Israeli security officials have acknowledged that the current military campaign against Iran was launched without a clear strategy for regime change, raising questions about the long-term objectives of the war and whether military success will ultimately be measured by control over Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile.
Internal doubts emerge over war’s political objectives
Senior Israeli defence and intelligence sources have privately acknowledged that the campaign against Iran began without a detailed or realistic plan for how the Islamic Republic’s leadership might be replaced if the regime were weakened by military action.
The strikes, launched in late February as part of a coordinated Israeli-U.S. operation targeting Iranian military and nuclear infrastructure, were intended primarily to degrade Iran’s strategic capabilities rather than to engineer an immediate political transition in Tehran.
According to officials familiar with internal discussions, early expectations that sustained bombing and the killing of senior leaders might spark a popular uprising inside Iran were based more on hope than concrete intelligence assessments.
Nearly two weeks into the conflict, intelligence reports suggest the Iranian political system remains largely intact and capable of maintaining control.
Iranian leadership remains resilient despite heavy strikes
Despite thousands of strikes against military facilities, missile sites and command infrastructure, the Iranian government appears to have stabilised its leadership structure following the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei earlier in the conflict.
Iran’s security apparatus, particularly the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), continues to exercise effective control over the state, according to intelligence assessments cited by Western officials.
Analysts note that regime change in Iran would likely require far more than aerial bombardment. Political transformation of the country’s ruling system would almost certainly demand either a mass internal uprising or a prolonged ground campaign—neither of which currently appears imminent.
Western intelligence agencies say opposition groups inside Iran remain fragmented and lack the organisational capacity to challenge the state without significant external support.
Control of enriched uranium emerges as key strategic benchmark
With regime change increasingly uncertain, some Israeli officials say the true measure of success may ultimately revolve around Iran’s nuclear material rather than its political leadership.
Iran is believed to possess roughly 440 kilograms of highly enriched uranium—material that, if further refined, could theoretically be used to produce nuclear weapons.
The concern among Israeli strategists is that if this stockpile remains intact and under Iranian control after the war, Tehran could eventually accelerate its nuclear programme once the conflict subsides.
In that scenario, critics warn the military campaign could prove strategically ambiguous: while damaging Iran’s infrastructure in the short term, it might also strengthen Tehran’s determination to obtain a nuclear deterrent.
War’s strategic goals remain fluid
Officially, Israel and the United States have framed the campaign as an effort to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and to degrade the country’s missile and military capabilities.
Statements from Washington have also highlighted broader goals, including weakening Iran’s regional proxy networks and limiting its ballistic-missile programme.
However, the absence of a clearly defined end-state—particularly regarding Iran’s political leadership—has prompted debate among security experts about how the conflict will ultimately be judged.
If the Iranian regime survives and retains nuclear capabilities, critics argue that the war’s strategic gains may prove temporary.
A conflict with uncertain endgame
The war between Israel, the United States and Iran has already expanded into a broader regional confrontation involving missile exchanges, proxy militias and threats to global energy supplies.
For Israeli planners, the central strategic dilemma is becoming increasingly clear: military operations can destroy facilities and delay nuclear development, but they cannot easily determine the political future of a country of more than 85 million people.
As the conflict continues, the decisive question may no longer be whether Iran’s government falls, but whether Tehran retains the nuclear materials that could shape the region’s balance of power for decades.
Newshub Editorial in Asia – March 12, 2026
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