The world watched in stunned silence. Within hours of Ayatollah Khamenei’s killing, missiles were flying,
Iran’s envoy openly warned the U.S. to “be polite.” Washington vowed “certain death.”
framing its missile barrages as self‑defence under Article 51. Washington counters that Iran’s decades of proxy warfare and repression make it the true aggressor,
invoking a narrative of pre‑emptive protection against an “imminent” nuclear threat. Between these dueling stories stands a fraying international legal order, strained by claims of anticipatory self‑defence that many jurists view as dangerously elastic.
As António Guterres pleads for restraint, Russia condemns the assassination, and Europe scrambles for a ceasefire, the UN chamber mirrors a world split over who broke the rules first. What happens next — more strikes
, back‑channel talks, or both at once — will decide whether this becomes a contained catastrophe or the opening chapter of a much larger war.