Zürcher Nachrichten - Israel presses Tehran

EUR -
AED 4.256969
AFN 73.026624
ALL 95.949668
AMD 436.29849
ANG 2.074968
AOA 1062.937298
ARS 1612.956254
AUD 1.648622
AWG 2.089361
AZN 1.97515
BAM 1.955793
BBD 2.330592
BDT 141.989509
BGN 1.981339
BHD 0.437098
BIF 3425.188147
BMD 1.159146
BND 1.479895
BOB 7.995972
BRL 6.159011
BSD 1.157196
BTN 108.180626
BWP 15.778945
BYN 3.510788
BYR 22719.261378
BZD 2.327292
CAD 1.591102
CDF 2637.057544
CHF 0.913917
CLF 0.027244
CLP 1075.745893
CNY 7.982348
CNH 8.005172
COP 4253.385281
CRC 540.49813
CUC 1.159146
CUP 30.717369
CVE 110.264618
CZK 24.515015
DJF 206.059287
DKK 7.48519
DOP 68.689762
DZD 153.294785
EGP 59.995792
ERN 17.38719
ETB 182.369469
FJD 2.566871
FKP 0.868888
GBP 0.86899
GEL 3.147128
GGP 0.868888
GHS 12.613956
GIP 0.868888
GMD 85.201694
GNF 10142.964899
GTQ 8.863969
GYD 242.099162
HKD 9.082199
HNL 30.628894
HRK 7.547552
HTG 151.809475
HUF 393.739159
IDR 19654.711213
ILS 3.60393
IMP 0.868888
INR 108.971952
IQD 1515.894754
IRR 1525001.44174
ISK 144.047519
JEP 0.868888
JMD 181.799371
JOD 0.82188
JPY 184.582853
KES 149.909481
KGS 101.364887
KHR 4623.983998
KMF 494.955743
KPW 1043.265709
KRW 1744.874492
KWD 0.35536
KYD 0.964297
KZT 556.328075
LAK 24848.914008
LBP 103633.441366
LKR 360.978751
LRD 211.759267
LSL 19.520632
LTL 3.422657
LVL 0.701156
LYD 7.407974
MAD 10.813063
MDL 20.15193
MGA 4824.983303
MKD 61.639787
MMK 2432.834089
MNT 4136.040892
MOP 9.340468
MRU 46.32084
MUR 53.912319
MVR 17.920835
MWK 2006.593056
MXN 20.746631
MYR 4.565921
MZN 74.073751
NAD 19.520632
NGN 1572.092184
NIO 42.579853
NOK 11.093021
NPR 173.089401
NZD 1.985179
OMR 0.445696
PAB 1.157196
PEN 4.000686
PGK 4.994983
PHP 69.723065
PKR 323.078682
PLN 4.282755
PYG 7557.973845
QAR 4.231485
RON 5.101986
RSD 117.449594
RUB 96.003268
RWF 1683.694173
SAR 4.352195
SBD 9.33305
SCR 15.877645
SDG 696.647132
SEK 10.831104
SGD 1.486609
SHP 0.86966
SLE 28.486057
SLL 24306.724357
SOS 661.297712
SRD 43.45349
STD 23991.981659
STN 24.499915
SVC 10.124965
SYP 128.330532
SZL 19.526932
THB 38.14522
TJS 11.114462
TMT 4.068602
TND 3.417588
TOP 2.790945
TRY 51.295112
TTD 7.850973
TWD 37.135217
TZS 3008.589588
UAH 50.693025
UGX 4373.984863
USD 1.159146
UYU 46.629839
UZS 14107.951178
VES 527.05282
VND 30499.449254
VUV 137.764445
WST 3.161931
XAF 655.95473
XAG 0.017051
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.13265
XCG 2.085493
XDR 0.815797
XOF 655.95473
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.576393
ZAR 19.85325
ZMK 10433.709028
ZMW 22.593922
ZWL 373.244535
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%


Israel presses Tehran




By March 8, 2026, Israel’s campaign against Iran no longer looks like a tightly bounded military operation designed merely to restore deterrence. It now appears to be something broader, harsher, and more politically ambitious: an effort to keep striking until the Islamic Republic can no longer function with strategic coherence, political confidence, or an orderly chain of succession.

What began with attacks on military, leadership, and nuclear-related targets has moved steadily closer to the core machinery of power. The shift is unmistakable. Israel is not only trying to degrade missiles, commanders, and command networks. It is also bearing down on the institutions that allow clerical rule to intimidate society, absorb shocks, and recover after crisis. The logic is brutal but clear: a regime can survive heavy battlefield damage if its internal organs of coercion and succession remain intact. Once those organs begin to fracture, however, a military campaign starts to bleed into a political one.

That is why the death of Ali Khamenei changed the meaning of the war. Removing the supreme leader did not simply decapitate the man at the top of the system. It forced Iran into the most sensitive test the Islamic Republic can face in wartime: whether it can reproduce legitimacy and authority fast enough to prevent elite panic, institutional rivalry, and public defiance. In ordinary times, succession in Iran is opaque by design. In wartime, under bombardment, opacity becomes weakness. Uncertainty multiplies. Rumor becomes strategy. Every delay in producing a stable successor creates space for fear, hedging, and internal competition.

Iran may still move quickly to formalize a new supreme leader. Reports now indicate that the body responsible for choosing the next leader has reached a decision, even if the identity of that choice has not yet been officially unveiled. But speed is not the same as stability. A successor selected under bombardment, under threat, and under suspicion of outside manipulation would inherit authority under siege from the first moment. In practical terms, that means the regime is trying to project continuity while the ground beneath it is still shaking.

Israel seems determined to exploit exactly that vulnerability. Its public rhetoric has become far more explicit than the old language of deterrence or preemption. Israeli leaders are no longer speaking only about removing immediate threats. They are openly describing a war that could create the conditions in which Iranians themselves bring down the system. That matters because language follows intent. States do not repeatedly invoke the possibility of internal collapse unless they believe the battlefield and the political arena are beginning to merge.

The strategic logic now visible is that Israel is not preparing to stop at symbolic punishment. It is pressing forward with a theory of victory that blends military attrition, leadership decapitation, succession chaos, and pressure on internal repression. In that framework, air power is not meant to conquer Iran in any conventional sense. It is meant to hollow out the regime’s ability to command, to frighten, and to replace itself.

Seen through that lens, Israel’s widening target selection makes grim sense. Strikes against organs of internal security are about more than military efficiency. They are about weakening the very structures that monitored dissidents, suppressed protest movements, enforced fear, and kept the streets manageable whenever public anger surged. Attacks on fuel depots and energy infrastructure serve a parallel purpose. They do not merely increase the cost of war for Tehran; they test the state’s ability to preserve daily life in the capital. A regime that cannot keep fuel flowing, smoke off the skyline, and basic confidence intact starts to look less like an enduring order and more like a system under slow liquidation.

Israel also appears to believe that this moment is unusually favorable because the war is landing on top of a pre-existing domestic crisis. Iran was already under severe internal strain before the latest wave of strikes. The economy had been battered by sanctions, currency collapse, inflation, shortages, blackouts, and chronic water stress. Public anger had already spilled into the streets. What makes the present moment especially dangerous for Tehran is not only that people are exhausted, but that the base of discontent has widened. Social exhaustion, merchant unrest, student anger, and the steady erosion of economic confidence can be managed one by one. When they begin to overlap, authoritarian systems stop looking immovable.

That social dimension matters enormously. Governments can often suppress unrest when it is confined to students, activists, or a single urban class. It becomes more serious when discontent reaches people who usually prefer order to upheaval: traders, families worried about food prices, workers struggling with shortages, and citizens who may not share the same ideology but do share the same exhaustion. A regime loses more than popularity when that happens. It loses the sense that daily life, however difficult, still has a workable center.

Yet collapse is not automatic. Regimes built on fear, patronage, and force often survive far longer than outside observers expect. Iran’s system still retains organized coercive power, ideological loyalists, and a security culture that was built precisely to withstand moments like this. The Revolutionary Guard remains the most decisive institution in the country, and history offers no guarantee that pressure from the air will produce a democratic opening on the ground. There is an equally serious possibility that the opposite could happen: that a weakened clerical order gives way not to pluralism, but to a more nakedly militarized state dominated by hardline security factions.

That is one of the central uncertainties now hanging over the succession. Iran’s constitutional framework provides a temporary leadership mechanism and assigns the task of choosing a new supreme leader to the clerical establishment. In theory, that offers continuity. In practice, continuity is exactly what Israel appears unwilling to allow. By signaling that any successor who preserves the same strategic line could also become a target, Israel is turning succession itself into a battlefield. The aim, in effect, is not merely to kill a leader, but to break the regime’s confidence that leadership can be regenerated at all.

This is a profound shift. Deterrence usually works by threatening pain if an adversary acts. What is emerging here looks closer to regime denial: the effort to convince Tehran that it may no longer be able to maintain a functioning model of rule. Once that threshold is crossed, the question is no longer only whether Iran can retaliate. It is whether Iran can still govern.

That is why the phrase “Israel won’t let up” should now be taken literally. From Jerusalem’s perspective, stopping too soon may be more dangerous than continuing. A paused campaign could leave a bruised but surviving regime determined to rebuild, rearm, and retaliate with even greater urgency. An incomplete victory would allow Tehran to present survival itself as triumph, purge internal hesitation, and return later with a sharper sense of strategic revenge. For Israeli decision-makers, the conclusion seems to be that if the Islamic Republic remains intact at the center, then even serious battlefield damage may prove temporary.

Yet the costs of pursuing this logic are already immense and rising. The war has produced a mounting civilian death toll inside Iran, severe damage across several fronts, toxic smoke over Tehran, regional strikes on critical infrastructure, and expanding instability far beyond the immediate battlefield. Lebanon is bleeding again. Gulf states are being dragged deeper into the conflict. Energy markets are on edge. What began as a direct confrontation has become a region-wide stress test of state resilience, civilian endurance, and international restraint.

Nor is there any clean political endgame in sight. Even if Israel succeeds in pushing the clerical system toward fracture, what comes next remains deeply uncertain. A public uprising is not a government. A leadership vacuum is not a constitution. The Iranian opposition is diverse, divided, and burdened by history. Many Iranians may despise the current order without wanting their future written by foreign bombardment. Others may welcome the weakening of the state’s coercive apparatus while rejecting any externally favored replacement. National anger against the regime and national anger against foreign attack can coexist at the same time. That is one reason why regime change is always easier to imagine than to stabilize.

Still, one conclusion is now difficult to avoid. Israel is no longer treating the survival of the Islamic Republic as a tolerable outcome so long as its missiles and nuclear infrastructure are degraded. It is increasingly treating regime durability itself as part of the threat. That is the real significance of the present moment. The campaign is not just about what Iran has. It is about what Iran is: a clerical-security state that Israeli leaders now appear to believe cannot be safely contained if it remains politically intact.

As of March 8, 2026, the gamble is therefore stark. Israel seems to believe that sustained pressure can turn military disruption into political decomposition. Iran, meanwhile, is trying to prove that even after the death of its supreme leader, the state can still reproduce authority, suppress panic, and project continuity. One side is pushing for breakdown. The other is fighting for survival.

Whether that struggle ends in regime collapse, regime mutation, or prolonged regional war remains unknown. But the direction of travel is already clear. Israel is not acting as if this war ends with a repaired deterrent balance. It is acting as if the war ends only when the system that threatened it can no longer stand in recognizable form.