“A credible transition in Iran is urgently needed,” she posted on X after a call with Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani of Qatar. “This must mean the halt of Iran’s military nuclear and ballistic missile programmes and the end of destabilising actions on air, land and at sea. Above all, it must reflect and support the democratic aspirations of the brave people of Iran.”
The transition to a new supreme leader under the current Iranian system is handled by 88 clergymen in the Assembly of Experts.
Qatar has come under heavy barrages from Iran, which is retaliating against a U.S.-Israeli attack on its territory aimed at destroying its nuclear facilities and ballistic missile capabilities, in addition to toppling the Islamist regime.
“With the region in deep upheaval, Qatar can count on strong European solidarity,” von der Leyen said in her post on X on Sunday.
Qatar shot down waves of Iranian missiles fired at targets within its territory over the weekend. On Saturday, the resulting shrapnel injuring 16 people, according to Al Jazeera. On Sunday, a small fire caused by falling debris was quickly contained.
Von der Leyen called the Iranian strikes on Qatar “reckless and indiscriminate.”
What an Iranian transition of power, if any, will look like is unclear, not least because the country lacks a unified opposition.
Reza Pahlavi, son of the pro-Western Shah toppled in Iran’s 1979 revolution, is positioning himself as a potential candidate to lead the country away from dictatorship to democracy.