Is new Ayatollah a nepo baby who went to UK for impotency treatment?

· Toronto Sun

Just days after Iranian despot Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was obliterated , the rogue nation’s mad mullahs have reportedly named a successor.

He is nepo baby Mojtaba Khamenei , 56, who is now reportedly filling the old man’s shoes.

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The old Ayatollah’s pulverized corpse was found in the rubble of his secret compound on Sunday following a blistering attack on the theocratic regime by the U.S. and Israel on Saturday. Mojtaba is the sinister Ali’s second-oldest son.

The attacks on the terror sponsoring nation reportedly took 40 of the regime’s fanatical leadership off the board.

Iran‘s “Assembly of Experts” have now reportedly elected Mojtaba as the next Supreme Leader, according to Iran International. And he has some fairly evil shoes to fill in the wake of his 86-year-old father’s death.

According to The New York Times , some of the kooky clerics were worried about actually naming Mojtaba the new pooh bah because they feared that would make him a target for elimination. Indeed.

The Times of Israel reported that the 88 members of the Assembly were slated to meet in the holy city of Qiom. Unfortunately, the Israeli air force turned the proposed meeting spot into a parking lot.

The change in leaders comes as the regime’s most fanatical followers, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, are pressuring the regime to strike back against the U.S. and Israel.

Revolutionary Guards love him

Mojtaba is believed to be a hardliner and he received the Guards’ endorsement.

According to reports, Mojtaba is tight with the Guards and served as a “mini-Supreme leader” within his father’s vile apparatus. He has long been eyed as the likely heir.

Mojtaba reportedly served during the bloody Iran -Iraq War in the late 1980s and has been one of the most bloodthirsty in crushing descent.

Iran watchers say he married late in life to Zahra Haddad-Adel in 2004 and their first child was born in 2007.

But the new Ayatollah may have worried if he was killed, then the 72 virgins and honeycakes may have been off the menu.

The Daily Mail, citing a U.S. intelligence document, reported that Mojtaba was frequently treated for impotency at an array of U.K. hospitals.

Pressure to produce heir

The document said the despot in waiting was under pressure to produce an heir.

His final visit lasted two months and eventually produced an heir, named Ali, after the child’s grandfather.

“Mojtaba was expected by his family to produce children quickly, but needed a fourth visit to the U.K. for medical treatment,” the intelligence paper stated. “After a stay of two months, his wife became pregnant. Back in Iran, a healthy boy was born, named Ali for his paternal grandfather.”

At the time, he was considered a possible successor to his elderly father.

“He was widely viewed within the regime as a capable and forceful leader and manager who may someday succeed to at least a share of national leadership. His father may also see him in that light,” the report said.

The only fly in the ointment was that he was seen as weak when it came to the religious game.

Ayatollah game is weak

“(He) is not expected ever to achieve by his own scholarship the status of ‘mujtahid,’ far less that of ayatollah,” the report said. “Mojtaba reportedly is quite aware of his own limitations and does not appear to harbor an expectation of becoming sole Supreme Leader in his own right.”

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was against hereditary leadership and had secretly named three potential successors before he died, none of whom was his son, the New York Times reported.

Those he did name were Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i, the head of the judiciary, his chief of staff Ali Asghar Hejazi, and Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of Iran’s first Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini.

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