Trump: Iran asked me to be Supreme Leader, but I said no thanks
Trump’s “Iran asked me to be Supreme Leader” joke at an NRCC fundraiser uses a real, deadly leadership crisis in Iran to normalize assassination-as-policy and blur what’s confirmed about the war and succession.
Mar 26, 2026
Sources
Summary
Donald Trump said at a National Republican Congressional Committee fundraiser that Iranians wanted him to be their next Supreme Leader, which he framed as a joke about how dangerous the job has become. The New Arab uses the remark to underscore a claimed U.S.-Israeli assassination campaign and to suggest uncertainty about Iran’s new leader’s status, while mixing confirmed facts with disputed or unclear claims. The story matters because joking rhetoric from a sitting U.S. president can launder extreme policy choices into punchlines and mislead audiences about what is verified in a fast-moving war.
Reality Check
Trump’s comment appears to be a joke, not evidence that Iran actually offered him any formal or informal role. Iran’s leadership succession to Mojtaba Khamenei after Ali Khamenei’s reported killing has been widely reported, but claims that Mojtaba is dead or gravely injured are not established in the article text and should be treated as unverified unless independently confirmed. On the Strait of Hormuz, reporting suggests Iran is imposing control and conditions on passage (vetting/fees) rather than a clean, universally enforced “blockade” claim.
Detail
Trump made the “Iran asked me to be Supreme Leader… No, thank you” remark at an NRCC fundraising dinner in Washington on March 25, 2026, per multiple reports summarizing the event.
The remark was presented as a joke implying Iran’s top job is now unusually undesirable because Iranian leaders are being killed during the conflict.
Iran’s state-linked announcement that Mojtaba Khamenei succeeded his father followed Ali Khamenei’s reported killing in U.S.-Israeli strikes; major outlets reported the succession on March 8, 2026.
The article claims Mojtaba Khamenei has not appeared publicly since being chosen and says U.S./Israeli intelligence reports suggest he may be dead or seriously injured; this is asserted without showing sourcing or confirmation.
The New Arab describes the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran as “unprovoked,” a characterization rather than a verified fact in the article text itself.
Separate reporting the same day indicates Iran is exerting control over the Strait of Hormuz via inspection/vetting and/or a fee/toll regime, rather than a simple on/off ‘closure’ as often stated in war coverage.
The article also describes shifting and contradictory statements about talks; contemporaneous reporting describes diplomacy as faltering and positions hardening rather than a clearly progressing negotiation track.