Israelâs audacious attack targeting Hezbollahâs leader on Friday has rattled the group, delivering its most severe blow since its founding. This has led its Iranian backers to warn that Israel has entered a dangerous phase of the conflict by altering the rules of engagement.
As Tehran watches its most prized non-state ally take a beating, questions are mounting about how it may respond.
The Jewish state significantly escalated its yearlong conflict with the group after expanding its Gaza war objectives on September 17 to include its northern front with Hezbollah. The following day, thousands of pagers used by its members exploded simultaneously, with walkie-talkies targeted the day after that. Israel then began an air assault that killed several Hezbollah commanders and led to the highest number of casualties in Lebanon in almost two decades.
And on Friday, Israel struck what it said was Hezbollahâs headquarters in the southern suburbs of Beirut, targeting its leader Hassan Nasrallah. The Israeli military has claimed that Nasrallah has been killed, but Hezbollah is yet to comment on the matter.
How much has Hezbollah been degraded?
âHezbollah has taken the biggest blow to its military infrastructure since its inception. In addition to losing weapon depots and facilities, the group has lost most of its senior commanders, and its communications network is broken,â said Hanin Ghaddar, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute and author of âHezbollahland.â
Despite its losses however, the group still retains skilled commanders and many of its most powerful assets, including precision-guided missiles and long-range missiles that could inflict significant damage to Israelâs military and civilian infrastructure, said Ghaddar. Most of those missiles havenât been deployed yet.
Since Israel stepped up its campaign, Hezbollahâs military performance âhas proven that it was able to absorb that shock and was able to bounce back and it has been striking hard at northern Israel for days now,â said Amal Saad, Hezbollah expert and lecturer in politics and international relations at Cardiff University in Wales.
On Wednesday, Israel intercepted a ballistic missile fired by Hezbollah near Tel Aviv, an unprecedented attack that reached deep into the countryâs commercial heartland. Hezbollah said it targeted the headquarters of Israelâs intelligence agency.
While Nasrallahâs targeting is unlikely to disrupt the operational continuity of the movement it is âobviously a massive, massive demoralization amongst its ranks and supporters and absolute terror which will temporarily paralyze ordinary peopleâ within the movement, said Saad.
âThat doesnât mean the organization is paralyzed,â she added. âHezbollah is an organization that was built to absorb these types of shocks⊠itâs built to be resilient and outlast individual leaders.â
Few contenders for Hezbollahâs leadership can match Nasrallahâs popularity, said Ghaddar, as he is closely associated with the groupâs âgolden days,â including the end of Israelâs occupation of southern Lebanon in 2000 and the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war, both of which were viewed as major victories for the Lebanese group.
If the groupâs leadership is truly dismantled and coordination between Iran and Hezbollah is disrupted, it could prompt Iranâs Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to take the lead, according to Ghaddar.
âThey (Iran) will have to find a way to do it themselves. But itâs not an easy option as they will (become) targets, and they donât understand Lebanon.â
Under what circumstances would Iran intervene?
Ahead of the attempt on Nasrallahâs life, Iranâs official line was that Hezbollah is capable of defending itself, even as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei acknowledged on Wednesday that Israelâs killing of the groupâs leaders was âdefinitely a loss.â
Following Fridayâs attack however, Iranâs embassy in Lebanon indicated that Tehranâs calculations might now be shifting.
âThere is no doubt that this reprehensible crime and reckless behavior represent a serious escalation that changes the rules of the game, and that its perpetrator will be punished and disciplined appropriately,â the embassy said on X.
Iranâs rationale for avoiding involvement in the conflict may no longer hold, said Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Washington DC-based Quincy Institute. âIf it becomes clear (to Iran) that Hezbollah actually cannot defend itself following the bombing in Beirut, particularly if Nasrallah himself was killed, then the Iranian justification for staying out of the war has collapsed,â he said. âAt that point, Iranâs credibility with the rest of its partners in the Axis will risk collapsing if Tehran does not react.â
Iran is likely âhorrified by the effectiveness and efficiencyâ of Israelâs attacks but despite the targeting of Hezbollahâs top leadership, Tehran may still believe the group can defend itself and dictate the terms of an eventual ceasefire, which would help the group recover, according to Farzin Nadimi, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute.
Tehran is most probably already helping Hezbollah rebuild its military command structure and providing tactical and operational advice to its leadership, he said. However, if the group nears collapse, it could âprompt a more assertive Iranian intervention,â potentially in the form of missile and drone strikes, as seen in April when Iran blamed Israel for attacking its diplomatic building in Damascus. Nadimi added that while a larger attack is unlikely, itâs not entirely out of the question.
Saad, the Hezbollah expert from Cardiff University, said an intervention by Iran would likely drag the United States into the war, noting that Tehran was âthe weakest linkâ in the conflict.
âItâs the only member of the Axis that is an actual state. All the others are non-state or quasi-state actors. So, Iran has the most to lose if it participates,â she said.
â(Iran) is a conventional armed force, it would probably not fare anywhere near as well as Hezbollah would in a war because itâs a completely different military infrastructure,â Saad noted. âHezbollah knows its terrain and adversary better than anyone else.â
Why Hezbollah matters to Iran
Since its inception 40 years ago, the Lebanese militant group has been the crown jewel of Tehranâs so-called Axis of Resistance, a group of mostly Shiite, Iran-allied Islamist militias spanning Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza and Yemen that gives Iran strategic depth against its adversaries.
As a non-Arab, Shiite state, Iran sees itself as âstrategically lonelyâ in the Middle East and therefore sees Shiites in the Sunni-dominated region âas the closest thing it has to natural allies,â Parsi said..
âFrom Tehranâs perspective, Hezbollah is central to the Axis because of its capabilities and discipline, its geographical placement, and its ideological and political proximity to Iranâs Islamic Republic,â Parsi added. âThe destruction of Hezbollah is not in the cards in my assessment, but if it were to occur, that would be an existential blow to the Axis.â
The group is essential to âmaintain a strong military component on the northern borders of Israel and keep Israel off-balance,â said Nadimi from the Washington Institute.
âIt will be important to maintain Hezbollah as a viable and resilient actor and ally,â he said. âIran has designed Hezbollah with resiliency in mind and believes they can take a lot more beating before Iran feels compelled to intervene directly.â
Iran looks to improve ties with the West
But Iran also has domestic considerations. The escalation between Hezbollah and Israel comes at a delicate time for Iranâs new reformist president, who campaigned on improving foreign relations to lift Tehran out of the isolation that has crippled its economy.
Just this week, President Masoud Pezeshkian said at the United Nations that his country is ready to engage with the West on its disputed nuclear program. He has named as his Vice President Javad Zarif, the seasoned, US-educated diplomat who became the face of Iranâs 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers, abandoned by the administration of former US President Donald Trump in 2018.
Parsi, from the Quincy Institute, said the Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7 and the subsequent escalation with Hezbollah âwere very badly timedâ for Tehran, since they ârisked prematurely bringing forward a confrontation between Iran, Hezbollah and Israel at a time that is much more strategically suitable for Israel than the Axis.â
At home, Pezeshkian must navigate between his reformist constituency, which favors detente with the West, and hardline elements within the regime that want a show of force against Israel.
On Monday, the day nearly 500 Lebanese were killed in Israeli airstrikes, Pezeshkian stated in New York that Iran was ready to âlay down arms if Israel does the same.â The remark sparked intense backlash from hardliners at home for appearing weak in front of the enemy, according to reports. His statement, along with his offer to reconcile with the West in his speech to the UN General Assembly the following day, also drew criticism in some Lebanese media.
Given the âprofound unhappiness of much of the Iranian publicâ with the regime, Pezeshkianâs priority is national reconciliation, said Parsi.
Still, if Hezbollah is seriously degraded, âTehran may face a situation in which it will conclude that war is at its doorstep whether it chooses it or not and that it is, as a result, better off responding before Hezbollah is further weakened,â he said.
Wary of Israelâs âtrapâ
He said that both Iran and Hezbollah had exercised restraint in the face of Israeli attacks, âbut now the Israelis are crossing the line, in my view, and there is every prospect of the war getting more difficult to contain.â Hezbollah was capable of defending itself, he added, but it was incumbent on the international community to step in before the situation gets âout of hand.â
Iran has yet to carry out the revenge it promised Israel after the assassination of Hamasâ political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran in July.
This week however, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that his country would not remain âindifferentâ if a full-scale war between Israel and Hezbollah erupted in Lebanon.
âWe stand with the people of Lebanon with all means,â he said at a news conference in New York ahead of a UN Security Council meeting.