According to the report, citing Iranian and Arab officials, the 67-year-old Vahidi advocated for Iran to launch last week's ballistic missile barrage on Israel, which Tehran said came in response to an Israeli strike against Hezbollah headquarters in southern Beirut. Moderate voices within Tehran were hesitant, believing that direct attacks on Israel would jeopardize talks with the US, the report added. In the end, Vahidi won out, with Iran launching 24 missiles at Israel in several attacks last Sunday night and Monday morning.
According to the report, Vahidi and the IRGC “stood as the biggest obstacle” to a deal with the US, pushing Iran's negotiating team to hold out until its demands were met, believing that the country was in an advantageous position and did not need to offer concessions to Washington.
Vahidi has insisted that Iran “reestablish military deterrence,” the report said, in the wake of weeks of relentless US-Israeli bombing campaigns, and then months of protracted conflict and blockades in the Straight of Hormuz. He also reportedly advocated for more strikes on Arab countries in the Gulf, despite statements from Iran's political leaders that such attacks would stop.
This approach has contrasted with the more moderate positions taken by much of Iran's public-facing political leadership, a group that Vahidi has “tussled with” in recent months, the Journal added. In each instance of disagreement, the IRGC commander “has come out on top,” it said, adding that Vahidi has “frequently overruled” Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.
Additionally, it was Vahidi who decided to link an end to the war in Iran with an end to Israel's war against Hezbollah in Lebanon, successfully tying Israel's hands in its fight against the Iran-backed terror group, causing the US fear that increased IDF action in Lebanon would collapse negotiations, the Journal said.
Vahidi is wanted by Interpol over the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center in Argentina that killed 85 people, which Hezbollah was ruled as responsible for. He is also under US sanctions for his role in the brutal regime crackdown on Iranian women's rights protests in 2022, the report added. Now, at the helm of the entire IRGC, Vahidi wields immense power, shaping his country's positions in talks with the US, reportedly refusing to give an inch and insisting that Iran flex its muscles even after it was battered in the war.
However, the Journal noted that he now wears a “perilous crown,” a crown that his predecessor wore for less than a year before he was killed during the opening blows of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
