Iran Supreme Leader Endorses Hardline Protégé as President

Ebrahim Raisi. (Getty Images)
Ebrahim Raisi. (Getty Images)
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Iran Supreme Leader Endorses Hardline Protégé as President

Ebrahim Raisi. (Getty Images)
Ebrahim Raisi. (Getty Images)

Iran’s supreme leader officially endorsed his hardline protégé as the nation’s next president on Tuesday, just two days ahead of the inauguration of Ebrahim Raisi. The new president’s ascension comes at a sensitive time for Iran and the wider Middle East.

Iran is reeling from crushing US sanctions that have devastated the economy, led to the crash of the Iranian riyal and hit ordinary Iranians hard.

In his speech, Ali Khamenei advised Raisi, a former judiciary chief, to “empower the country’s poor people and improve the national currency.”

Doubts about an imminent return to Tehran’s tattered 2015 nuclear deal, which granted Iran sanctions relief in exchange for limits on its nuclear program, have become a dark cloud dangling over the incoming hardline administration.

The collapse of the nuclear agreement after former President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the accord three years ago doomed the relatively moderate administration of outgoing President Hassan Rouhani, who has seen his popularity plummet. Rouhani sat stone-faced throughout the endorsement ceremony.

Last week, Khamenei delivered a harsh rebuke of the West, blaming the delay of the nuclear deal’s revival on America’s “stubborn” negotiating stance. While repeating his usual anti-West rhetoric on Tuesday about Iran’s “enemies” seeking to sway public opinion, Khamenei struck a milder tone during the endorsement. He focused on Iran’s mounting domestic issues, praising Raisi’s anti-corruption campaign and asking him to encourage local production.

“The nation needs competent, effective and brave management,” Khamenei said.

Without commenting on the stalled nuclear negotiations in Vienna, Raisi stressed he would “pursue the removal of oppressive sanctions” in order to salvage the crippled economy.

“We will not (tie) the people’s dining tables and the economy to the will of the foreigners,” he said. Raisi won a landslide victory in the June election, which saw the lowest in the country’s history. He will take the oath of office in an inauguration ceremony Thursday before parliament.

President Joe Biden has pledged to rejoin the nuclear accord and lift sanctions if Iran moves back into compliance with the agreement.

But escalating tensions in the Middle East now risk complicating the diplomatic choreography. The West has blamed Iran for a drone attack last week that struck an oil tanker linked to an Israeli billionaire off the coast of Oman, killing two crew members. Iran has denied involvement in the incident, which marks the first-known fatal assault after a years-long shadow war targeting commercial shipping in the region.



Pope Leo Decries 'Sharp Intensification' of War in Ukraine

Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
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Pope Leo Decries 'Sharp Intensification' of War in Ukraine

Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
Pope Leo XIV holds his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Pope Leo on Wednesday decried what he called a "sharp intensification" of the war in Ukraine, telling pilgrims at his weekly audience at the Vatican that ⁠he wanted to ⁠express closeness to civilians killed in recent attacks.

"I am following with concern ⁠the war in Ukraine," Leo, the first US pope, said, according to Reuters. "War does not solve problems, but aggravates them. It does not build security, but multiplies suffering and ⁠hatred.”

"Where ⁠missiles and drones fall, hopes also fall, homes and places of worship are destroyed, and innocent lives are shattered," he said.


US Strike on Alleged Drug Boat in Pacific Kills One, Strands Two

A US strike targeted a boat suspected of being used for drug trafficking in the eastern Pacific (Reuters ffile photo)
A US strike targeted a boat suspected of being used for drug trafficking in the eastern Pacific (Reuters ffile photo)
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US Strike on Alleged Drug Boat in Pacific Kills One, Strands Two

A US strike targeted a boat suspected of being used for drug trafficking in the eastern Pacific (Reuters ffile photo)
A US strike targeted a boat suspected of being used for drug trafficking in the eastern Pacific (Reuters ffile photo)

The US military attacked what it called a drug trafficking boat Tuesday in the eastern Pacific, killing one person and leaving two others stranded at sea, officials said.

"One male narco-terrorist was killed during this action and there were two survivors," US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) wrote in a post to X.

It added that it "immediately notified the US Coast Guard to activate the search and rescue system for the survivors."

In its post, the military alleged the targeted vessel was "operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations" and "transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific" for drug trafficking.

Grainy black-and-white video accompanying the post showed part of the boat obscured by a box before the strike, then a large explosion, and then smoking wreckage in the water.

No survivors can be seen in the footage.

The US military launched the operation, dubbed "Southern Spear," in early September, with President Donald Trump insisting the US is effectively at war with drug cartels operating out of Latin America.

But his administration has not provided definitive evidence that the vessels it has been striking are involved in drug trafficking.


US Navy Assisting Ships Cross Strait of Hormuz

US naval units enforce a blockade in the Strait of Hormuz (Getty)
US naval units enforce a blockade in the Strait of Hormuz (Getty)
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US Navy Assisting Ships Cross Strait of Hormuz

US naval units enforce a blockade in the Strait of Hormuz (Getty)
US naval units enforce a blockade in the Strait of Hormuz (Getty)

The US Navy is quietly assisting commercial ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz as the US-Iran negotiations remain uncertain, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

Citing US military officials, the newspaper said a Greek supertanker carrying 2 million barrels of crude oil was guided by the US Navy as it crossed the strategic waterway off the Omani coast.

The ship was stuck in the Gulf since early March and is now headed to India to deliver its cargo.

A spokesman for the US Central Command confirmed that Washington was not resuming Project Freedom and that US forces are not currently escorting commercial vessels through.

The US Navy plans to assist about a dozen vessels, including supertankers and container ships, in transiting the waterway over the coming days, according to the report.

On Tuesday, Iran said the United States had violated a ceasefire by striking targets near the contested Strait of Hormuz, potentially complicating efforts to bring the war to a close. The US said its attacks were defensive in nature, targeting missile sites and boats attempting to lay mines.

Despite a ceasefire officially coming into effect since early April, the US military’s Central Command announced that it had launched “self-defense” strikes against Iran, with targets including missile launch sites and boats placing mines.

The New York Times quoted two American officials as saying that the US military strikes against targets in southern Iran on Monday came after intelligence analysts detected a series of potentially threatening Iranian military actions in the 24 hours leading up to the strikes.

American warplanes sank two of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) speedboats that were trying to place mines in the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway that Iran has effectively blocked and that carried roughly a fifth of the world’s daily oil and gas supply before the war, the newspaper said.

The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational matters, also said that Iran launched one-way attack drones near some of the nearly two dozen US Navy warships in or around the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. The ships are enforcing a blockade against vessels trying to enter or leave Iranian ports.

American military analysts also detected activity at some of Iran’s surface-to-air missile sites near the Strait of Hormuz that threatened land- and carrier-based attack planes operating in the region as part of the naval blockade.

US officials and independent analysts also said on Tuesday that the Revolutionary Guards may have been testing to determine whether their forces have some new, additional operating room as the two sides try to solidify the potential agreement that US President Donald Trump has said could end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

CENTCOM said Tuesday that, as part of the American blockade on Iranian ports, it has redirected 108 commercial vessels since mid-April.

Meanwhile, the IRGC said Tuesday it reserves the right “to respond to any ceasefire violation by the aggressor US army.”

It added that it shot down a US MQ-9 drone and claimed that an RQ-4 drone and an F-35 fighter jet also entered Iranian airspace before retreating.

Other Pentagon officials dismissed Iranian media reports of the downing of a US MQ-9 drone.