Berliner Boersenzeitung - Is that Israel's final blow?

EUR -
AED 4.172342
AFN 72.710612
ALL 94.168298
AMD 416.905528
ANG 2.034081
AOA 1042.371374
ARS 1678.31029
AUD 1.65118
AWG 2.044985
AZN 1.9286
BAM 1.953543
BBD 2.284331
BDT 139.388972
BGN 1.921014
BHD 0.427626
BIF 3379.668848
BMD 1.136103
BND 1.47142
BOB 7.830678
BRL 5.903261
BSD 1.134218
BTN 106.921597
BWP 15.47679
BYN 3.2276
BYR 22267.609445
BZD 2.280951
CAD 1.613709
CDF 2578.952433
CHF 0.920584
CLF 0.026563
CLP 1045.441695
CNY 7.729871
CNH 7.732513
COP 3916.883862
CRC 516.189873
CUC 1.136103
CUP 30.106717
CVE 110.133891
CZK 24.26945
DJF 201.972005
DKK 7.474919
DOP 66.832794
DZD 151.6401
EGP 56.247867
ERN 17.041538
ETB 178.882691
FJD 2.574516
FKP 0.863381
GBP 0.861603
GEL 2.999799
GGP 0.863381
GHS 12.745827
GIP 0.863381
GMD 82.374992
GNF 9937.954521
GTQ 8.645746
GYD 237.107734
HKD 8.909054
HNL 30.348649
HRK 7.534292
HTG 148.234877
HUF 354.840039
IDR 20421.556456
ILS 3.388909
IMP 0.863381
INR 107.521196
IQD 1485.701749
IRR 1562197.774025
ISK 144.001077
JEP 0.863381
JMD 178.747237
JOD 0.805487
JPY 183.755445
KES 147.17041
KGS 99.352152
KHR 4567.301578
KMF 493.068367
KPW 1022.492668
KRW 1758.908246
KWD 0.351795
KYD 0.945119
KZT 549.658668
LAK 25207.846413
LBP 101564.502763
LKR 382.246361
LRD 206.248102
LSL 18.781437
LTL 3.354616
LVL 0.687217
LYD 7.283548
MAD 10.696976
MDL 20.130894
MGA 4835.32959
MKD 61.665491
MMK 2385.286853
MNT 4071.590517
MOP 9.159416
MRU 45.047662
MUR 54.74872
MVR 17.55286
MWK 1966.720578
MXN 19.935202
MYR 4.662111
MZN 72.600692
NAD 18.781437
NGN 1563.41347
NIO 41.733012
NOK 11.244909
NPR 171.205307
NZD 2.016571
OMR 0.436833
PAB 1.133251
PEN 3.887705
PGK 4.976974
PHP 69.678275
PKR 315.645935
PLN 4.286572
PYG 6930.66674
QAR 4.141125
RON 5.233345
RSD 117.38096
RUB 85.43419
RWF 1666.621562
SAR 4.258129
SBD 9.147844
SCR 15.043431
SDG 681.661005
SEK 11.084614
SGD 1.473553
SHP 0.848215
SLE 28.17688
SLL 23823.506013
SOS 648.136161
SRD 42.399316
STD 23515.028438
STN 24.490031
SVC 9.924004
SYP 125.575795
SZL 18.780677
THB 38.010011
TJS 10.476812
TMT 3.976359
TND 3.337298
TOP 2.735463
TRY 52.964947
TTD 7.702898
TWD 36.180204
TZS 2975.379763
UAH 50.999382
UGX 4193.008418
USD 1.136103
UYU 45.466075
UZS 13613.03396
VES 705.239032
VND 29896.537885
VUV 136.128641
WST 3.155838
XAF 655.690086
XAG 0.020225
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.070373
XCG 2.043977
XDR 0.815518
XOF 655.736242
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.102488
ZAR 18.803803
ZMK 10226.281982
ZMW 20.472108
ZWL 365.824549
  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18.7

    +3.74%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%


Is that Israel's final blow?




What is unfolding now is no longer a contained exchange across a tense frontier. It is the visible emergence of a two-front Israeli campaign whose logic is becoming harder to ignore: weaken the Ayatollah-led order in Tehran, and at the same time cripple the armed movement that gives it strategic reach into Lebanon. Israel’s military posture and political messaging increasingly suggest that this is not merely about absorbing attacks and replying with greater force. It is about changing the strategic order between Tehran, Beirut and Israel’s northern border. In that sense, the war against Iran and the war against Hezbollah are no longer separate files. They are part of the same attempt to dismantle an interconnected system of pressure.

Hezbollah’s latest intervention makes that point unmistakable. By launching attacks from Lebanon as Israel intensified pressure on Iran, the movement behaved exactly as Israeli planners have long feared it would: not simply as a Lebanese force with its own local agenda, but as Iran’s forward shield. Hezbollah did not step into the crisis to defend a national Lebanese consensus. It stepped in because its strategic value lies in protecting Iran’s regional deterrent and preserving Tehran’s capacity to project power through proxy warfare. That is the core of the current moment, and it is why the confrontation has expanded so quickly. From an Israeli perspective, if Hezbollah mobilizes whenever Tehran is under direct threat, then leaving Hezbollah intact would mean accepting that any future clash with Iran will always reopen the northern front.

This is also why the northern theater has never been a secondary issue for Israel. For years, the country has lived with the reality that Hezbollah can menace civilian communities with rockets, drones, anti-tank weapons, infiltrations and fortified positions close to the border. Even during periods officially described as calmer, Israeli officials maintained that Hezbollah was trying to rebuild, reorganize and preserve the option of renewed escalation. The problem, in Israeli eyes, has never been a single barrage or a single border incident. The problem has been the continued existence of a heavily armed Iranian-backed force that can decide when the north burns and when it does not. No Israeli government that takes that assessment seriously can regard Hezbollah as a manageable nuisance. It sees Hezbollah as a structural threat.

The wider security framework on the Lebanese front has clearly decayed. The arrangements that were meant to preserve a fragile calm after earlier rounds of war no longer command real compliance. Cross-border fire, repeated strikes, violations along the frontier and the visible militarization of the border zone have exposed how much of the old order has already broken down. Civilians on both sides have once again paid the price through evacuations, displacement and the constant fear that a single exchange can become a regional war. In such conditions, Israel appears to have concluded that the age of partial fixes is over. A front that remains permanently unstable is, in practice, a front that remains strategically lost.

That is why the current phase looks less like retaliation and more like an attempt at strategic rollback. Israel is not only trying to reduce immediate threats. It appears intent on forcing a more decisive change in the balance of power. In Iran, that means pressuring the regime’s military and coercive architecture. In Lebanon, it means degrading Hezbollah so deeply that it can no longer function as Tehran’s reliable northern sword. The sequencing matters. If Iran is weakened but Hezbollah remains strong, then Tehran preserves a critical tool of future coercion. If Hezbollah is hurt but Iran’s regional system remains intact, the movement can eventually be rebuilt. Israeli strategy increasingly seems designed to avoid that half-finished outcome by hitting both centers of pressure at once.

The timing is not accidental. Hezbollah remains one of the most formidable non-state armed organizations in the region, but it is also operating in a more difficult environment than before. It has absorbed attrition, leadership losses, sustained intelligence penetration and repeated blows to its infrastructure. Its room for maneuver is narrower, its political surroundings harsher and its public narrative less secure than in periods when it could more easily present itself as the undisputed guardian of Lebanese dignity. A movement built on discipline, endurance and myth can survive a great deal of punishment. But even such movements become vulnerable when military pressure coincides with strategic overextension and domestic fatigue.

Lebanon’s internal response to the latest escalation is therefore one of the most revealing parts of the story. Instead of closing ranks around Hezbollah, state institutions and large parts of the political class have taken a markedly sharper tone, insisting that decisions of war and peace cannot continue to be made by an armed organization operating beyond full state control. For ordinary Lebanese civilians, the immediate meaning of that shift is grim rather than abstract: renewed displacement, fear of deeper incursions and the sense that the country is once again paying the price for decisions taken outside the state’s authority. That mood matters. It does not disarm Hezbollah overnight, nor does it erase the movement’s social base, military networks or capacity for coercion. But it does show that Hezbollah is confronting a deeper legitimacy problem inside Lebanon at precisely the moment Israel is escalating. In strategic terms, that is a dangerous combination for the group: external pressure and internal isolation reinforcing one another.

None of this, however, means that Israel is on the verge of an easy victory. Hezbollah remains dangerous, adaptive and deeply embedded. It has veteran fighters, decentralized capabilities, local intelligence, underground infrastructure and the ability to continue operating under heavy pressure. Southern Lebanon is not a blank map waiting to be redrawn. It is dense, political and emotionally charged terrain, where every military move carries the risk of civilian suffering, international backlash and unintended escalation. Israel may be able to damage Hezbollah severely. Turning that damage into lasting strategic irrelevance is a much harder task. The history of the region is full of campaigns that succeeded tactically but failed to settle the political question that came after them.

That is where the gamble becomes stark. If Israel is truly moving from deterrence to destruction of Hezbollah’s military relevance, of Iran’s regional reach and perhaps even of the confidence of Iran’s ruling order, it is embracing a campaign of enormous consequences. Military superiority can break command structures, logistics chains and missile stockpiles. It cannot, by itself, guarantee a stable political end state in Beirut or Tehran. A weakened Hezbollah does not automatically produce a sovereign Lebanese state capable of monopolizing force. A battered Iranian regime does not automatically yield a coherent post-crisis order. Vacuums in the Middle East have a habit of filling themselves with fresh instability.

Even so, the logic driving Israel is not difficult to understand. From Jerusalem’s perspective, the old equilibrium had become intolerable long before this latest escalation. That equilibrium meant a northern border that could never truly normalize, an Iranian regional network that could always activate multiple fronts and a deterrence model that forced Israel to live under the shadow of future wars it did not choose. Once Hezbollah entered the widening confrontation to shield Iran’s position, the case for a narrower Israeli response became much harder to sustain. In Israeli strategic thinking, the northern problem and the Tehran problem ceased to be separable. If one keeps feeding the other, both must be addressed together.

The rhetoric surrounding Iran points in the same direction. Public language from Israeli leaders has increasingly gone beyond the technical vocabulary of preemption, nuclear delay and immediate self-defense. It has moved toward the language of rupture: not merely containing Iranian power, but helping bring about the end of the order that projects it. That does not amount to a detailed roadmap for regime change, and it certainly does not ensure that such an outcome is achievable. But it does reveal the scale of current ambition. Israel no longer appears satisfied with managing the symptoms of the Iranian challenge. It seems to be reaching for the possibility of breaking its strategic center of gravity.

The phrase “final blow” therefore captures something real, even if the outcome remains uncertain. What Israel appears to want now is not only to defeat attacks in the present, but to dismantle the architecture that makes those attacks recurrent: the link between Tehran’s ruling establishment, Hezbollah’s armed power and the permanent insecurity of the northern frontier. Whether that ambition can be fulfilled is another matter. Hezbollah can be pushed back without disappearing. Iran can be struck hard without producing a stable transformation. Lebanon can resent Hezbollah more deeply and still remain too weak to impose a lasting monopoly of force. Yet the direction of travel is now unmistakable. This is no longer a war merely to contain enemies. It is an attempt to break the system that binds them.