Has the U.S. ever assassinated a world leader before?

The U.S. government for decades shied away from targeting foreign leaders after embarrassing failures and unintended consequences from covert activities by the #CIA.

The targeting and killing of Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, which opened an undeclared war with Iran, is the first time in modern history the U.S. — in this case working with Israel — openly killed the leader of a foreign country, according to CNN presidential historian Tim Naftali.

For those keeping track, the U.S. has now decapitated two foreign governments — both U.S. adversaries overseeing vast oil reserves — in the past two months. Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro is in New York awaiting trial and Khamenei is dead.

There is actually a ban on U.S. involvement in assassinations in U.S. law – most recently in an executive order signed by Ronald Reagan. It is still technically in effect.

But since 9/11, after which Congress gave presidents broad authority to use force to combat terrorism, there has been a slow but steady move toward this moment. Presidents from both parties have killed leaders of terrorist groups such as Osama bin Laden. U.S. President Donald Trump took another step when he ordered the killing of Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani by airstrike in Iraq in 2020. Now the U.S. has killed a foreign head of state.

“You can always come up with an individual who, by their power and their depth of depravity, whose removal benefits humanity,” Naftali said, arguing few will mourn Khamenei’s demise. “But making the decision to wipe out a foreign head of state should not be taken easily or quickly.”

‘I got him before he got me’

Neither U.S. President Donald Trump nor the Trump administration has publicly used that word – assassination – to describe the killing of Khamenei. They have offered multiple reasons for attacking Iran – lack of faith in Iran’s leaders in negotiations over Iran’s plans for a nuclear program; the potential for Iran to develop anti-ballistic missiles; Iran’s sponsorship of terror groups in other countries, the recent killing of protesters in its streets.

When Trump announced the strikes in a video posted to his social media account at 2:30 a.m. ET Saturday, he said, without evidence, that Iran posed an “imminent” threat. But in a phone conversation with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl, Trump offered a more personal reason for killing Khamenei.

“I got him before he got me. They tried twice, well I got him first,” Trump said, according to Karl.

Trump is likely referring to U.S. intelligence from the summer of 2024 that Iran was plotting to assassinate then-candidate Trump and other officials, around the same time a gunman with no known ties to Iran tried to kill Trump at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Iran denied the claim.

When the U.S. military has been involved, foreign leaders have faced justice in their own countries.

Iraq’s Saddam Hussein was hanged after a trial by authorities in Iraq after the U.S. invaded and toppled his government.

Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi was killed in crossfire after being captured by revolutionary forces, aided by a multinational bombing campaign with allies.

After World War II, allies put Nazi leaders on trial in Nuremberg.

READ MORE: War widens to include Iranian-backed militias as Israeli and American planes pound Iran
CIA involvement in coups and assassinations was previously kept secret

The U.S. was complicit in the overthrow and killing of Vietnamese dictator Ngo Dinh Diem, who previously had been propped up by U.S. support.

The CIA was directly, and secretly, involved in the 1973 ouster of Chilean leader Salvador Allende, which led to his suicide.

The U.S. orchestrated an overthrow in Iran in the 1950s

Other leaders overthrown with help by the U.S., like Mohammad Mosaddegh in Iran in 1953, were put in prison rather than killed. The U.S. has since acknowledged its role in the coup, undertaken because the US and Britain feared Iran, and its oil, would fall behind the Iron Curtain. It was Kermit Roosevelt Jr., grandson of former President Theodore Roosevelt, who worked in Iran to help orchestrate the coup.

After Watergate, a special bipartisan Senate committee was convened to assess abuses by the American intelligence community. The Church Committee, named for Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, issued a special report specifically on the issue of assassinations.

Over hundreds of papers, it ticked through U.S. efforts to undermine foreign leaders and assassinate them. Most notable are the failed assassination attempts against Cuba’s Fidel Castro, first ordered by the Kennedy administration.
Today, death is more likely to come from above

During the Obama administration, the U.S. revolutionized the use of covert drone strikes, as CNN national security analyst Peter Bergen has written, to kill suspected terrorists.

Technology has progressed since then. Israel Defence Forces released footage on its social media from a drone of what it said were the last moments of the Palestinian leader Yahya Sinwar, when he was sitting alone in a bombed-out room while the drone hovered nearby.

It’s not clear what technology was used in the strike on Khamenei. Last July, Iran claimed that another Palestinian, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, was assassinated in Tehran by a “short-range projectile.”

Tracking his daily moments

Israel appears to have fired the projectile that killed Khamenei and other leaders, but CNN reported Sunday that the CIA provided key intelligence on the Ayatollah’s whereabouts that allowed him to be targeted.
From CNN’s report:

(The CIA was) monitoring for his daily patterns — where he lived, whom he met with, how he communicated and where he might retreat under threat of attack, five people familiar with the matter told CNN. They were keeping tabs, too, on Iran’s senior political and military leaders, who rarely gathered in the same place with the ayatollah, the country’s supreme leader for nearly four decades.

The attacks coincided with an opportunity to take out not only the ayatollah but also other Iranian leaders, who recent intelligence suggested would be at a Tehran compound that is home to the offices of the ayatollah, the Iranian presidency and the national security apparatus.

In other words, the opportunity was there.
When the U.S. decided assassinations were a bad idea

The Church Committee concluded there were at least eight attempts to assassinate Castro between 1960 and 1965, including by mob hit, according to the author Dan Bohning, who wrote for CNN about the assassination attempts in 2008.

Its conclusions express bipartisan opposition to assassinations. It quotes President John F. Kennedy, somewhat ironically given attempts to kill Castro and his own ultimate demise, as saying the U.S. should not be assassinating foreign leaders.

“We can’t get into that kind of thing, or we would all be targets,” Kennedy said, according to the Church report.

More detailed quotes from the testimony of Richard Helms, who was involved in the 1953 Iran coup and also CIA assassination attempts before rising to be CIA director.

In testimony, Helms explained both moral and practical opposition to assassination.

“If you are going to try by this kind of means to remove a foreign leader, then who is going to take his place running that country, and are you essentially better off as a matter of practice when it is over than you were before?”

Helms pointed to the assassination of Diem in Vietnam as an example.

“That whole exercise turned out to the disadvantage of the United States,” Helms said. At the time he made those comments, in the years before the Islamic Revolution, Helms was the U.S. ambassador to Iran.

“It isn’t because I have lost my cool, or because I have lost my guts, it simply is because I don’t think it is a viable option in the United States of America these days,” Helms said of his opposition to assassination.

Three successive U.S. presidents, Republican Gerald Ford, Democrat Jimmy Carter and Republican Reagan would each sign executive orders making it illegal for the U.S. government to engage in assassination.

Reagan’s order is still technically in effect, but Trump has been given broad immunity by the Supreme Court for his official acts while in office.

Trump is now seizing his opportunity to remake the geopolitical system, operating without seeking congressional approval in both hemispheres.


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🇮🇷 Funeral service for the 150+ Iranian primary school girls murdered by the U.S.


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#BREAKING: Newly appointed Supreme Leader of #Iran, Ayatollah Arafi, has reportedly been killed in an airstrike, just hours after being given the role.


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#Pentagon Chief Pete Hegseth said the US-Israeli operation against Iran will not turn into another United States’ endless war.

He said the United States would go as far as it takes in Operation Epic Fury against Iran.

TASS has compiled the key statements of the head of the Pentagon.
Change of power in Iran

The US-Israeli military operation against Iran is not aimed at a violent change of power in the Islamic republic: "This is not a so called regime change war, but the regime sure did change, and the world is better off for it today."

The Pentagon hopes that "the Iranian people will take advantage of this incredible opportunity."

The United States does not impose democracy by attacking Iran: "All on our terms, with maximum authority, no stupid rules of engagement, no nation building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars. We fight to win, and we don't waste time or lives."
US Plans

When conducting a military operation against Iran, the United States is ready to go "as far as we need to advance American interests."

Iran still has long-range weapons, and the United States is focused on them: "They have long-range weapons that we are extremely focused on."

The Pentagon will not discuss further plans of the agency: " But we're not going to go into the exercise of what we will or will not do," he said.
The campaign against Iran

Epic Fury is an air operation against Iran: "Two days ago, under the direction and direct orders of President Donald Trump, the Department of War launched Operation Epic Fury, the most lethal, most complex and most precise aerial operation in history."

The first strike on Iranian territory during the ongoing military operation was carried out by Israel, based on intelligence provided by the United States: "This was a daylight strike based on a trigger event conducted by the Israeli Defense Forces enabled by the US intelligence community."

"More than 100 aircraft" were involved in the initial stage of the operation.

The United States has deployed cyber units and space command: "In support of these kinetic operations, cybercom and spacecom have continuously layered effects to disrupt, disorient and confuse the enemy."

The United States pursues realistic goals that meet its interests: "We set the terms of this war from start to finish. Our ambitions are not utopian. They are realistic, scoped to our interests and the defense of our people and our allies."

The air defense systems of the United States and its partners have so far intercepted "hundreds of ballistic missiles" from Iran.
The work of the American contingent

Fulfilling the goals of the United States during the operation against Iran does not require sending "200,000 people" to the Islamic republic who would "stay there for 20 years": "We've proven that you can achieve objectives that advance American interests without being foolish about it."

Currently, there is no US contingent in #Iran.


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More than 85,000 Canadians and permanent residents currently in the Middle East: GAC

On Saturday, the United States and Israel began strikes on Iran, targeting the country’s leadership, and later confirming Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed.

Retaliatory strikes have since widened the conflict in the region.

According to GAC, as of Monday morning, there are 2,932 Canadians and permanent residents in Iran and 6,006 in Israel. GAC says the federal government is not aware of any Canadians who have been injured or killed as a result of the hostilities.

Adding the caveat that these numbers are an estimate, because registration is voluntary and some people may have already left the region, GAC is also listing:

1,438 in Bahrain;
7,238 in Egypt;
943 in Iraq;
4,469 in Jordan;
4,070 in Kuwait;
23,165 in Lebanon;
793 in Oman;
438 in Palestine;
8,234 in Qatar;
10,948 in Saudi Arabia;
1,484 in Syria;
23,064 in the United Arab Emirates; and,
227 in Yemen.

“Canada condemns the strikes carried out by Iran on civilian infrastructure,” reads a statement from the federal government. “These attacks are a dangerous threat to regional stability and civilian safety.”

“They represent an unacceptable escalation and a blatant attempt to further destabilize the region,” the statement continues. “Attacks that endanger civilians and civilian infrastructure are deeply concerning and must cease immediately.”

The statement adds that Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand has been in touch with several of her counterparts, including in Kuwait, Israel, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Jordan, the United Kingdom and Qatar.

The federal government is urging Canadians in the Middle East to register with GAC in order to receive updates about travel advisories.

Speaking to reporters in India on Saturday, Anand said non-essential diplomatic staff in Tel Aviv have been asked to relocate, but not elsewhere in the region.

According to GAC, Canadian missions staff in the Middle East are “safe and accounted for.”

The agency is also deploying members of the Standing Rapid Deployment Team — employees on standby to respond to emergency situations — to the region to assist in a handful of countries, namely Armenia, Azerbaijan, Israel, Jordan, Turkmenistan and Türkiye.

She also reiterated the information provided online by GAC, urging Canadians to register with the agency, and warning to avoid all travel to both Israel and Iran.

Canadians are also advised to avoid all travel to several other Middle Eastern countries, including Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Qatar, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Canadians are also being cautioned to avoid non-essential travel to Jordan, Oman and Saudi Arabia.

GAC is warning that consular services during “active conflict” is “limited,” and that staff is prioritizing essential services, so Canadians and permanent residents in affected countries should “prepare contingency plans” independently of the federal government.

With files from CTV News’ Abigail Bimman


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The United States is sanctioning the Rwandan Defense Force (#RDF) and four senior #RDF officials for supporting M23 and perpetuating the conflict in eastern DRC in violation of the Washington Accords. The United States is resolved to uphold the Washington Accords and ensure all parties deliver on the promises of this historic agreement.

https://www.state.gov/releases/office-of-the-spokesperson/2026/03/sanctioning-rwandan-violators-of-the-washington-accords-for-peace-and-prosperity


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Middle East Conflict Sparks Surge in Oil Prices. Stock futures fall, gold and dollar climb as traders gauge fallout.

Oil prices surged Sunday after the U.S. and Israel traded deadly blows with Iran across the Middle East, leaving Wall Street bracing for the economic fallout of an extended regional war.

Benchmark U.S. crude futures rose as much as 11%, trading as high as $75 a barrel, before retreating slightly. Brent futures, the global price gauge, jumped 8%, to roughly $79 a barrel. Futures tied to the S&P 500 fell around 1%. Changes in stock futures don’t always reflect market moves after the opening bell.

Tit-for-tat strikes in recent days have thrust one of the world’s key chokepoints for energy into the crossfire. As tanker operators scrambled for safety, momentarily snarling supplies of oil, natural gas and more, traders have waded into the fog of war across live social-media feeds and TV coverage.

Iranian officials and media in recent days have shared conflicting statements about whether Tehran intends to stymie sea traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a tactic that analysts say is likely designed to sow confusion. While there haven’t been concerted attacks on energy infrastructure so far, tanker-tracking firms say many companies have avoided traversing the narrow shipping route out of caution.

“The Iranians understand that the key sensitivity to the U.S. is the price of oil. They’re trying to increase the price,” said Gregory Brew, a senior analyst at the Eurasia Group.

“What they’re trying to do right now is create uncertainty about the safety of the waterway,” added Brew, an Iran specialist. “They want to maintain space up the escalatory ladder. They’re not going 100% immediately.”

Now, the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the deaths of U.S. servicemembers is pushing the conflict into a perilous new phase.

Investors and politicians view a forced closure of the strait by Tehran as a scorched-earth tactic that would draw a furious military response. Even so, analysts at Barclays believe a prolonged conflict could put $100-a-barrel oil in play.

That type of price jump would push up the cost of fuel for cars, power plants and more the world over, rippling through the economy and markets. In a sign that investors are searching for safety, gold futures on Sunday climbed more than 2%.

“For equities and credit the impact [of the war] is negative, but only a severe and sustained oil disruption would imply substantial consequences for global growth,” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote on Sunday. “We expect cyclical sectors and oil importers—some of which have had strong starts to the year and may face vulnerability from positioning adjustments—will likely see pressure unless a resolution occurs quickly.”

For weeks, as Washington massed forces in and around the Middle East, traders snapped up oil futures for fear of a conflict that could disrupt a roughly six-mile-wide shipping route through which roughly one-fifth of global oil and natural gas travel. Benchmark U.S. prices as of Friday had already jumped 20% from their early January lows.

That type of increase is normal when tensions flared with Tehran in recent years. But the tankers hauling oil and fuel through the Strait of Hormuz have never been disrupted at length.

Even last year, when Iranian officials reportedly threatened to choke off shipments through the waterway during a 12-day war between Iran and the U.S. and Israel, crude prices quickly retreated after the dust from the conflict had settled.

But the speed and severity of strikes by Israeli and American forces in recent days, as well as Iranian counterattacks on energy-export powerhouses lining the Persian Gulf, took some analysts by surprise. President Trump’s stated goal for regime change in the Islamic Republic has upped the ante.

ClearView Energy Partners opened a missive to clients this weekend with an ominous warning: This time could be different.

“[C]ivil strife in the wake of regime change also threatens to introduce chronic risk—inside Iran, and regionally—as factions jockey for power,” the analysts said. “In short, crude price premia could persist beyond the end of Israeli and U.S. combat operations.”

Oil prices’ recent climb suggests some wartime risks have already been priced in. Now, “the key question is when do vessels re-establish export flows,” said Alan Gelder, senior vice president of refining, chemicals and oil markets at energy consultant Wood Mackenzie.

Gelder added that a full resumption of shipments from countries including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq could take weeks, even in an optimistic scenario in which Tehran agrees to cooperate with Washington’s demands over its nuclear program.

“During that time, oil prices are heavily risked to the upside,” Gelder said. Analysts say a sustained disruption of Qatari natural gas could similarly boost prices for the heating and power-generation fuel.

Should the worst-case scenarios play out, Americans could face higher prices at the pump heading toward midterm elections, pressuring Trump’s affordability push. But the energy-hungry economies of Asia and Europe could pay an even steeper cost.

In a note to clients Sunday, Evercore analysts said a weekslong oil-price run-up to roughly $80 or $85 a barrel “would leave only a small impact on the global economy and very little on the U.S.”

The impacts would snowball with a more sustained or severe move. “The risk case of $100-120 oil is in our mind qualitatively different,” Evercore wrote. “The price shock would be much more material, raising risks to inflation expectations.”


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#Gaza's ceasefire had some momentum. Now, some fear a new war will distract the #world.

Residents say they are scared of neglect and deprivation, with Israel in the wake of the weekend strikes closing all crossings into their shattered territory of over 2 million people.

Palestinians told The Associated Press they were rushing to markets, haunted by memories of painful food scarcity last year under months of Israel’s blockade. Part of Gaza, around Gaza City, was found to be in famine.

“When the crossings shut down, everything was suspended from the market,” said Osamda Hanoda from Khan Younis. “The prices go up, and people live in misery.”
Reports show prices of goods rising sharply

The shaky Israel-Hamas ceasefire had led to more humanitarian aid and other supplies entering Gaza, even as the United Nations and aid partners say more of everything from basic medical supplies to fuel is needed.

Now, Palestinians are hoarding again, with reports of prices rising sharply for basic goods such as bags of flour.

“We are afraid of not finding milk” and diapers for the kids, or food and water, said Hassan Zanoun, who was displaced from Rafah.

COGAT, the Israeli military body overseeing civilian affairs in Gaza, did not respond to a request for comment Sunday. In its announcement of the closings, it asserted that the food supply inside the territory “is expected to suffice for an extended period.” It added that the rotation of humanitarian workers in and out of Gaza is postponed.

It was not clear when any crossing might reopen. Israeli authorities focused on Iran, and citizens dashed repeatedly for shelter as sirens wailed.
Ramadan is disrupted

The war in Gaza began with the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and it’s been marked from the start by restrictions on people and supplies being allowed into the territory — and terrified people, including medical evacuees in need of treatment, getting out.

A month ago, Gaza’s main Rafah border crossing with the outside world — its only crossing not with Israel — reopened, allowing a small and tightly controlled flow of Palestinian traffic in both directions. No cargo was allowed through.

Now all crossings are closed again in the middle of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, a time of chosen deprivation, evening feasts and prayer. Images have shown Palestinians lined up at long tables in the middle of bombed-out debris.

The strikes on Iran shook that routine.

“All the people rushed to markets, and they all wanted to shop and hide,” said Abeer Awwad, who was displaced from Gaza City, as word of the explosions in Tehran began to spread.

Under the Oct. 10 U.S.-brokered ceasefire, the heaviest fighting has subsided, though regular Israeli fire continues in Gaza. The U.N. World Food Program has noted progress in the enclave but said in its latest food security analysis last week that hunger remains.

“Households reported an average of two meals per day in February 2026, compared to one meal in July,” it said. ”Still, one in five households consumed only one meal daily.”
A challenge for aid groups and others

Refocusing the world’s attention on Gaza is a challenge for aid groups and others as Iran scrambles for new leadership and explosions continue in Tehran, Israel and around the Middle East.

Trump has said bombing in Iran could continue through the week or longer, and warned Tehran of “A FORCE THAT HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE!” if it escalates attacks.

It’s a dramatic turn from Trump’s launch less than two weeks ago of his new Board of Peace, a gathering of world leaders that is aimed at ending the war in Gaza but has ambitions of resolving conflicts elsewhere.

Even with that bump in momentum on Gaza, major challenges remain for the ceasefire. They include disarming Hamas, assembling and deploying an international stabilization force, and getting a newly appointed Palestinian committee meant to govern Gaza into the territory.

As the Middle East turns to another war, some Palestinians see a benefit: Israel’s military is distracted.

“The good thing is that the sound of booms and demolitions is rare now near the yellow line,” said Ahmed Abu Jahl, of Gaza City, speaking about the line dividing Gaza and marking out roughly half the territory controlled by Israeli forces.

“Even the drones, they are still flying overhead, but their number has gone down.”

___

Wafaa Shurafa, Toqa Ezzidin And Cara Anna, The Associated Press

Ezzidin reported from Cairo and Anna from Lowville, New York.


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Ten countries in the Middle East, including Israel, have been affected by Iranian strikes in response to the joint US-Israeli military operation, according to calculations by TASS.

Namely, Bahrein, Jordan, Iraq, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, where US military bases are stationed, came under Iranian missile and drone attacks. Iran mostly targeted the Jewish state in launching its airstrikes. Air defenses in Syria, too, took part in repelling Iranian missile strikes, as residents in Damascus reported several explosions, according to media reports. Iran said the attacks were not aimed at its neighbors but exclusively targeted Iran and US military bases in the Middle East.

On February 28, the US and Israel launched a military operation against Iran. Major Iranian cities, including Tehran, have been hit. The Islamic Republic’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed in the attacks. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC, the Iranian Armed Forces’ elite unit) announced a large-scale retaliatory operation.


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#Pezeshkian Strongly Condemns #US-Israeli #Attack on Minab School, “This savage act adds another black page to the record of countless crimes by the aggressors, a memory that will never be erased from our nation’s history,” the president said in a message on Saturday.

On Saturday morning, the Israeli regime targeted the Shajareh‑Tayyebeh Girls’ Elementary School. The death toll has risen to at least 108 students killed and 92 others injured, local authorities said.

Some victims remain trapped under the rubble, and rescue efforts are ongoing.

Pezeshkian expressed deep condolences to the families of the victims and the nation. “I share the heavy sorrow of the victims’ families, the noble people of Minab, and all of #Iran, and I stand with them in this grief.”

He also called on rescue, medical, and relevant authorities to mobilize all resources and to prioritize “immediate and continuous assistance to the injured and the families of the fallen.”


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