Iran's farewell to Khamenei draws a coalition of Axis-aligned delegations
Delegations from Afghanistan's Taliban, the Afghan resistance, and the Fatemiyoun joined a wider roster of regional allies at the funeral of Iran's supreme leader, a roll-call that maps the geography of Tehran's remaining partnerships.

The funeral of Iran's supreme leader, held on 3 July 2026, drew a delegation list that reads less like a diplomatic register and more like a map of the country's surviving alliances. A summary circulated by the Telegram channel Fotros Resistancee at 17:03 UTC and again at 17:24 UTC the same day catalogues the foreign contingents present at the ceremony, compiled by the channel's editor and explicitly flagged as unofficial.
The roster is narrow by the standards of a head-of-state funeral in a regional capital, but it is wide enough to fix the shape of Tehran's external relationships at a moment of leadership transition. The delegations in attendance are drawn almost exclusively from governments and movements that share Iran's strategic orientation in the Middle East and South-Central Asia, and the absence of Western and most Arab-state representation is as informative as the names that do appear.
Who came, and from where
According to the Fotros Resistancee compilation, Afghanistan sent a layered delegation: representatives of the Taliban government in Kabul, a separate Afghan resistance delegation, and a Fatemiyoun contingent — the Shia Afghan militia that fought inside Iran's regional security architecture through the conflicts in Syria and beyond. The presence of all three Afghan streams at a single state ceremony is itself the story; it indicates a coordinating role for Tehran that survives the change at the top.
The broader list, as itemised by the same channel, extends across movements and governments that have treated Iran as a patron, an adversary of a shared adversary, or both. The Fotros Resistancee summary is explicit about its non-official status, and the compilation has not been corroborated by state-run Iranian outlets in the form quoted by the channel.
A narrow diplomatic stage
A funeral in Tehran is by long convention an exercise in signalling. The guest list tells the home audience which partnerships are durable and which have frayed. The composition published by Fotros Resistancee shows durability in the direction Tehran cares about most: the contiguous belt of allied, aligned or dependent partners that stretches from Kabul through Baghdad and Damascus to Beirut, and into the smaller Shia communities of the Gulf.
It also shows the limits. Western governments, the Sunni Arab monarchies of the Gulf, and most of Iran's non-aligned neighbours are not on the list. That absence is consistent with the pattern documented in coverage of regional diplomacy since 2019: Iran's ceremonial partners are increasingly drawn from the same political-military network that has defined its external posture, rather than from a wider cross-confessional diplomatic mainstream.
What the list does not prove
A guest list, even a long one, is not a balance sheet. It does not tell an observer how deep the financial ties are, where the disagreements sit, or which of the movements present are genuine partners and which are there because they have nowhere else to go. A Fatemiyoun delegation reflects a decade of integration into Iran's security logistics. A Taleban presence reflects the diplomatic opening that culminated in 2023. An "Afghan resistance delegation" is the most ambiguous of the three, and the Fotros Resistancee summary does not specify which Afghan resistance formation it represents.
Iranian state media have not, in the material available to this publication, published a consolidated diplomatic guest list of the kind that Fotros Resistancee has assembled. The compilation should therefore be read as a partisan mapping rather than a verified protocol record, useful for understanding the geography of the moment rather than as a definitive document of who crossed which border.
What to watch next
The leadership transition in Iran will be tested less by the funeral than by the months that follow it. The decisive questions are whether the new administration ratifies the security and intelligence arrangements that the previous one built with movements present at the ceremony; whether the financial architecture that has underwritten those partnerships — including the networks that have been under sanctions pressure from the United States and the European Union — survives the transition intact; and whether any of the absent governments seek re-engagement under the new leadership.
For now the ceremony has done what such ceremonies are designed to do. It has displayed, in one room, the countries and movements that still answer Tehran's call.
Desk note: Monexus has relied on a single non-official Telegram compilation for the delegation list, and has declined to manufacture corroborating wire citations that the source material does not contain. The geographic and political shape of the attendance — Afghan factions in particular — is treated as the editorial substance, with sourcing caveats carried in prose.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/FotrosResistancee
- https://t.me/FotrosResistancee
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatemiyoun
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Afghanistan_relations