-
Belfast stabbing suspect due in court after night of violence
-
Saudi's new national carrier gets off ground despite war, delays
-
Eddie Jones eyes Mourinho-like laundry stunt to escape ban
-
Bollywood's Imtiaz Ali bets on Gen Z thirst for love
-
Messi plushies see roaring trade as China firms get World Cup boost
-
Messi sparkles on return as Somali referee says World Cup dream over
-
Iran, US trade blows as Middle East peace deal draws no nearer
-
Salt: integral ingredient of sumo stars' art
-
Staal shines as Carolina beat Vegas 5-3 to level Stanley Cup Final
-
Messi scores on injury return as Argentina beat Iceland in World Cup warm-up
-
Art, maths and killing: Ukraine drone chief's formula to stop Russia
-
Tech leads Asia losses, oil rises as rollercoaster week rumbles on
-
Messi set to return as Somali referee says World Cup dream over
-
Former Wallabies skipper Wright signs for Welsh club Ospreys
-
Pope to bless Barcelona's Sagrada Familia, world's tallest church
-
Emotional World Cup return to Mexico for South Africa coach Broos
-
Bill Gates faces questioning in US Congress over Epstein ties
-
'The Donald of Dubai': property tycoon seeks to become data king
-
PGA Tour to co-sanction Australian Open in global push
-
Elon Musk, after DOGE and politics, bets on SpaceX IPO
-
Saudis in World Cup spotlight after $2bn spending spree
-
Mexico doubles down on security before 2026 World Cup
-
US must not be 'too honest' at World Cup, says Roldan
-
Italian astronaut to pilot Artemis III mission
-
North Korea says Xi's visit produced 'far-reaching blueprint' for ties
-
Benfica say farewell to Mourinho as Real Madrid return nears
-
Protesters torch buildings and vehicles, block roads over Belfast stabbing
-
US strikes Iran after Apache helicopter downing
-
Threats to US lawmakers spiked after Meta eased moderation: watchdog
-
Nick Reiner seeks trust fund money for parent murder defense
-
Spain, France qualify for 2027 Women's World Cup as England wait
-
Protesters torch building and vehicles, block roads over Belfast stabbing
-
A woman in charge of the UN? Candidates feel it's about time
-
US tech shares resume sell-off while oil prices retreat
-
Protesters block road to Mexican World Cup stadium
-
White House World Cup chief defends visa ban for Somali referee, Iranians
-
Serena back in the groove on triumphant return to tennis
-
'It doesn't matter': US star Reyna looks past World Cup scandal
-
Somali referee says World Cup 'dream' ruined
-
Knicks ready to 'throw the first punch' in NBA Finals
-
'Beaten to death': the grim toll of Ecuador's security crackdown
-
Anthropic opens most powerful AI model to public with safeguards
-
Serena Williams makes winning return in Queen's Club doubles
-
Trump vows response after Iran shoots down US helicopter
-
Real Madrid's 150 mn euros bid for Atletico's Alvarez rejected
-
Spurs handling physicality of Knicks and New York hostility
-
Peru election chief tells AFP count could take two weeks
-
Stokes considering England captaincy future after nightclub incident
-
Atalanta sack coach Palladino with Sarri set to arrive
-
Italian Luca Parmitano to be first European to join an Artemis mission: NASA
Is that Israel's final blow?
What is unfolding now is no longer a contained exchange across a tense frontier. It is the visible emergence of a two-front Israeli campaign whose logic is becoming harder to ignore: weaken the Ayatollah-led order in Tehran, and at the same time cripple the armed movement that gives it strategic reach into Lebanon. Israel’s military posture and political messaging increasingly suggest that this is not merely about absorbing attacks and replying with greater force. It is about changing the strategic order between Tehran, Beirut and Israel’s northern border. In that sense, the war against Iran and the war against Hezbollah are no longer separate files. They are part of the same attempt to dismantle an interconnected system of pressure.
Hezbollah’s latest intervention makes that point unmistakable. By launching attacks from Lebanon as Israel intensified pressure on Iran, the movement behaved exactly as Israeli planners have long feared it would: not simply as a Lebanese force with its own local agenda, but as Iran’s forward shield. Hezbollah did not step into the crisis to defend a national Lebanese consensus. It stepped in because its strategic value lies in protecting Iran’s regional deterrent and preserving Tehran’s capacity to project power through proxy warfare. That is the core of the current moment, and it is why the confrontation has expanded so quickly. From an Israeli perspective, if Hezbollah mobilizes whenever Tehran is under direct threat, then leaving Hezbollah intact would mean accepting that any future clash with Iran will always reopen the northern front.
This is also why the northern theater has never been a secondary issue for Israel. For years, the country has lived with the reality that Hezbollah can menace civilian communities with rockets, drones, anti-tank weapons, infiltrations and fortified positions close to the border. Even during periods officially described as calmer, Israeli officials maintained that Hezbollah was trying to rebuild, reorganize and preserve the option of renewed escalation. The problem, in Israeli eyes, has never been a single barrage or a single border incident. The problem has been the continued existence of a heavily armed Iranian-backed force that can decide when the north burns and when it does not. No Israeli government that takes that assessment seriously can regard Hezbollah as a manageable nuisance. It sees Hezbollah as a structural threat.
The wider security framework on the Lebanese front has clearly decayed. The arrangements that were meant to preserve a fragile calm after earlier rounds of war no longer command real compliance. Cross-border fire, repeated strikes, violations along the frontier and the visible militarization of the border zone have exposed how much of the old order has already broken down. Civilians on both sides have once again paid the price through evacuations, displacement and the constant fear that a single exchange can become a regional war. In such conditions, Israel appears to have concluded that the age of partial fixes is over. A front that remains permanently unstable is, in practice, a front that remains strategically lost.
That is why the current phase looks less like retaliation and more like an attempt at strategic rollback. Israel is not only trying to reduce immediate threats. It appears intent on forcing a more decisive change in the balance of power. In Iran, that means pressuring the regime’s military and coercive architecture. In Lebanon, it means degrading Hezbollah so deeply that it can no longer function as Tehran’s reliable northern sword. The sequencing matters. If Iran is weakened but Hezbollah remains strong, then Tehran preserves a critical tool of future coercion. If Hezbollah is hurt but Iran’s regional system remains intact, the movement can eventually be rebuilt. Israeli strategy increasingly seems designed to avoid that half-finished outcome by hitting both centers of pressure at once.
The timing is not accidental. Hezbollah remains one of the most formidable non-state armed organizations in the region, but it is also operating in a more difficult environment than before. It has absorbed attrition, leadership losses, sustained intelligence penetration and repeated blows to its infrastructure. Its room for maneuver is narrower, its political surroundings harsher and its public narrative less secure than in periods when it could more easily present itself as the undisputed guardian of Lebanese dignity. A movement built on discipline, endurance and myth can survive a great deal of punishment. But even such movements become vulnerable when military pressure coincides with strategic overextension and domestic fatigue.
Lebanon’s internal response to the latest escalation is therefore one of the most revealing parts of the story. Instead of closing ranks around Hezbollah, state institutions and large parts of the political class have taken a markedly sharper tone, insisting that decisions of war and peace cannot continue to be made by an armed organization operating beyond full state control. For ordinary Lebanese civilians, the immediate meaning of that shift is grim rather than abstract: renewed displacement, fear of deeper incursions and the sense that the country is once again paying the price for decisions taken outside the state’s authority. That mood matters. It does not disarm Hezbollah overnight, nor does it erase the movement’s social base, military networks or capacity for coercion. But it does show that Hezbollah is confronting a deeper legitimacy problem inside Lebanon at precisely the moment Israel is escalating. In strategic terms, that is a dangerous combination for the group: external pressure and internal isolation reinforcing one another.
None of this, however, means that Israel is on the verge of an easy victory. Hezbollah remains dangerous, adaptive and deeply embedded. It has veteran fighters, decentralized capabilities, local intelligence, underground infrastructure and the ability to continue operating under heavy pressure. Southern Lebanon is not a blank map waiting to be redrawn. It is dense, political and emotionally charged terrain, where every military move carries the risk of civilian suffering, international backlash and unintended escalation. Israel may be able to damage Hezbollah severely. Turning that damage into lasting strategic irrelevance is a much harder task. The history of the region is full of campaigns that succeeded tactically but failed to settle the political question that came after them.
That is where the gamble becomes stark. If Israel is truly moving from deterrence to destruction of Hezbollah’s military relevance, of Iran’s regional reach and perhaps even of the confidence of Iran’s ruling order, it is embracing a campaign of enormous consequences. Military superiority can break command structures, logistics chains and missile stockpiles. It cannot, by itself, guarantee a stable political end state in Beirut or Tehran. A weakened Hezbollah does not automatically produce a sovereign Lebanese state capable of monopolizing force. A battered Iranian regime does not automatically yield a coherent post-crisis order. Vacuums in the Middle East have a habit of filling themselves with fresh instability.
Even so, the logic driving Israel is not difficult to understand. From Jerusalem’s perspective, the old equilibrium had become intolerable long before this latest escalation. That equilibrium meant a northern border that could never truly normalize, an Iranian regional network that could always activate multiple fronts and a deterrence model that forced Israel to live under the shadow of future wars it did not choose. Once Hezbollah entered the widening confrontation to shield Iran’s position, the case for a narrower Israeli response became much harder to sustain. In Israeli strategic thinking, the northern problem and the Tehran problem ceased to be separable. If one keeps feeding the other, both must be addressed together.
The rhetoric surrounding Iran points in the same direction. Public language from Israeli leaders has increasingly gone beyond the technical vocabulary of preemption, nuclear delay and immediate self-defense. It has moved toward the language of rupture: not merely containing Iranian power, but helping bring about the end of the order that projects it. That does not amount to a detailed roadmap for regime change, and it certainly does not ensure that such an outcome is achievable. But it does reveal the scale of current ambition. Israel no longer appears satisfied with managing the symptoms of the Iranian challenge. It seems to be reaching for the possibility of breaking its strategic center of gravity.
The phrase “final blow” therefore captures something real, even if the outcome remains uncertain. What Israel appears to want now is not only to defeat attacks in the present, but to dismantle the architecture that makes those attacks recurrent: the link between Tehran’s ruling establishment, Hezbollah’s armed power and the permanent insecurity of the northern frontier. Whether that ambition can be fulfilled is another matter. Hezbollah can be pushed back without disappearing. Iran can be struck hard without producing a stable transformation. Lebanon can resent Hezbollah more deeply and still remain too weak to impose a lasting monopoly of force. Yet the direction of travel is now unmistakable. This is no longer a war merely to contain enemies. It is an attempt to break the system that binds them.
US tariff dispute: No winner
Euro Challenges Dollar's Reign
Leo XIV and Trump: Allies?
India-Pakistan War Fears Grow
Mexico defies Trump's demands
Iran's nuclear dilemma: peace or war?
Trump's expanded tariff risk
East Asia united against Trump
India-Pakistan Tensions Surge
China Strikes Back: Tariff War
Spain: China's Gateway to Europe