Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei visiting an exhibition on Iran’s nuclear industry achievements in 2023. Photo: Iran's Supreme Leader Office Handout

As Israel continues its assault on Hezbollah in Lebanon, Iran appears increasingly backed into a corner.

Israel’s efforts to weaken Iran’s proxy network have focused on a number of objectives: eliminating key Hezbollah leaders, destroying their weapons and other military sites, and targeting large numbers of fighters and sympathizers.

Hezbollah has undoubtedly been weakened over the past few weeks, which presents a dilemma for Iran. Could this sustained pressure on its main militant proxy group push Iran towards finally acquiring a nuclear weapon?

Iran’s deterrence strategy

The use of armed proxy networks as a deterrence strategy is a well-known approach employed by countries worldwide.

Iran has successfully adopted this strategy for decades, starting with Hezbollah in Lebanon and extending to Palestinian militant groups such as Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza, various Iraqi militant factions, and Houthi rebels in Yemen.

This strategy has allowed Iran to project power in the region and counter pressure from the United States, Israel and their allies while deterring any direct military confrontation from its adversaries.

Both Iran and Israel have, until recently, appeared reluctant to engage in a full-scale war. Instead, they have adhered to certain rules of engagement in which they apply pressure on each other without escalating to all-out conflict. This is something neither side can afford.

Iran has long avoided direct confrontation with Israel, even when Israel has targeted its groups in Syria and assassinated several Iranian nuclear scientists over the past few decades.

Recently, however, this strategy has shifted. Feeling the impact of Israel’s prolonged assaults on its proxy network, Iran has responded by launching two direct missile attacks against Israel in the past six months.

This indicates that as pressure on Iran’s proxies intensifies, Tehran may increasingly resort to alternative strategies to reestablish effective deterrence against Israel and its Western allies.

Some analysts believe Israel may now be gaining what is called “escalation dominance” over Iran. As one group of experts has explained, this happens when one combatant escalates a conflict

in ways that will be disadvantageous or costly to the adversary while the adversary cannot do the same in return, either because it has no escalation options or because the available options would not improve the adversary’s situation.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed a “harsh response” to Iran’s latest missile attack against Israel in early October. This could push Iran further towards changing its deterrence strategy, particularly if Israel strikes Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Calls for a new nuclear strategy

With pressure growing on Iran’s leaders, the regime is now openly discussing whether to declare a military nuclear program.

This would represent a major shift in Iranian policy. Iran has long maintained that its nuclear program is strictly for civilian purposes, with no intention of developing a military component. The US and its allies have contested this assertion.

On October 8, the Iranian parliament announced it had received draft legislation for the “expansion of Iran’s nuclear industry”, which will be discussed in parliament. The nature of this expansion is not yet known – it’s unclear whether it will include a military program. However, recent statements by Iranian officials suggest such an agenda.

Kamal Kharrazi, a senior politician and member of the Expediency Discernment Council, a high-ranking administrative assembly appointed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, forewarned of a reconsideration of Iran’s nuclear program. In an interview in May, he said:

Iran’s level of deterrence will be different if the existence of Iran is threatened. We have no decision to produce a nuclear bomb, but we will have to change our nuclear doctrine if such threat occurs.

Calls in Iran for a revision of the country’s defense doctrine are growing louder. This week, nearly 40 lawmakers wrote a letter to the Supreme National Security Council, which decides on Iran’s general security policy.

They demanded the council reconsider the current nuclear policy, noting that Khamenei’s fatwa forbidding the production of a nuclear bomb could be subject to change due to current developments.

In the same vein, Ayatollah Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of the founder of the Islamic revolution and former Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini, called last week for “enhancing the level of deterrence” against Israel. Iranian media interpreted this as referring to nuclear weapons.

There have also been reports speculating that an earthquake in Iran last week could actually have been a nuclear bomb test. However, the US has said there is no evidence yet that Iran is moving towards building a nuclear weapon.

Revived nuclear deal increasingly unlikely

In 2015, Iran signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany and the European Union. This deal allowed it to pursue a civilian nuclear program with certain restrictions on its critical nuclear facilities. In exchange, the US and its allies agreed to lift sanctions on Iran.

However, the US withdrew from the deal under then-president Donald Trump in 2018 and reimposed sanctions on Iran. Since then, Iran has barred several international inspectors from monitoring some of its nuclear sites.

It is now believed to be just weeks away from producing enough weapons-grade material to build a bomb.

Efforts to revive the nuclear negotiations have not gone far in recent years, though Iran’s new president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has suggested his government would be willing to engage again with the West and resume the talks.

Yet, if Israel carries out an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities in retaliation for last week’s missile attack, as has been speculated, Iran may deem it necessary to opt for the weaponization of its nuclear program instead.

If Iran declares a military nuclear program, it would do so with the expressed intention of restoring a deterrence balance with Israel that could prevent a full-scale war. Israel is believed to possess nuclear weapons but has never confirmed it.

However, such a decision is likely to have dire implications for both Iran and the region.

It would undoubtedly lead to more international pressure and US sanctions on Iran, making it even more isolated. And it could spark a nuclear arms race in the region, as Saudi Arabia has already pledged to pursue a nuclear arsenal if Iran develops one.

Ali Mamouri is research fellow, Middle East Studies, Deakin University and Shahram Akbarzadeh is convenor of the Middle East Studies Forum (MESF) and deputy director (International) of the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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7 Comments

  1. Can anybody enumerate the real damages of Israel done by Iran? Iran fires missiles that destroy some trees and wound some cows. Even the missile never fall near the Israeli army. Hezbollah and Hamas are cats paw of Iran to provide a chance for the Israelis to decimate the innocent Palestinians and provide a pretext for Israelis to attack the life and property of the native Palestinians of Gaza and over all the whole region.

  2. The World Establishment is piercing Iranian daggers into the Muslim body systematically. The USA Israel and the anti-Islam world is preparing Iran to be a pseudo-representative of Islam. Iran normally tilts toward the West. Iranians represent a specific kind and can never be leaders of the Islamic world. On the contrary, the USA, Israel, and on the whole the so-called world establishment are striving to make Iran the only representative of Islam. To represent Iran as an extremist Islamic country is the real plot of the West and world establishment. This strategy is to enable Iran to show its power against Israel and the West. It is in fact to counter Chinese influence in the South Asian region especially and the Middle East in general. Moreover, to subdue the other and the greater sect of Islam which has not accepted Israel and the West. The conflict between Israel and Iran is part of a strategy to boost Iranian power. This war between Israel and Iran is nothing more than a war of words.

    1. Word salad. Iranians (worked there) have no truck with their regime or the Muslim world, they seem to be more proud of their original history.
      It will be the first ex Muslim country

  3. This piece suffers from to simplistic flaws. One is that Iran “appears increasingly backed into a corner.” – don’t let the appearances fool you. And the second one is, “Hezbollah has undoubtedly been weakened…” – weakened is in the eyes of the beholder.
    Iran has been the guidance control center the latest resistance movement which has exposed the incompetence of the previous and current Israeli “leaders”. The main achievement of the Iranian resistance movement is destroy the Israeli “brand” that was gift wrapped by the West and shown to those uppity Arabs/Muslims who can kill more. They’re all in shelters now.
    Hezbollah has made some big mistakes in spreading itself too far and thin. Something that is fixable. The Hezb has been pounding all parts of Israel for a year now. Israel’s response has, as usual, been murdering civilians. Collective punishment has always been Israel main, and the only, tool to face the reality that the illusion of superiority bought with the US taxpayers money is over.
    In that light who’s in the corner? Losers who are under attack from all side in spite of the fact that they are the most heavily armed country? Or Iran that busy visiting new and old friends all around?!

    1. Iran is Persia and they have no truck with Arabs. This regime has weaponised the Shiites in the Levant, and the Sunnis are poised for payback.
      No one has any idea what the Israelis are going to do, but if the lithium zion batteries are anything to go by it will lead to Persians overthrowing the regime. Persia will be the first ex Muslim country.
      4by2’s are smart people. Good luck to them.

  4. Declaring a military nuclear program before they had bombs in hand would be folly. However, with minds clouded by religion, they could be that stupid. The fiasco for their ally in Lebanon indicates they are.