NEWS
Iran’s ‘Blood Covenant’ raises a $40 million bounty for Trump’s Assassination.

A chilling new escalation from Iran: a shadowy campaign known as “Blood Covenant” (also referred to as “Blood Pact” or “Ahde Khoun”) is claiming to have raised over $40 million as a bounty for anyone who assassinates former U.S. President Donald Trump.
What’s really happening?
- The campaign emerged shortly after Grand Ayatollah Nasser Makarem Shirazi issued a fatwa on June 29, labeling Trump (and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu) enemies of God and calling for their execution under Islamic law.
- The campaign’s website features Trump’s image in crosshairs, pledging the bounty as “justice” for those threatening the Shiite “Deputy of the Imam Mahdi.”
- Religious input and Quranic references frame the assassination campaign as an act of jihad, heightening global concerns.
Who’s really behind it?
- Investigations by intelligence analysts have linked the operation to Hossein Abbasifar, a former journalist with ties to Iran’s state media.
- Digital forensic evidence, including metadata and communication trails, strongly points to Abbasifar as the likely architect of the “Blood Covenant” platform.
- U.S. officials are exploring targeted sanctions and asset freezes in response to the identification.
U.S. Response & security context
- A senior U.S. State Department official confirmed that the administration is monitoring the threat and “committed to using every tool at our disposal, including sanctions.”
- The U.S. Secret Service is maintaining elevated protective measures for former President Trump amid credible threat assessments.
- The bounty campaign follows a pattern of escalating rhetoric from Iran, including previous threats of drone attacks and direct mentions of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence.
What it signifies
This campaign reflects a dangerous evolution in geopolitical hostility—blending religious decrees, digital propaganda, and crowdfunding. It uses the guise of ideological justice to legitimize violence, marking a new chapter in asymmetric warfare.
The initiative also demonstrates how extremist actors are increasingly weaponizing modern tools—social media, crypto donations, and online campaigns—to coordinate dangerous real-world threats.
✅ What to watch next
- Verification of funds: Though the campaign claims to have raised $40 million, the transparency and traceability of these funds remain unclear.
- International response: Expect coordinated pressure on Iran, including digital takedown efforts, legal actions, and multilateral condemnations.
- Security measures: U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies are likely to expand security protocols around high-profile figures linked to U.S.-Iran tensions.
Bottom line
The “Blood Covenant” campaign is more than just extremist bravado.