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Rising Lion: Israel’s Bold Move Against Tehran

Kyle Moran’s op-ed exposes how Israel’s Operation Rising Lion dealt a crushing blow to Iran’s nuclear plans, shifting the Middle East’s future in a game-changing strike.

Kyle Moran

Jun 18, 2025 - 12:34 PM

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Israel’s Operation Rising Lion

Israel’s ongoing air campaign against Iran is not merely a tactical reprisal, it marks a strategic watershed moment in the Middle East. Unlike previous exchanges between Tehran and Jerusalem, Operation Rising Lion is broader in scope and ambition, aiming to reshape the regional balance of power and neutralize a mounting existential threat.

Reports indicate that the Iranian regime is under severe strain following the elimination of key leadership figures and sustained military pressure. With U.S. President Donald Trump demanding “unconditional surrender,” Tehran faces a narrowing set of options. Even if the regime survives through emergency negotiations, the damage to its nuclear infrastructure appears to be decisive.

Over 200 Israeli fighter jets struck more than 100 high-value targets across Iran, including the uranium enrichment site at Natanz, missile factories, and nuclear research facilities. These strikes laid bare the fragility of Iran’s vaunted air-defense systems, which failed to mount an effective response. As of this writing, Israeli air superiority reportedly extends over multiple Iranian cities, including the capital.

Preempting the Nuclear Umbrella

Operation Rising Lion was not merely about degrading Iran’s capabilities, it was a deliberate move to prevent Tehran from crossing the nuclear threshold. Iran had long sought to follow the “North Korea model”: achieving nuclear weapons capability to gain impunity for regional aggression, knowing full well that such deterrence could shield it from meaningful retaliation. This path, if left unchallenged, would have dramatically escalated global and regional insecurity.

A nuclear-armed Iran would pose a far graver danger than North Korea. Unlike Pyongyang, which threatens primarily its immediate neighbors, Iran is the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism and explicitly seeks Israel’s destruction. Under a nuclear shield, Iranian proxies such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis would gain unprecedented freedom to operate across the Middle East, severely limiting the West’s ability to deter or punish Iranian aggression.

Critics may cite the UN Charter’s prohibition on the use of force, but when confronted with an existential nuclear threat from a regime intent on your annihilation, preemptive strikes can be credibly framed as acts of legitimate self-defense under international law.

A Regional Realignment

The effects of Operation Rising Lion are already rippling through the region. Despite public condemnations, several Arab states have quietly cooperated. Syria’s new leadership has reportedly granted Israeli jets access to its airspace, and Jordan has intercepted Iranian missile launches over its territory. These quiet actions speak louder than diplomatic statements, they reveal a shifting consensus about who truly threatens regional stability.

Whether or not the Iranian regime endures, the trajectory of its nuclear ambitions has been decisively altered. In blocking Iran’s bid to become the “North Korea of the Middle East,” Israel may have opened the door to a more stable regional order, and a renewed chance at strategic clarity.

Diplomacy’s Failure, Israel’s Opening

Israel’s success in Operation Rising Lion hinged on a rapidly narrowing window of Iranian vulnerability. Before the strikes, Tehran found itself more isolated and exposed than at any point in recent years. Since October 7th, Iran had suffered setbacks across its “Axis of Resistance”, from Gaza to Lebanon and Syria, undermining its regional influence. Compounding this, Israeli strikes last fall severely degraded Iran’s Russian-supplied S-300 air defense systems, leaving critical infrastructure virtually undefended.

This window, however, was never guaranteed to stay open. Iran had already begun efforts to repair its damaged air defenses and accelerate deployment of its domestically produced Bavar-373 system, which it claims surpasses the Russian systems in capability. Had these upgrades come online in time, Israel’s freedom of maneuver would have sharply diminished.

Meanwhile, the international community remained mired in the illusion that diplomacy alone could defuse the crisis. As with the 2015 JCPOA agreement, Iran used negotiations not to reach resolution, but to stall for time, making just enough concessions to prolong talks while quietly edging closer to nuclear breakout.

Even as Tehran advanced its program, Western powers clung to failed diplomatic frameworks. Days before the strikes, Iran was reportedly preparing to reject the latest U.S. proposal as “unacceptable.” One Iranian diplomat told Reuters that the nuclear committee found the offer “completely one-sided,” accusing Washington of trying to force a “bad deal.” Simultaneously, an IAEA report circulated among member states revealed that Iran’s stockpile of uranium enriched to 60%, just below weapons-grade, had grown to 408.5 kg, enough for roughly nine nuclear bombs if further enriched.

The core problem with diplomacy was not its intent, but its effect. Every extended deadline and carefully worded communiqué gave Tehran what it needed most: time and legitimacy. The longer the world maintained the illusion of constructive dialogue, the more Iran was able to accelerate its weapons program while appearing to act in good faith.

The New Middle East and Israel’s Decisive Role

Israel acted while the world’s diplomats hesitated, recognizing that stopping Iran’s nuclear ambitions required bold and immediate intervention. Though many global leaders may publicly condemn the strikes, privately they are likely relieved that someone else made the hard decision for them.

Waiting for elusive diplomatic breakthroughs in the hope of “peace in our time,” to borrow a phrase, would have invited far greater catastrophe. Iran’s pattern of using negotiations to buy time while quietly advancing its nuclear capabilities was well established. Every passing month allowed Tehran to creep closer to the bomb, and to restore its crippled air defenses. By acting now, Israel seized a fleeting window of vulnerability and likely averted a far deadlier future. The current risks, serious as they are, pale in comparison to the threat of a nuclear-armed regime openly committed to destabilizing the region.

We are witnessing the birth of a new Middle East, one in which Tehran’s threats sound increasingly hollow, its proxies are on the defensive, and the specter of an Iranian bomb no longer looms over every diplomatic table. Much of this is thanks to Israel’s clarity of vision and timing. That fact should not just be acknowledged, it should be commended.

 

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Kyle Moran

Kyle Moran is a political commentator specializing in international affairs and national security. He graduated from the University of Rhode Island, and his work has been published widely from RealClearPolitics to the Washington Examiner. 

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