New York Post Mohammad Baqir AlSadi intended kill Ivanka Trump burn father house
policy

New York Post Mohammad Baqir AlSadi intended kill Ivanka Trump burn father house

s
sumernow
May 23, 2026 3 min read

Several days after the arrest of Mohammad Baqir Al-Sadi in Turkey by US forces, informed sources revealed that the daughter of US President Donald Trump, Ivanka, was the target of an assassination attempt.


The sources noted that Al-Sadi, 32, had given a pledge to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to kill Ivanka, and even possessed a blueprint of her home in Florida, according to the New York Post.


The sources also claimed that the Iraqi leader was seeking to target Trump's family in response to the assassination of Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani by a US drone in Baghdad six years ago.


Entifadh Qanbar, former deputy military attaché at the Iraqi Embassy in Washington, told the newspaper: "After Soleimani's assassination, Al-Sadi was telling people around him, saying Ivanka must be killed and Trump's house burned just as he burned our house."


He added, "We heard that he had a map of Ivanka's house in Florida." A second source also confirmed Al-Sadi's plot to kill her.


Al-Sadi also posted on his account on the X platform in 2021 a map showing the residential area in Florida where the $24 million home of Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner is located, accompanied by a threat in Arabic that read: "I say to the Americans, look at this picture and know that neither your palaces nor the Secret Service will protect you... We are now in the phase of monitoring and analysis. I told you that our revenge is a matter of time."


Furthermore, Qanbar revealed that Al-Sadi was close to Soleimani and considered him a father figure, especially after the death of his father, Ahmad Kazemi, an Iranian brigadier general, in 2006.


The spokesman explained that the leader grew up in Baghdad and was raised mainly by his Iraqi mother, but was later sent to Tehran for training with the Revolutionary Guard.


He added that he "later established a travel company specializing in religious trips, which allowed him to travel around the world to communicate with terrorist cells."


The man in his thirties was arrested in Turkey on May 15 and extradited to the United States, where he faces charges of carrying out 18 attacks and attempted attacks in Europe and the United States, according to the Department of Justice.


The Department of Justice also accused him of being behind attacks on American and Jewish targets, including throwing firebombs at the "BNY Mellon" bank in Amsterdam last March, stabbing two Jewish victims in London in April, and shooting at the US Consulate building in Toronto also in March.


Upon his arrest in Turkey, he was in possession of an Iraqi service passport, a special travel document granted to government employees that can only be obtained with the approval of the Iraqi Prime Minister, allowing him to travel easily with limited security checks at Iraqi airports and use VIP lounges, according to the newspaper.

s

sumernow