Iran’s supreme leader warned that the United States and Israel could face “new bitter defeats,” delivering a defiant message at a moment when tensions were rising again around the Strait of Hormuz and the fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire was under strain. Current reporting identifies Iran’s supreme leader as Mojtaba Khamenei, who succeeded his father after the opening phase of the 2026 war.
The warning fits into a broader pattern of hardening Iranian rhetoric since the war began on February 28. Recent reporting says Mojtaba Khamenei has cast Iran as the side that withstood U.S. and Israeli pressure, and has framed any further confrontation as something that would bring more losses to Washington and Tel Aviv rather than force Tehran to back down.
What gives the remark extra weight is the timing. AP reported that Iran reclosed the Strait of Hormuz after briefly reopening it, blaming an ongoing U.S. blockade of Iranian ports. That move pushed the region back toward crisis and raised the stakes for every new official statement coming out of Tehran.
So this is not just another slogan in a speech. It comes in the middle of an active confrontation over shipping, sanctions pressure, ceasefire terms and possible future negotiations. AP’s latest coverage says the renewed closure of Hormuz has already intensified global concern because the waterway carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply.
Politically, the message is aimed in two directions at once. Outwardly, it is meant to warn the U.S. and Israel that Iran still sees itself as capable of retaliation. At home, it reinforces the image of a leadership that is refusing to look cornered even after a devastating war and leadership transition. That reading is consistent with recent coverage of Mojtaba Khamenei’s public messaging since taking power.
Iran’s supreme leader did warn of “new bitter defeats” for the U.S. and Israel, but the real story is bigger than the quote itself: Tehran is using that warning to signal that the conflict is far from settled, and that any attempt to squeeze Iran further could trigger another dangerous round of escalation.
