Welcome to a special edition of Balance of Power on the Israel-Iran conflict. Each weekday we bring you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. The Middle East is on the cusp of what may turn out to be one of its most consequential moments in decades. The toppling of Iran’s Western-backed shah in the 1979 revolution paved the way for the establishment of the Islamic Republic — a geopolitical earthquake that reverberated across the region and beyond for years. The Middle East is again bracing for a shifting of the plates following Israel’s decision to finally act on its decades-long threat to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities and its brazen decapitation of top commanders. Iran called it a declaration of war, and responded with a missile barrage fired at Israel’s commercial capital Tel Aviv and other sites. But what has focused the attention of leaders in global and regional capitals is Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to wage what has all the hallmarks of an open-ended campaign designed ultimately to provoke a collapse of Iran’s clerical regime from within. It’s this scenario and all its potential repercussions that’s preoccupying leaders of Iran’s Gulf Arab neighbors, who tried for months to get Tehran to agree to a deal with the US. Saudi commentators say the region is now in the midst of conflict like no other going back to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 or even the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s — incidentally, the last time Tehran witnessed attacks of this scale. Damage to a building hit by a ballistic missile launched from Iran in Bat Yam, Israel. Photographer: Kobi Wolf/Bloomberg Much depends on how far the two central players are willing to go. Netanyahu is betting that he can not only destroy Iran’s nuclear program but finish off an existential enemy, and that Washington, his main backer, will come on board if necessary. If it comes to all-out war, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will hope that Iranians rally around the regime. It’s an option he was already mulling during talks with President Donald Trump’s administration, according to Reza Bundy, chief executive of national-security focused asset manager Atlas, who said that an attack was preferable to what the regime would consider “a bad nuclear deal.” Either way, a series of strategic gambles by each side are now playing out, with the consequences potentially momentous. — Sam Dagher Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in 2024. Photographer: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images |