At first glance, Iran appears to be pursuing increasing adventurism outside its borders in spite of US and UK efforts at deterrence.
The last few weeks have seen Iran and the myriad armed groups it supports engaged in attacks in Iraq, Syria, the Red Sea, and Pakistan, which have been met with retaliatory military action, mainly by the United States and the UK.
Both the US and the UK have used the term “deterrence” to describe their military reactions to Iran-linked attacks. The term implies that precise punishment of Iranian adventurism would stop it from increasing the scope and scale of its direct or indirect military action. But Iran and its proxies continue to engage in attacks despite the US and UK’s declared objective of deterrence.
Read more: The credibility of American deterrence in the Middle East
While this indicates that Iran does not regard US and UK deterrence as fully credible, the actions of Iran and its proxies also show that they are not as powerful as they purport to be. When a country’s or entity’s status is weak, it may engage in risky behaviour to try to hold on to its status.
Limited strikes or all-out war?
Deterrence theory in international relations says that deterrence only works if the target sees it as credible. When it comes to US interests in the Middle East, Iran knows that Israeli security is a red line. This is why Iran has not escalated its intervention in the war between Israel and Gaza to direct confrontation with Israel.