The world’s two hottest hotspots both got hotter in recent days.
A major land war on Europe’s eastern edge pitting the Russian bear against Ukrainian forces surprised everyone when Ukraine went on the offensive into Russia, while Israel’s war-at-a-distance with Iran drew much closer with Israeli assassinations of Iranian allies.
To Ukraine’s north-east, having defended a Russian invasion for the past 2.5 years, Kyiv launched an invasion of its own. It punched through a lightly defended border stretch, struck into Russian territory, claimed control on 1,000 sq.km, and embarrassed Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Likewise, in Iran, shortly after he met and congratulated the Islamic Republic’s new president, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh was killed in a house in Tehran, probably by Israel. Hours earlier, Israel killed senior Hezbollah commander Fuad Shukr in Beirut.
In both cases, the retaliation could be both imminent and formidable. The nature of these pending reprisals—and the combatants involved—will likely differ significantly, yet they are also subtly intertwined.
While separated by almost 2,000km, the politics and diplomacy involved overlaps more closely than it at first appears.
Iran’s reply to Israel
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has unequivocally vowed to avenge Haniyeh’s assassination. Iranian military advisors have been meeting loyalist factions and proxies across the Middle East to plan a coordinated retaliation.
When it comes, it will follow Tehran’s response to the bombing of its consulate in Damascus and the killing of its military leaders in early April. Then, an aerial attack unleashed more than 300 missiles and drones against Israel in a single night.