In the post-war strategic landscape of the Middle East, silence constitutes the most deceptive variable. While the balance of power appears to have shifted, security circles in Tel Aviv grapple with a reality far more complex than headlines suggest. Israeli strategists seemingly agree on one unwritten consensus: the “Iran issue” has not ended; it has simply transformed. Yet, in a twist of irony that defines modern asymmetric warfare, an internal phenomenon in Iran – namely the persistence of scattered, low-intensity protests – has unexpectedly become a deterrent against aggressive foreign actions. Western capitals predominantly view the regime as teetering on the brink. However, a closer reading of recent assessments by the Israeli intelligence community suggests a more cynical reality: the […]
