President Donald Trump has said the US believes reports that the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has been killed in a US and Israeli missile strike
Reports emerging this evening (Saturday) suggest that Iran’s Supreme Leader has died following missile strikes launched across the Middle East.
On Saturday (February 28), President Donald Trump stated that the administration considers reports regarding the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to be “a correct story”. This evening, Number 10 has announced that Britain will convene an emergency session of the UN Security Council.
The session has been requested by France, Colombia, Russia and Bahrain following Saturday morning’s strikes by the US and Israel on Iran. The operations, which targeted locations in Tehran and elsewhere across the nation, triggered Iranian retaliation with strikes reported across multiple Gulf states including the UAE, Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
Saturday marks the final day of the UK’s rotating presidency of the Security Council before the position transfers to the United States. The session is anticipated to commence at approximately 9pm UK time, reports the Irish Mirror.
Imagery circulated after the US-Israeli operations included photographs depicting significant damage to Khamenei’s Tehran compound. The US and Israel characterised the operations as “pre-emptive” action against a Tehran administration pursuing nuclear weapons development.
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Negotiations between the US and Iran focused on addressing Tehran’s nuclear programme concluded on Thursday without reaching agreement, though talks were scheduled to continue at a future date. In response to the strikes, Sir Keir Starmer assembled the Government’s emergency Cobra committee on Saturday morning, followed by consultations with European and Gulf partners.
In a unified declaration alongside the leaders of France and Germany, the Prime Minister criticised Iran’s response and called upon Tehran to “refrain from indiscriminate military strikes” and “seek a negotiated solution”. Addressing the nation from Downing Street, Sir Keir clarified that the UK had not participated in the strikes, but had later deployed aircraft “as part of co-ordinated regional defensive operations to protect our people, our interests and our allies”.
He noted that security measures had been enhanced for British installations across the Middle East and the Government was “reaching out to UK nationals in the region and doing everything we can to support them”. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has instructed UK citizens in certain Middle Eastern areas to “shelter in place”.
This guidance applies to Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, where a blaze has erupted at the upmarket Fairmont Hotel in Dubai’s Palm district – an incident Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper denounced during a conversation with her Emirati counterpart. Several hundred thousand British citizens are presently believed to be in the Gulf region.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch voiced her backing for the strikes on Iran, branding the Tehran administration a “vile regime” that “carries out attacks on the UK and on our citizens”, has attempted to develop nuclear weapons and “brutally repressed pro-democracy protests only months ago and murdered thousands of its own people”. Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey called on the Prime Minister to dismiss the possibility of permitting British bases to be utilised for “future unilateral US strikes”.
He stated: “The Iranian people deserve to live free from a brutal regime. Donald Trump’s unilateral and illegal military action won’t deliver freedom, peace and security. It will only unleash more bloodshed.”
However, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage suggested Sir Keir ought to “change his mind” and permit the US to conduct attacks from British bases, including Diego Garcia in the Chagos Islands. The Government has reportedly previously declined American requests to utilise the Diego Garcia base for strikes against Iran amid fears it would violate international law.
Senior Labour MP Dame Emily Thornberry, chairwoman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, told the Press Association there was “no legal basis for this attack”.





