Zürcher Nachrichten - Iran's revenge rewired

EUR -
AED 4.244974
AFN 72.820821
ALL 95.679468
AMD 435.069847
ANG 2.069125
AOA 1059.943556
ARS 1608.41038
AUD 1.649033
AWG 2.083477
AZN 1.960828
BAM 1.950286
BBD 2.324029
BDT 141.589657
BGN 1.975759
BHD 0.435868
BIF 3415.542608
BMD 1.155882
BND 1.475727
BOB 7.973455
BRL 6.141665
BSD 1.153937
BTN 107.875982
BWP 15.734511
BYN 3.500901
BYR 22655.282549
BZD 2.320738
CAD 1.585043
CDF 2629.631372
CHF 0.910875
CLF 0.027167
CLP 1072.7165
CNY 7.959867
CNH 7.977497
COP 4241.407488
CRC 538.976054
CUC 1.155882
CUP 30.630867
CVE 109.954107
CZK 24.487528
DJF 205.479011
DKK 7.47136
DOP 68.496328
DZD 152.86307
EGP 59.999466
ERN 17.338226
ETB 181.855905
FJD 2.559642
FKP 0.866441
GBP 0.867079
GEL 3.138222
GGP 0.866441
GHS 12.578435
GIP 0.866441
GMD 84.954116
GNF 10114.40169
GTQ 8.839008
GYD 241.417396
HKD 9.05505
HNL 30.542641
HRK 7.533347
HTG 151.38197
HUF 393.178948
IDR 19599.362345
ILS 3.593781
IMP 0.866441
INR 108.66508
IQD 1511.625902
IRR 1520706.944273
ISK 143.64086
JEP 0.866441
JMD 181.287413
JOD 0.819536
JPY 183.919854
KES 149.487327
KGS 101.07943
KHR 4610.962577
KMF 493.56122
KPW 1040.327809
KRW 1739.960935
KWD 0.354359
KYD 0.961581
KZT 554.761421
LAK 24778.937947
LBP 103341.603261
LKR 359.962213
LRD 211.16294
LSL 19.465661
LTL 3.413019
LVL 0.699181
LYD 7.387113
MAD 10.782612
MDL 20.095181
MGA 4811.395855
MKD 61.466205
MMK 2425.983079
MNT 4124.393548
MOP 9.314164
MRU 46.190397
MUR 53.760182
MVR 17.870088
MWK 2000.942367
MXN 20.733739
MYR 4.552987
MZN 73.846768
NAD 19.465661
NGN 1567.66451
NIO 42.459945
NOK 11.070054
NPR 172.601971
NZD 1.98137
OMR 0.444436
PAB 1.153937
PEN 3.98942
PGK 4.980917
PHP 69.526124
PKR 322.168873
PLN 4.275387
PYG 7536.690129
QAR 4.219569
RON 5.087616
RSD 117.118848
RUB 96.006653
RWF 1678.952788
SAR 4.339939
SBD 9.306767
SCR 15.832933
SDG 694.685214
SEK 10.812147
SGD 1.481684
SHP 0.867211
SLE 28.405845
SLL 24238.275136
SOS 659.435457
SRD 43.331121
STD 23924.418772
STN 24.430922
SVC 10.096452
SYP 127.969146
SZL 19.471943
THB 38.037761
TJS 11.083163
TMT 4.057145
TND 3.407964
TOP 2.783085
TRY 51.2244
TTD 7.828864
TWD 37.030636
TZS 3000.117216
UAH 50.55027
UGX 4361.667455
USD 1.155882
UYU 46.498526
UZS 14068.222325
VES 525.568607
VND 30413.56094
VUV 137.376492
WST 3.153027
XAF 654.107521
XAG 0.017125
XAU 0.00026
XCD 3.123828
XCG 2.07962
XDR 0.8135
XOF 654.107521
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.797228
ZAR 19.734312
ZMK 10404.320537
ZMW 22.530296
ZWL 372.193456
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%


Iran's revenge rewired




The Middle East has crossed a threshold that diplomats spent decades trying to avoid: a direct, multi‑theatre confrontation in which escalation is no longer measured by deniable sabotage or proxy fire, but by openly declared “major combat operations”, leadership decapitation, and retaliatory strikes that fan out across an entire region.

In the early hours of 28 February, a joint campaign by the United States and Israel began striking targets across Iran. The operation—described by US officials as a concentrated effort to cripple Tehran’s missile and nuclear capabilities—rapidly expanded beyond a single night of raids into a sustained strike programme. Within hours, the most consequential political fact of the crisis crystallised: Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was dead, along with a tranche of senior military and security figures.

For Tehran, the death of its paramount leader is more than a symbolic blow. It punctures the central claim of the Islamic Republic’s deterrence model: that its leadership can control the tempo of conflict, calibrate retaliation, and avoid a war that threatens regime survival. Yet what has followed is not simply a conventional quest for revenge. Iran is escalating—but in ways that suggest the next phase may be designed less to “answer” a strike in kind than to widen the battlefield, multiply pressure points, and force adversaries—and their regional partners—into an exhausting, costly posture with no clean off‑ramp.

A weekend that rewrote the rules
By the time the first assessments emerged, the outlines were stark. Strikes targeted a wide range of sites linked to Iran’s military, command infrastructure and strategic programmes. Iran responded with missile attacks aimed at Israel and at US assets in the region, while allied armed groups—long embedded in Tehran’s security architecture—moved to join the fight. Casualty figures, as ever in a fast‑moving war, shifted by the hour; by early March, the toll included American service members killed during the opening days, deaths in Israel from Iranian strikes, and a sharply rising number of fatalities inside Iran from the strike campaign.

The political messages were as dramatic as the military ones. The US President publicly framed the operation not as a limited punitive action but as a decisive move to end a threat. He also urged Iranians to take control of their future—language that, even when paired with official denials of an open‑ended ground war, inevitably sharpened Tehran’s suspicion that the campaign’s real horizon might be broader than the stated targets.

In Tehran, state institutions moved quickly to memorialise the Supreme Leader’s death as a national trauma, announcing an extended mourning period and days of public closure. The government portrayed the killing not merely as an attack on Iran, but as an affront to the wider religious community it claims to lead. Iran’s President vowed justice and retaliation, arguing that accountability was both a right and an obligation.

These signals matter because they illuminate the strategic crossroads Tehran now faces. Iran can retaliate “as Iran”—with missiles, drones, and overt military action—or it can retaliate “as the Islamic Republic”—a system built to fight indirectly, to disperse risk, and to turn regional geography into leverage. Recent days indicate it is attempting both simultaneously.

Escalation, but not symmetry
The most intuitive reading of revenge is symmetry: you strike us, we strike you. Yet Iran’s current approach points to a different logic—one aimed at imposing a regional tax on war itself.

Rather than concentrating its response solely on Israel, Iran has been reported to activate a pre‑existing plan designed for a scenario precisely like this: a sudden leadership shock and sustained external attack. The plan’s essence is dispersion. It seeks to destabilise the wider Middle East and disrupt global markets by widening the target set far beyond the immediate combatants.

In practice, that has meant drone and missile activity across the Gulf, including strikes aimed at energy infrastructure and attacks on US bases and strategic sites across multiple countries. The geographical breadth is not incidental. It pressures governments that have tried to keep the conflict at arm’s length, raises insurance and shipping costs, and feeds market volatility—especially in oil and gas—by creating the perception that supply routes and export terminals could become collateral damage or deliberate targets.

This is why Iran’s revenge could indeed be “different”. It is less about a single spectacular blow and more about sustained friction: making the region feel unsafe, forcing adversaries to defend many sites at once, and turning every partner base or pipeline into a political liability for a host government.

Decapitation and decentralisation
The killing of a Supreme Leader would ordinarily invite paralysis: competing factions, contested succession, and uncertainty within command structures. Instead, Iran appears to have anticipated the risk of decapitation. Reports indicate it has decentralised operational authority so that military units can continue functioning—and even act autonomously—despite leadership losses.

This is a hard lesson of modern conflict: removing commanders does not always remove capability, particularly when a system has trained itself to operate through redundancy and ideology. Decentralisation complicates deterrence because it blurs the line between ordered retaliation and opportunistic escalation. It also raises the risk of miscalculation: if local commanders believe they are empowered to act, an incident can trigger an escalation spiral without a clear political hand on the brake.

For Israel and the United States, this creates a paradox. A campaign intended to degrade Iran’s strategic tools may simultaneously validate Tehran’s long‑held belief that dispersal—across units, across geography, across proxies—is the only sustainable defence. The more the battlefield expands, the more Iran can claim that it is not “losing” but “surviving” by making the war uncontainable.

Why energy and bases matter more than rhetoric
Iran’s strategic leverage has always rested on three overlapping capabilities: missiles and drones that can reach targets across the region; networks of aligned armed groups that can open secondary fronts; and geography that sits astride critical energy routes. In the current crisis, Tehran appears to be drawing on all three. Targeting energy infrastructure does not merely threaten physical assets; it threatens predictability—one of the most valuable commodities in global markets. Even limited disruption can push prices upwards, create political pressure in consumer countries, and strain alliances as governments argue over the costs of continued confrontation.

Similarly, striking US bases is not only a military act but a political one. It forces Washington to respond in a way that risks deeper entanglement, while also testing the political tolerance of host countries that have granted access or basing rights. If a base becomes a magnet for attack, a host government may face domestic pressure to curtail cooperation or publicly distance itself—precisely the kind of diplomatic friction Tehran can use as a weapon.

Allies, proxies, and the widening circle
The entry of Iran‑aligned groups—particularly in Lebanon and Iraq—adds another layer of complexity. These groups can escalate on their own timelines, choose targets that create maximum political impact, and exploit local dynamics that outside powers struggle to control. Their involvement also increases the chances of civilian harm and regional spillover, especially if retaliatory air strikes hit densely populated areas or if armed groups fire from within civilian environments.

For Israel, the prospect of simultaneous pressure from multiple directions has long been central to its threat assessments. For Gulf states, the danger is different: becoming battlegrounds by proximity. For the United States, the risk is the slow creep from a declared, time‑bounded operation into a rolling campaign to protect personnel and bases, respond to new attacks, and maintain credibility. This is how “different revenge” works: it is a method of stretching an opponent’s attention and resources until political cohesion frays.

The fog of war, now amplified by the internet
As missiles fly and leaders die, an older battlefield has returned with a new twist: information. A wave of misrepresented imagery has circulated online since the strikes began, including AI‑generated or repurposed videos falsely presented as evidence of dramatic battlefield outcomes. Some prominent claims—such as the alleged disabling of a US aircraft carrier—have been publicly refuted by US officials. Other viral clips have been traced to simulation footage or to older, unrelated events.

The significance is not only that misinformation spreads. It is that, in a crisis where public opinion matters—where governments must justify casualties, where allies must defend their choices, and where markets react to fear—false narratives can shape behaviour before facts catch up. In that environment, “revenge” does not always look like a missile launch. Sometimes it looks like confusion, panic buying, political pressure, and a public sense that the war is spiralling beyond anyone’s control.

What comes next: a long campaign, not a single strike
The most important question is not whether Iran will retaliate; it already has. The question is what form its continuing retaliation will take—and whether the United States and Israel can contain the conflict to their stated objectives.

Official statements emphasise the destruction of missiles, naval assets, and the prevention of a nuclear weapons capability. They also stress that the operation is not intended to become a prolonged occupation. Yet history offers a caution: even wars that begin with narrow goals can expand when adversaries choose to fight asymmetrically, when allies are attacked, or when domestic politics demands visible results.

Iran’s incentives, meanwhile, have shifted. The death of a Supreme Leader is a profound internal shock. It may strengthen hard‑line impulses, weaken restraint, and elevate the argument that survival requires demonstrating continued capacity to hurt opponents—directly and indirectly. It may also intensify internal power struggles, as competing factions seek to prove resolve and legitimacy. In this setting, Iran’s “different” revenge is best understood not as a single act, but as a strategy: disperse command, widen the theatre, hit the region’s economic nerves, keep adversaries guessing, and force the confrontation to become a regional crisis that nobody can simply walk away from.

The danger is that every day the war continues, the number of potential triggers multiplies: an accidental shoot‑down, a misread radar blip, a strike that hits a sensitive site, or a proxy attack that causes mass casualties. Any one of these can make restraint politically impossible. For now, the shape of the conflict suggests an unmistakable conclusion. Iran is escalating its attacks, but it is also reframing revenge. The aim appears less to mirror the opening strike than to create a landscape in which the costs of continuing—economic, political, and strategic—become intolerably high for everyone involved.