Ivanka Trump was allegedly marked for death in a terrifying revenge plot tied to an Iran-linked terror suspect, according to authorities and reports.

The alleged target? President Donald Trump’s daughter.

The alleged motive? Revenge for the 2020 killing of Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani, who died in a U.S. drone strike ordered by Trump in Baghdad.

Now, federal officials claim the suspect had more than violent ideas. He allegedly had a blueprint of Ivanka’s Florida mansion.

Authorities say Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi, a 32-year-old Iraqi national, was recently arrested after allegedly plotting attacks against Americans and Jewish targets across Europe and North America.

According to reports, sources claim Al-Saadi specifically focused on Ivanka, 44, blaming the Trump family for Soleimani’s death.

Former Iraqi embassy official Entifadh Qanbar told The New York Post that the suspect openly talked about wanting to strike back at the Trump family in the most personal way possible.

“After Qasem was killed, he went around telling people, ‘We need to kill Ivanka to burn down the house of Trump the way he burned down our house,’” Qanbar said.

That alleged statement has now added a disturbing new layer to what authorities describe as a wide-ranging terror case with international reach.

Sources claim Al-Saadi had a blueprint of Ivanka’s Florida home, where she lives with her husband, Jared Kushner.

He also allegedly shared an image online showing the exclusive neighborhood where the couple’s reported $24 million mansion is located.

In another chilling post, written in Arabic, he reportedly warned Americans that “neither your palaces nor the Secret Service will protect you.”

The message allegedly claimed his group was still in the “surveillance and analysis” stage.

It also reportedly warned that revenge was only “a matter of time.”

Federal authorities say Al-Saadi was arrested in Turkey on May 15 before being extradited to the United States.

The Department of Justice has accused him of being connected to multiple violent attacks, including the firebombing of a Bank of New York Mellon building in Amsterdam and a shooting near the U.S. consulate in Toronto.

Officials also say he was linked to attacks targeting Jewish communities in Belgium and the Netherlands.

Authorities claim Al-Saadi had ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, known as the IRGC, as well as the Iraqi militia Kata’ib Hezbollah.

Experts further allege he had close connections to Soleimani before the commander’s death, and later developed ties with Esmail Qaani, who replaced Soleimani after the U.S. strike.

Despite the serious allegations, Al-Saadi reportedly lived a very public life online.

He allegedly posted photos from luxury travel destinations, military facilities, and locations where weapons were visible.

Court documents also claim he shared emotional tributes to Soleimani while hinting at future revenge attacks against the United States.

For the Trump family, the alleged plot is especially alarming because it appears to have brought a global conflict directly to their doorstep.

Ivanka, who served as a senior adviser during her father’s first term, has largely stepped away from Washington politics in recent years.

She and Kushner relocated to Florida after leaving the White House, where they have kept a lower profile while raising their family.

But according to authorities, that did not keep her name out of the sights of a suspect allegedly obsessed with revenge.

The case is now raising new fears about threats against high-profile political families, especially as tensions with Iran and its proxy networks continue to loom over U.S. security officials.

Al-Saadi is accused of helping coordinate a violent campaign across multiple countries.

But the alleged fixation on Ivanka Trump may be the most shocking detail yet.

What began with the killing of one of Iran’s most powerful military figures may have turned into an alleged years-long revenge mission aimed at the daughter of the president who ordered the strike.