Why Now?
To understand the timing, one must recognize the growing urgency in Israeli assessments over the past year. Iran had been accelerating its nuclear enrichment program and advancing weaponization research at an alarming pace. At the same time, it became increasingly immune to deterrence. Iran dismissed U.S. efforts to signal a credible military threat and interpreted international caution as strategic paralysis.How Did Israel Strike?
The Israeli campaign was defined by one crucial military principle: surprise. The initial phase of the operation targeted Iran’s ability to respond. Israel sought to decapitate both the leadership and the operational infrastructure that could enable a counterstrike. The groundwork for this was laid months earlier, on Oct. 26, 2024, when Israel covertly dismantled key segments of Iran’s air defense systems. This preliminary strike created a corridor of vulnerability, enabling a stealth offensive when the time came.Protecting the Home Front
One of Israel’s most acute vulnerabilities is its densely populated home front. Iran’s missile and drone arsenals—coupled with its regional proxies—pose a persistent threat to Israeli cities. As such, neutralizing Iran’s missile launch platforms was a core objective in the early stages of the campaign. Minimizing casualties and economic disruption at home is not just a humanitarian goal; it is essential for national endurance in a protracted conflict. Israel’s capacity to sustain operations depends, above all, on its ability to shield and protect its civilians.Targeting the Nuclear Core
Finally, the crown jewel of the operation: the targeted strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Although tactically sequenced later in the campaign, these targets topped the strategic priority list. Israel deployed precision strikes on a series of installations that collectively form the backbone of Iran’s nuclear production line—facilities tied not just to enrichment but to weaponization infrastructure as well.The War Israel Tried to Avoid
While the June 13 operation may appear to some as a rush to conflict, the reality is quite the opposite. Israel invested years—especially during the Trump administrations—in trying to avoid war by projecting a credible military threat. The objective was clear: to compel Iran to reach a negotiated agreement by demonstrating that military consequences were not theoretical, but real.Israeli defense officials worked in tandem with Washington to build diplomatic leverage. War games were conducted, exercises publicly showcased, red lines articulated—all to signal that if diplomacy failed, force would follow. But this strategy met a cultural wall. In the Middle Eastern strategic mindset, a threat is only credible if it is executed. Warnings, even those paired with visible military readiness, were dismissed unless accompanied by action. Tehran viewed restraint as weakness and delay as hesitation.
The Price of Miscalculation in the Middle East
The Middle East has never been forgiving to those who misread the intent—or the pain threshold—of their adversaries. Israel learned this the hardest way possible on Oct. 7, 2023. The price of underestimating Hamas’s intentions and capabilities was catastrophic. The attacks of that day left Israel wounded, grieving, and stunned. Many questioned whether it could rise from the ashes, let alone fight back with coherence and resolve.But what was difficult to predict then has now become clear: Israel’s enemies would soon make the same mistake.
Iran miscalculated—profoundly. It failed to internalize how deeply the Oct. 7 trauma reshaped Israel’s national psyche and strategic posture. More crucially, it underestimated the degree to which Israel was prepared for this moment. In the years since Oct. 7, Israel worked brick by brick, quietly and methodically, to put all of the necessary pieces in place—in intelligence, cyber, air power, long-range strike capabilities, and regional coordination.
When the operation commenced, these assets were not scrambled in haste—they were released like a slingshot long-held in tension, unleashing a series of calibrated, painful, and irreparable blows to the core of Iran’s defense and nuclear infrastructure.
Perhaps the greatest Iranian misjudgment was its blindness to the depth of Israeli penetration. The level of access, the intelligence precision, and the operational reach achieved by Israel ahead of this campaign were far beyond what Tehran had even begun to imagine.
The Fight Is Far From Over
Yet even amid operational success, it is critical to curb any sense of triumphalism. The fight is far from over. Israel’s primary objective—the full dismantlement of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure—has not yet been achieved. Key elements of the program, especially the fortified facility at Fordow, remain intact.A Sovereign Decision
While American support was indispensable—particularly in bolstering Israel’s air defense systems, resupplying ammunition, and providing essential political cover on the international stage—the decision to strike Iran was Israel’s alone. This underscores a core tenet of Israel’s national security doctrine: that despite its strategic partnership with the U.S. and the critical support it receives, Israel ultimately relies on its own capabilities to defend itself.The Diplomatic Endgame—But Not Yet
Israel’s endgame is not endless war, but rather seeking to use its successful campaign together with the credible threat of U.S. involvement to achieve a diplomatic solution that is advantageous to Israel—inhibiting Iran’s ability to enrich uranium. Most critically, any diplomatic resolution must follow Israel’s campaign to dismantle Iran’s critical nuclear infrastructure. A premature settlement forced under duress would risk leaving the core threat intact and give Iran the ability to reconstitute its nuclear program.While some voices may speculate about regime change in Iran, that is not Israel’s stated or implied objective—and at this stage, such an outcome remains speculative at best and dependent on forces beyond Israel’s control. The task at hand is far more immediate and narrowly defined: to deny Iran the capability to produce a nuclear weapon. Only when that goal is accomplished can diplomacy play its proper role—not as a shield against action, but as a tool to solidify its outcomes.
Strategic Implications
Israel’s attack on Iran was not just a military action. It was a declaration of intent. It signaled that, while diplomacy and deterrence are always preferable, Israel will not outsource its security—especially when faced with existential threats. The operation underscored the value of surprise, strategic patience, and careful sequencing. It demonstrated that in today’s evolving threat environment, deterrence is only credible when backed by visible, decisive action.For defense professionals, policymakers, and observers alike, the lesson is clear: ignoring clear and present dangers may delay war, but it makes eventual conflict more costly. Israel chose to act—not because it wanted war, but because the alternative was far worse.





