Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi was found dead after his helicopter crashed in the mountains of northwestern Iran, the state media confirmed on Monday, 20 May. A consummate loyalist whose death will be a blow to the country’s conservative leadership, Raisi had gone missing a day earlier.
While search and rescue teams – hampered by rain, fog, forests and mountains – searched for wreckage, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had said the nation “should pray” for Raisi’s health.
As an expert on Iran’s domestic politics and foreign policy, I believe concern in Tehran may extend beyond the human tragedy of the crash. Raisi's death will have important implications for an Iranian state that is consumed by domestic chaos, and regional and international confrontation.
Who is Ebrahim Raisi?
Since the Iranian Revolution of 1979, Raisi had acted as an assiduous apparatchik of the Islamic Republic and a prominent protégé of Khamenei, who as supreme leader holds ultimate power in the Islamic Republic.
Before becoming president in 2021, Raisi held various positions inside the judiciary under the purview of the supreme leader. As a prosecutor, and at the end of the Iran-Iraq War in 1988, he sat on the committee that sentenced thousands of political prisoners to death.
Since 2006, Raisi served on the Assembly of Experts, a body that appoints and supervises the supreme leader.
And despite being seen as lacking charisma and eloquence, it was thought that Raisi, 63, was being groomed to succeed the 85-year-old Khamenei as supreme leader.
A Checkered Domestic Record
Domestically, Raisi’s presidency had been both the cause and consequence of a legitimacy crisis and societal chaos for the regime.
He controversially won the 2021 presidential election after a high number of candidate disqualifications by the Guardian Council, which vets candidates, and a historically low voter turnout of less than 50%.
To appease his conservative base, Raisi and his government had reinvigorated the morality police and reimposed religious restrictions on society. This policy led to the Women, Life, Freedom protests sparked by the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini in 2022. The demonstrations proved to be the largest and longest in the Islamic Republic’s near 50-year history. They also resulted in unprecedented state repression, with over 500 protesters killed and hundreds more injured, disappeared and detained. Throughout the protests, Raisi demonstrated his loyalty to the leader and conservative elites by doubling down on restrictions and crackdowns.
Meanwhile, under Raisi, Iran’s economy continued to suffer due to a combination of government mismanagement and corruption, along with US sanctions that intensified in response to Tehran’s domestic repression and overseas provocations.
Confrontation over Rapprochement
Domestic turmoil under Raisi’s presidency had been accompanied by shifts in Iran’s regional and international role.
As supreme leader, Khamenei had the final say on foreign policy. But Raisi presided over a state that continued down the path of confrontation toward its adversaries, notably the US and Israel.
And whether out of choice or perceived necessity, Tehran had moved further away from any idea of rapprochement with the West.
Faced with increased US sanctions, Iran under Raisi had been reluctant to revive the nuclear deal.
Instead, Iran increased uranium enrichment, blocked international inspectors, and become a nuclear threshold state.
Raisi also continued the “Look to the East” policy of his predecessor, Hassan Rouhani. To this end, he and his government pursued greater rapprochement with China.
Beijing, in turn, had offered an economic lifeline by importing Iranian oil and brokering a diplomatic agreement between Iran and Saudi Arabia in March 2023.
Meanwhile, under Raisi’s presidency, Iran continued to serve as an ally and funder of anti-US and anti-West conflicts, delivering combat drones to Russia for use in Ukraine and providing arms to various regional proxies in the Middle East.
Since the war in Gaza began on 7 October 2023, Iran under Khamenei and Raisi maintained a delicate balance between enabling its regional proxies to counter Israel and the US while avoiding a direct confrontation with both countries, who are conventionally superior foes.
This balance was momentarily disrupted when the Islamic Republic directly attacked Israel with drones and missiles for the first time in history in April in retaliation for a strike on Iran’s consulate in Damascus.
Raisi – although not directly responsible for foreign policy – had been a key supporter of the Iranian regime as it has sought to further distance itself from the established international order and seek alliances with countries similarly antagonistic toward the West.
At the time of the helicopter crash, Raisi and his colleagues were returning from a dam inauguration ceremony held in neighboring Azerbaijan. The ceremony was presumably intended for Iran to ingratiate itself with Azerbaijan, having earlier taken an ambiguous, if not adversarial, position in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict – which ended in a convincing Azerbaijani victory in late 2023.
What a Change in President Will Mean?
Raisi's death is a setback for the Islamic Republic, with Supreme Leader Khamenei losing a longtime loyalist, regime insider and a prospective successor.
Under the Iranian constitution, any death of a president results in the first vice president serving as interim president. In Raisi's case, it will mean Mohammad Mokhber, who is a politician much in the same making of Raisi, and who has been a prominent member of the Iran team negotiating weapons deals with Moscow.
Iran will also have to hold presidential elections within 50 days. It remains to be seen who, in that instance, the supreme leader would give the nod to as a future president and potential successor.
But it is all but certain that conservatives in Tehran will continue to circle the wagons, given the internal and external pressure they face.
Domestically, this could take the form of greater state repression and election manipulation. Regionally and internationally, I believe it could mean forging stronger ties with budding allies and pursuing calculated confrontation against traditional adversaries.
(Eric Lob is associate professor of politics and international relations, Florida International University. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)