- The New York Post reports Ivanka Trump was allegedly targeted by Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi, an Iraqi national now facing U.S. terrorism charges.
- DOJ confirms the broader case: Al-Saadi is accused of material support for Iran-backed groups and plots or attacks involving U.S., Jewish and Israeli-linked targets.
- The Ivanka-specific “pledge” and Florida-home details are sourced to the Post and unnamed sources, not spelled out in the public DOJ summary reviewed by NoDechev.
Ivanka Trump was reportedly targeted in an assassination plot by an Iraqi national accused by U.S. prosecutors of working with Iran-backed terrorist networks, according to a New York Post report citing sources familiar with the case.
The suspect, identified in federal materials as Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi, was arrested in Turkey and extradited to the United States. The Justice Department says he is linked to Kata’ib Hezbollah and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and accuses him of supporting a network tied to attacks and attempted attacks across Europe, Canada and the United States.
What happened
According to the Post, Al-Saadi allegedly made a pledge to kill Ivanka Trump as revenge for the 2020 U.S. drone strike that killed Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad. The outlet reported that sources said he had a blueprint or plan connected to Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner’s Florida home.
The Post also reported that Al-Saadi posted a map showing the Florida enclave where Ivanka and Kushner live, alongside an Arabic-language threat warning that neither “palaces” nor the Secret Service would protect Americans.
That Ivanka-specific claim is the moving headline. It is also the part that needs the most careful label: it is reported by the Post through sources. The public DOJ announcement confirms the wider terrorism case and Trump-related revenge motive, but does not appear to separately lay out an Ivanka assassination plot in the short public summary.
What the DOJ case says
The Justice Department says Al-Saadi has been charged with terrorism-related offenses, including allegations involving material support for Iranian-backed terrorist organizations. Prosecutors describe him as connected to Kata’ib Hezbollah and the IRGC, with alleged activity involving U.S., Jewish and Israeli-linked targets.
DOJ’s public release says the case involves attacks and attempted attacks in multiple countries and alleged plots against targets in the United States. It also describes a motive connected to retaliation for Soleimani’s killing, a central grievance in Iran-backed militia messaging since January 2020.
In other words: the federal case is real and serious. The narrow question is how much of the Ivanka-specific reporting becomes part of the public court record as filings develop.
Image: Qasem Soleimani in 2019 — Wikimedia Commons / Tasnim News Agency, CC BY 4.0Why Soleimani matters here
Soleimani was the head of Iran’s elite Quds Force and a central figure in Iran’s regional proxy strategy. He was killed by a U.S. drone strike in Baghdad during Donald Trump’s first term. Since then, Iranian officials and aligned militia groups have repeatedly used revenge language around Trump and U.S. targets.
The Post quotes Entifadh Qanbar, a former deputy military attaché in the Iraqi embassy in Washington, saying Al-Saadi allegedly told people after Soleimani’s death: “We need to kill Ivanka to burn down the house of Trump the way he burned down our house.”
The line is explosive, but it should be read as sourced reporting rather than a court-proven finding. Al-Saadi is charged, not convicted, and a lawyer for him did not respond to the Post’s request for comment.
What is confirmed and what is not
Confirmed: DOJ announced federal terrorism-related charges against Al-Saadi and described alleged support for Iran-backed groups, alleged attacks or attempted attacks, and threats tied to retaliation for Soleimani.
Reported by NY Post: Al-Saadi allegedly pledged to target Ivanka Trump, allegedly had or discussed a plan involving her Florida home, and allegedly posted a map of the area with a threat.
Not yet independently established in the public record reviewed here: whether prosecutors will present the alleged Ivanka plot, the reported blueprint, or the Florida map as formal evidence in open court filings.
Why it matters
If the Post’s reporting is confirmed in court, the case would move beyond broad anti-Trump revenge threats into an alleged targeted plot against a former president’s family member. That would be a significant escalation in the long-running security concern around Iranian retaliation for Soleimani’s death.
It also shows how online visibility and militant signaling can overlap. According to the Post and DOJ-linked reporting, Al-Saadi allegedly used social media to publish threats, images and propaganda-style material while still moving internationally.
For now, the clean read is this: the DOJ case confirms a major Iran-linked terrorism prosecution. The Ivanka assassination angle is a sourced NY Post exclusive that fits the alleged motive, but still needs more public court-record confirmation.
NoDechev rating: serious allegation, partially confirmed context. The federal terrorism case is public; the Ivanka-specific assassination details are reported by the New York Post and should be tracked against future court filings.
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Image: Ivanka Trump official White House portrait — Wikimedia Commons / White House