hurdles. A committee within the 88-member Assembly of Experts — the body tasked with selecting the next leader — would first have to put his name forward at a session attended by at least two-thirds of its members.

From there, he would still require the backing of two-thirds of those present — roughly 40 senior clerics. There are no guarantees at any stage of the process.

Although he lacks hands-on political experience, Arafi, born in 1959, is widely seen as firmly aligned with Khamenei and his ideological vision. He has consistently argued that governance should be rooted in the comprehensive application of Shi'ite jurisprudence.

His clout is rooted chiefly in the powerful posts he has held: head of Al-Mustafa International University and dean of the seminary at the Iranian holy city of Qom. He is also a member of the Guardian Council, which approves all candidates for elected office, and a member of the Assembly of Experts — positions he secured with Khamenei’s backing and trust.

His credentials as a heavyweight within Iran's religious establishment date back to his early years as an 11-year-old student of Islam when he moved to the city of Qom, the epicenter of Shi'ite theological scholarship.

Over the years Arafi, the son of an Ayatollah, completed advanced studies in jurisprudence and philosophy.

Arafi's career kicked off after Khamenei became supreme leader in 1989. He began his work in his hometown of Meybod as a Friday prayer leader at the young age of 33, one of the first signs that he had won the confidence of Khamenei, who strategically promoted loyalists.

RAN UNIVERSITY PROMOTING IRANIAN SHI'ITE IDEOLOGY

He would later fill that same role in Iran's holy Shi'ite city of Qom, gaining religious authority and political clout in Iran's clerical system.

Arafi also became chairman of Al-Mustafa International University,which has affiliated religious seminaries and Islamic colleges in over 50 countries and seeks to promote the Islamic Republic's ideology overseas.

With over 50,000 foreign students enrolled, according to Al-Mustafa’s Persian-language website, students on its Iran campuses receive free housing, home loans and health care for themselves and their families.

He stepped down from the post in 2018. Two years later, the U.S. State Department formally labeled the Quds Force a foreign terrorist organization, highlighting its recruitment networks.

It said the force had enlisted Pakistani and Afghan students from Al-Mustafa International University into the Zaynabiyoun Brigade and the Fatemiyoun Division — militias deployed in Syria under the command of the Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force and previously sanctioned under U.S. counterterrorism and human rights measures.

During his tenure, Arafi claimed that approximately 50 million people converted to Shi'ite Islam within eight years through the institution’s outreach. Critics questioned this assertion.

In 2016, he was appointed head of Iran's national seminary system.

Arafi advanced his political standing three years later when he was handpicked by Khamenei to join the Guardian Council, a powerful election watchdog body that reviews legislation and qualifies candidates for elections.

(Editing by William Maclean)