The Japan Times - Strike fears rise over Iran

EUR -
AED 4.342456
AFN 74.492267
ALL 96.433258
AMD 442.923102
ANG 2.116222
AOA 1084.283752
ARS 1621.400836
AUD 1.671508
AWG 2.128364
AZN 2.003722
BAM 1.955461
BBD 2.369589
BDT 143.775039
BGN 1.948217
BHD 0.443723
BIF 3489.009011
BMD 1.182425
BND 1.493047
BOB 8.129589
BRL 6.130636
BSD 1.176496
BTN 106.994424
BWP 15.578295
BYN 3.373729
BYR 23175.524395
BZD 2.366189
CAD 1.615884
CDF 2695.928417
CHF 0.912513
CLF 0.025852
CLP 1020.798839
CNY 8.169077
CNH 8.143767
COP 4372.01538
CRC 561.502515
CUC 1.182425
CUP 31.334255
CVE 110.24586
CZK 24.229952
DJF 209.513625
DKK 7.471044
DOP 72.317445
DZD 153.251393
EGP 56.058161
ERN 17.736371
ETB 183.090513
FJD 2.627643
FKP 0.877177
GBP 0.874657
GEL 3.162938
GGP 0.877177
GHS 12.929755
GIP 0.877177
GMD 86.907336
GNF 10322.207916
GTQ 9.027433
GYD 246.107272
HKD 9.241513
HNL 31.125596
HRK 7.534644
HTG 154.213226
HUF 380.224031
IDR 19900.207937
ILS 3.683933
IMP 0.877177
INR 107.280862
IQD 1541.306337
IRR 49809.641266
ISK 144.89431
JEP 0.877177
JMD 183.318173
JOD 0.838324
JPY 182.447543
KES 151.657925
KGS 103.403187
KHR 4731.198602
KMF 494.253306
KPW 1064.192502
KRW 1707.788017
KWD 0.362603
KYD 0.980413
KZT 587.218118
LAK 25210.196732
LBP 105357.853876
LKR 364.010645
LRD 217.072313
LSL 18.953789
LTL 3.491393
LVL 0.715237
LYD 7.442708
MAD 10.788027
MDL 20.206577
MGA 5035.12583
MKD 61.629561
MMK 2483.183678
MNT 4218.566146
MOP 9.470796
MRU 47.107821
MUR 54.888529
MVR 18.280103
MWK 2040.145801
MXN 20.291946
MYR 4.599583
MZN 75.562867
NAD 18.953789
NGN 1583.479367
NIO 43.292667
NOK 11.248252
NPR 171.191279
NZD 1.97579
OMR 0.453081
PAB 1.176496
PEN 3.952031
PGK 5.131131
PHP 68.403172
PKR 328.808114
PLN 4.224673
PYG 7606.679371
QAR 4.288355
RON 5.095423
RSD 117.397632
RUB 90.400743
RWF 1718.301678
SAR 4.435866
SBD 9.512823
SCR 17.935007
SDG 711.221265
SEK 10.672394
SGD 1.495172
SHP 0.887125
SLE 28.972559
SLL 24794.854273
SOS 671.183473
SRD 44.501148
STD 24473.804275
STN 24.495851
SVC 10.294039
SYP 13077.114683
SZL 18.94771
THB 36.655755
TJS 11.147565
TMT 4.138486
TND 3.415907
TOP 2.846995
TRY 51.832293
TTD 7.963483
TWD 37.200857
TZS 3032.473592
UAH 50.923959
UGX 4235.264697
USD 1.182425
UYU 45.652074
UZS 14368.566169
VES 475.135355
VND 30757.822874
VUV 140.001092
WST 3.209604
XAF 655.843136
XAG 0.01354
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.195562
XCG 2.120396
XDR 0.815658
XOF 655.843136
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.949699
ZAR 18.939659
ZMK 10643.242744
ZMW 22.277132
ZWL 380.740275
  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.13

    +0.61%

  • BCC

    -2.2500

    82.13

    -2.74%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.8

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    25.8

    +0.89%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.8444

    59.52

    -1.42%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.96

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    90.28

    +0.01%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    97.09

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    -2.2500

    204.2

    -1.1%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.08

    +1.76%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    31.46

    +1.49%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    18.2

    +2.2%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.65

    +0.77%

  • BP

    -0.3308

    38.18

    -0.87%


Strike fears rise over Iran




For weeks, diplomacy has been moving in step with mobilisation. Now, the two are beginning to collide. In the past month, the United States has quietly assembled a posture in and around the Gulf that looks less like routine “deterrence” and more like readiness: the sort of layered force mix designed to survive first contact, sustain operations, and manage escalation if an initial strike fails to end a crisis. Israel, still bruised by the consequences of its last major exchange with Iran, has been calibrating its own preparedness—publicly insisting it will not tolerate a rebuilt Iranian nuclear capability, while privately bracing for retaliation should Washington pull the trigger.

Iran, meanwhile, is behaving like a state that believes war is plausible even as it negotiates: hardening sensitive sites, dispersing assets, projecting defiance at home and abroad, and seeking to extract concessions at the negotiating table without conceding what it regards as sovereign rights. The result is a familiar but dangerous pattern: talks under threat, force under ambiguity, and a region where a single misread signal can become irreversible.

A deadline that turns talks into an ultimatum
Diplomacy has resumed through indirect channels, with meetings hosted by regional intermediaries and later shifting to a European venue for further contacts. The core dispute remains unchanged: the United States is pressing for a far tighter ceiling on Iran’s nuclear activities—up to and including an end to enrichment—while Iran insists that any arrangement must recognise its right to a peaceful nuclear programme and deliver meaningful economic relief. The novelty is not the substance, but the tempo. Washington has been coupling the talks to a time-bound warning: an explicit window of days, not months, for Iran to accept terms. By design, such a clock does two things at once. It increases pressure on Tehran, narrowing the space for protracted bargaining. And it compresses decision-making in Washington itself, forcing the White House to choose between accepting an imperfect agreement, extending the deadline (and absorbing the political cost), or acting militarily.

That compression matters because nuclear negotiations are not purely technical. Every clause—verification access, stockpile limits, centrifuge restrictions, sequencing of sanctions relief—becomes a proxy for trust, and trust is precisely what is absent. Tehran remembers the collapse of earlier arrangements and doubts that any American undertaking will outlast political cycles. Washington, for its part, doubts that Iranian transparency will ever be sufficient to rule out a “threshold” capability—the ability to assemble a weapon quickly should a decision be taken. In such conditions, the deadline is less a diplomatic instrument than a strategic signal: it tells Iran that the United States is prepared to shift from coercion-by-sanctions to coercion-by-strike.

What “limited” could mean—and why planners prepare for more
Publicly, American language has left open the notion of a “limited” strike—an operation framed as narrow, finite, and aimed at nuclear infrastructure or enabling military systems. Privately, military planning reportedly assumes a more complicated reality: that even a restrained opening move could trigger a prolonged sequence of actions and reactions. There are practical reasons for that caution. Iran’s nuclear programme is not a single target. It is a network of facilities, capabilities, personnel, and supply chains—some above ground, others buried; some declared, others suspected. A truly “limited” strike that achieves strategic effect would need to do more than crater buildings. It would have to degrade specialised equipment, disrupt command-and-control, blunt air defences, and impede Iran’s ability to reconstitute what was lost. That logic tends to expand target lists.

Then there is the second-order problem: retaliation. Even if Tehran avoids a full-scale conventional response, it retains multiple pathways to impose costs—through missile or drone attacks on regional bases, harassment of shipping, cyber operations, or action by aligned non-state actors. A “limited” operation can therefore become weeks of force protection, counter-strikes, and crisis management, even if neither side formally declares war.

This is why Washington’s posture-building has emphasised depth rather than symbolism: carrier-based aviation to generate sustained sorties; additional combat aircraft to widen options and reduce dependence on any single base; intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance to locate mobile launchers and dispersing assets; missile defence to blunt the most predictable forms of retaliation; and logistical throughput to sustain tempo if the first wave is not the last.

The anatomy of a build-up
The US military’s regional footprint is designed for flexibility, but the current concentration has been notable in both scale and composition. Naval forces have been moving into theatre with the kind of redundancy that suggests planners are hedging: not merely “presence”, but the ability to surge, absorb attrition, and maintain operations over time. Air assets have also been repositioned, including stealth-capable platforms and supporting aircraft needed for extended operations—tankers for refuelling, early warning systems to coordinate airspace, and specialised reconnaissance to locate targets that do not stay still.

Such moves are rarely announced as preparation for attack. They are described instead as “reassurance” of allies, “deterrence” of escalation, and “defence” of regional interests. Yet the difference between deterrence and readiness is not rhetorical; it is logistical. When large quantities of equipment and personnel arrive on tight timelines, and when plans are discussed in terms of sustained operations rather than short punitive raids, it becomes harder to treat the build-up as merely precautionary.

For regional states hosting American forces, this creates a delicate dilemma. Hosting provides security guarantees; it also makes them potential targets. Some will press Washington privately to keep any operation brief. Others will press for maximal damage to Iran’s capabilities, arguing that half-measures invite future crises. Either way, their geography ties them to the outcome.

Israel’s calculus: opportunity, fear, and the problem of follow-through
Israel’s security establishment has been preparing for the possibility that the United States will strike—and that Iranian retaliation will be directed at Israel regardless of whether Israel participates in the initial blow. The expectation is not simply that missiles might fly, but that Iran would seek an outcome that restores deterrence: a demonstration that attacks on Iranian soil carry immediate regional costs.

Israel also faces a strategic paradox. It wants the Iranian nuclear programme stopped or rolled back decisively. But it also knows that partial damage can be worse than none if it leads Iran to rebuild faster, deeper, and more covertly, with domestic legitimacy reconstituted through wartime mobilisation. This is why Israeli debate often pivots on a blunt question: if the programme cannot be ended outright, what is the objective of force? Delay, degradation, or destruction? Each goal demands different levels of escalation and different tolerances for regional fallout.

In parallel, Israel has continued to articulate conditions it believes any diplomatic arrangement should meet: deep restrictions on enrichment and stockpiles; curbs on missile ranges; an end to support for armed partners across the region; and a halt to internal repression that, in Israel’s view, fuels instability and radicalisation. Iran rejects such bundling as an attempt to turn nuclear negotiations into a referendum on its entire security doctrine. Here, too, the danger is sequencing. If Washington and Israel appear aligned on maximalist demands that Iran will not accept, the “deadline” becomes not a pressure tactic but a glide path to conflict.

Iran’s counter-moves: hardening, dispersal, and a negotiating stance under fire
Iran has responded to the rising threat environment in ways consistent with a state that expects air power. Sensitive facilities have been fortified and further protected, including through physical hardening—measures intended to complicate targeting, reduce damage, and slow follow-on assessments. Such efforts are not, by themselves, proof of weaponisation; they are, however, evidence that Tehran is trying to preserve programme survivability under the assumption that strikes are possible.

At the same time, Iran has signalled that it is preparing a counterproposal in the talks—an attempt to show engagement while defending its red lines. Those red lines are widely understood in Tehran: no permanent end to enrichment; no negotiation of its ballistic missile programme; and no wholesale abandonment of regional partnerships that Iran frames as deterrence and strategic depth.

This position is sharpened by domestic vulnerability. Iran has faced significant internal unrest and a harsh state response. Under such pressure, concessions that appear imposed by foreign threats can be politically toxic. A leadership worried about legitimacy at home may therefore be more willing to endure external risk than to accept a deal portrayed as capitulation. That dynamic complicates American calculations. The more the United States emphasises coercion—deadlines, threats, military options—the more it may strengthen the internal argument in Tehran that compromise is dangerous, and that only resilience preserves sovereignty.

Why the next phase could be more dangerous than the last
The most unstable period in crises of this kind is often the final stretch before a decision—when signals are plentiful, interpretations multiply, and each side tries to shape the other’s psychology. For Washington, the danger is that a “limited” strike produces an “unlimited” problem: not regime collapse, not capitulation, but a drawn-out campaign of defence, retaliation management, and incremental escalation. For Israel, the danger is that even a successful American operation leaves Iran wounded but capable—angry enough to retaliate, intact enough to rebuild, and determined enough to push its most sensitive work further underground.

For Iran, the danger is that hardening and dispersal are interpreted as sprinting towards a threshold, prompting attack; while restraint is interpreted as weakness, inviting further coercion. Tehran’s leadership may believe that showing preparedness deters war. Washington may read the same actions as evidence that time is running out. Layered on top of these strategic dynamics is the simplest risk of all: miscalculation. Aircraft and ships operating in crowded theatres, missiles and drones on alert, proxy forces with their own incentives, and domestic political pressures that reward toughness—each increases the probability that an incident becomes a trigger.

In public, all parties still speak the language of prevention: preventing a nuclear-armed Iran, preventing regional war, preventing escalation. In practice, prevention is being pursued through instruments that can themselves create the very catastrophe they are meant to avoid. The world has been here before. The difference now is that the military pieces are moving more visibly, the timelines are shorter, and the political space for stepping back is narrower. In that environment, the question is not only whether a strike is imminent, but whether any actor still has enough room—and enough restraint—to keep it from becoming inevitable.