By Afshon Ostovar
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
On June 12, Israel unleashed a series of strikes that
damaged Iranian nuclear facilities and missile sites, destroyed gas depots,
and, critically, killed scores of top regime officials. Iranian Supreme Leader
Ali Khamenei remains alive. But his most important deputies—including Mohammad
Bagheri, the chief of staff of the armed forces, and Hossein Salami, the
commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps—are dead.
A few years ago, the sudden, near-simultaneous killing of
Bagheri, Salami, and a host of other senior leaders would have been
unthinkable. Over three decades, the hard-liners who control Iran’s regime had
built up what seemed like a formidable system of deterrence. They stockpiled
ballistic missiles. They developed and advanced a nuclear enrichment program.
Most important, they established a network of foreign proxies that could
routinely harass Israeli and U.S. forces.
But Iran’s hard-liners overplayed their hand. After Hamas attacked Israel on
October 7, 2023, the regime’s leaders opted for a campaign of maximum
aggression. Rather than letting Hamas and Israel fight it out, they unleashed
their proxies at Israeli targets. Israel, in turn, was compelled to expand its
offensive beyond Gaza. It succeeded in severely degrading Hezbollah, the most
powerful of Tehran’s proxy groups, and eviscerating Iranian positions in
Syria—indirectly contributing to the collapse of the Assad regime. Iran
responded to this aggression by unleashing the two largest ballistic missile
attacks ever launched against Israel. But Israel, backed by the U.S. military
and other partners, repelled those attacks and incurred little damage. It then
struck back.
With that, the foundation of Iran’s deterrence strategy
crumbled. Its ruling regime became more vulnerable and exposed than at any
point since the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s. And Israel, which has
dreamed of striking Iran for decades, had an opportunity it decided it could
not pass up.
REVOLUTIONARY HUBRIS
Since the 1979 Iranian Revolution, leaders in Tehran have
cultivated a web of proxies—Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in
Yemen, and militias in Iraq—and developed ties with the Assad regime in Syria.
These regional alliances, paired with Tehran’s robust ballistic missile
program, allowed Iran to threaten adversaries directly and from afar, giving
hard-liners core sources of power. The country’s leadership wasn’t immune to
pressure: it pursued nuclear negotiations with the United States in 2015, for
example, to help alleviate the economic pain created by sanctions. But even
these talks facilitated Iran’s rise as a regional power. The resulting Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action provided Tehran with extensive sanctions relief
without limits on its defense, other than temporary guardrails on enrichment.
In 2018, the United States withdrew from the JCPOA and reimposed sanctions. But
Iran’s consequent nuclear provocations served as a lightning rod to absorb
outside pressure and insulate the regime’s other malign behavior.
In October 2023, the Islamic Republic was peaking. It
exerted heavy influence over a wide swath of land, from Iraq to the
Mediterranean. It had bullied neighboring Arab rivals, namely Saudi Arabia and
the United Arab Emirates, into submission. And Iranian proxies, armed with
rockets, missiles, and drones, were keeping constant pressure on Israel.
In October 2023, the Islamic Republic was at its peak.
The October 7 attacks seemed, at first, to only further
empower Iran. After all, Tehran’s primary regional adversary was suddenly
enmeshed in an all-consuming conflict. Iran thus encouraged its proxies to join
the fight against Israel, creating a united, regionwide front under Tehran’s
leadership. Hezbollah’s persistent rocket fire into northern Israel forced
civilians there to flee the towns near the border with Lebanon. In Yemen,
the Houthis expanded their attacks to commercial shipping in the Red Sea,
putting a severe strain on global commerce and compelling the United States to
concentrate significant naval power and resources on countering their
aggression. By mid-2024, Iran and its proxies were seriously testing the
U.S.-led regional order.
Yet within a few short months, Iran’s regional framework
all but collapsed. Israeli military offensives eviscerated Hamas in Gaza and
devastated Hezbollah
in Lebanon—key nodes in Iran’s decades-long pressure campaign against Israel.
Then came the surprising fall of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria, in
December. Syria had been vital to Iran’s larger deterrence architecture not
only because it presented another front against Israel but also because Syrian
territory—which shares a long border with Lebanon and northern Israel—contained
the main route through which Iran supplied weapons to Hezbollah and to
Palestinian militants in the West Bank.
In the face of these setbacks, Iran could have opted to
regroup. Instead, it opted to escalate the conflict with Israel by directly
striking the country in April and October 2024. By taking such action, the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps had hoped to showcase its military might and
reestablish deterrence. Instead, the IRGC exposed the limitations of its
missile capabilities. Even though the April and October strikes were the
largest-ever ballistic missile attacks against Israel, Israel’s vaunted air
defenses, combined with those of the United States and its regional partners,
intercepted almost all of Iran’s drones and missiles. The small handful that
did strike Israeli territory either missed their targets or did insignificant
damage.
The attacks exposed Iran as weak. They also prompted
Israel to hit back against Iran directly, using its superior airpower to
destroy key Iranian air defense batteries and military facilities in October,
shattering the final barrier that had previously prevented Tehran’s adversaries
from using military force against its territory. Iranian deterrence collapsed.
WINDS OF CHANGE
Despite the setbacks the Iranian regime had suffered, its
leadership and military commanders were far from admitting defeat at the
beginning of 2025. In a March 2025 speech, Salami rejected the idea that Iran
had lost its competitive edge, touting the Islamic Republic’s very survival as
proof of the effectiveness of its grand strategy. The regime, after all, had
been at war not with small powers but with large ones that had the most
advanced weapons, equipment, and militaries. “It is miraculous that our nation
has been able to stand up to arrogant powers,” Salami said. He struck a similar
tone in a May speech, stating, “A nation [that] is not captive, a nation [that]
raises the banner of resistance and acts on the words of its supreme leader
with all its heart, such a nation will never be defeated.”
Now, of course, Salami is dead, and it is harder than
ever for Iran to claim it has won its engagements. In just a few days, Israel
has done significant damage to Tehran’s military and nuclear program. Although
the true scale of the destruction is known only to Iranian leaders, it is
unlikely that the country will easily rebound from this low ebb. Perhaps most
significant, Iran has lost nearly all of its ability to defend its skies from
adversaries. Its once hailed air defenses have been destroyed or made inoperable
across most of the country. Its missile stockpiles have been depleted, many of
its mobile launchers have been destroyed, and the facilities it used to
manufacture missiles and process their fuel lie mostly in smoldering ruins.
Finally, much of Iran’s nuclear enrichment program has been damaged or
destroyed. Iran may still possess a stockpile of highly enriched uranium and
some underground cascades of centrifuges. But in the near term, nuclear
enrichment no longer provides deterrent value.
Added to this is the loss of the defense establishment’s
brain trust. The assassinations of numerous veteran commanders and military
officials, including General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the IRGC’s
Aerospace Force and the architect of its missile strategy, will leave a gaping
hole in the regime and erase knowledge built on decades of experience. The
regime has already replaced these commanders, but what cannot be duplicated so
quickly is the trust that their predecessors had earned from Khamenei, the
commander in chief, and the influence that they held over the regime’s grand
strategy.
Iran has lost nearly all of its ability to defend its
skies from adversaries.
Faced with such a defeat, the regime could accept defeat,
cut its losses, and seek compromise with Israel and the United States.
That path, at the very least, would require the regime to abandon enrichment.
It could also mean that Tehran has to give up its missile program, end support
to proxies, and renounce its goal of destroying Israel. But as much as the
Iranian people would prefer this outcome, for the regime it would be tantamount
to total surrender, viewed as a solution that would portend the eventual
collapse of Iran’s ruling theocratic system.
To avoid a total surrender, Khamenei could also
keep the fight going. That might include going for a nuclear breakout. Assuming
Iran still possesses its stockpile of highly enriched uranium and retains the
know-how, the regime could still try to test a nuclear device, hoping that
becoming a nuclear state will restore a measure of its lost deterrence. Tehran
could also continue to wage war, aiming to either exhaust Israel’s will to
fight or increase support for the regime among the Iranian people. The regime
may even hope that Israel expands its strikes, or aim to draw in the United
States, believing that if more Iranian civilians are killed, Iranian society
will become more sympathetic toward the country’s only defenders: the regime.
That “rally around the flag” effect is, at this point, the regime’s last
remaining hope to get Iranians on its side.
But increased aggression is a very dicey bet and could
leave the regime isolated and broke. The longer the war continues, the greater
the destruction the country will face, which would reduce the regime’s capacity
to simply operate. If there is no rally around the flag effect, or if it
eventually passes, the Islamic Republic’s citizens could ultimately turn on the
regime. And if the government secures a nuclear weapon in order to safeguard
its hold on power, Iran could end up looking quite a lot like North Korea—a
scenario no Iranian would want.
Whatever happens, the Iranian regime has doubtless lost
its decades-long conflict with Israel. It will either have to give up its
foundational political ideology and seek integration with the rest of the
region through diplomatic and economic engagement, or it will need to double
down on its beliefs, drawing further into itself. Ali Khamenei and the IRGC
have lost; the regional status quo they established is finished.
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