Try GOLD - Free
Tehran will wreak cold and calculated revenge on Israel
The Independent
|June 14, 2025
Reeling from the final stage in Israel’s long-running campaign to knock out its nuclear capabilities, Iran has retaliated with a modest flock of drones that have been easily swatted aside. That is dangerous for everyone else.

Launching 100 unmanned aircraft against the Jewish state after three top commanders, air defences, nuclear facilities and missile launch sites were destroyed is a sign that Iran’s capacities for conventional revenge have already been degraded.
So, Tehran will use hybrid warfare to strike back against Israel and her allies.
The most obvious targets are steaming through the Arabian Gulf. Oil tankers, carrying the lifeblood of global industry through the narrow choke points of the Gulf, have been struck with mines in “mysterious” assaults by Iranian commandos over recent years. These have been a rehearsal for retaliation against Israeli attacks that Israel has said were coming.
For years, Iran’s top leadership has described the Jewish state as a “cancer” that needed to be “cut out” of the Middle East and should be annihilated.
Iran created Hezbollah in Lebanon, as a proxy force to maintain pressure on Israel, backed Hamas in Gaza and on the West Bank, sent money, technicians and missiles to the Houthis of Yemen, and dispatched squads of assassins around the world to threaten its critics.
Israel’s campaign in Gaza against Hamas has evolved into a programme to drive the Palestinian population out of the enclave. But Israel’s campaigns everywhere else have, for years, been deliberately shaping the battlefield for the operation against Iran’s nuclear programme.
Over the past 12 months, Israel has eviscerated Hezbollah with bombs hidden in pagers, airstrikes and a ground invasion of Lebanon. It continues to target Hezbollah supply routes and Iranian advisers in Syria.

This story is from the June 14, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent

The Independent
Sitcom has sweetness and charisma but lacks laughs
Back in the 1990s, Ferran Adrià, head chef at the three-Michelin-starred El Bulli, pioneered a new type of cooking, which he referred to as “deconstructed cuisine”. In this revolution, a salad or sandwich was no longer a salad or sandwich; its ingredients were deconstructed and rebuilt in novel and interesting ways.
3 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
The Tories must unite to stop Farage from entering No 10
When the Second World War ended, the universal view was that it must never be allowed to happen again.
3 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
‘Creativity helps to fend off the darker angels always hanging around the corner’
Rufus Wainwright talks to Jude Rogers about life under Donald Trump and why he'll never mention Brexit again
6 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
The Doncaster De La Hoya risks it all against the beast
After reinvigorating his career, Dave Allen faces a stern test against 6ft 7in Arslanbek Makhmudov
3 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
CONTINENTAL SHIFT
Nigerian Modernism at the Tate Modern presents a jubilant panorama, whether visceral or playful
5 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
Protesters must not use Jews like me as a punching bag
When I hear the words “October 7”, I am aware of the visceral effect on my body.
3 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
Starmer chases economic growth on India trade trip
Sir Keir Starmer will resist growing demands from British business chiefs for more visas for highly skilled workers from India, he said yesterday as he flew to Mumbai for a trade trip. Opening up visas for Indian workers to come to the UK “isn't part of the plan”, he said.
3 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
Would this one tweak stop passport validity heartache?
Q You've just covered another story of an airline turning people away wrongly because staff got the rules on passport validity wrong.
1 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
Not everything in the 1990s was Absolutely Fabulous
Generation Z look back on the era of Alexander McQueen and Britpop with envy. But, writes retail guru Mary Portas, male power structures still held sway - and bullying was rife
5 mins
October 08, 2025

The Independent
Iron grip: why can't Tories turn the page on Thatcher?
Visitors to the Conservative Party conference have been struck by the ubiquity of one former Conservative leader - Margaret Thatcher.
3 mins
October 08, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size