Iran doesn't need to test a nuclear bomb to shift the balance of power – it just needs the world to believe it can.
With uranium enrichment levels edging past civilian use, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) sounding the alarm, and the regime openly rejecting Western demands, Tehran is closer than ever to becoming what experts call a "threshold state" – one that possesses the technological and scientific capacity to develop nuclear weapons but has not yet done so. The consequences could be profound: a regional arms race, accidental war, or even the threat of nuclear terrorism.
After decades of deterrence and delay, the moment long feared may now be just over the horizon.
On Wednesday, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei declared that a U.S. proposal for a renewed nuclear deal was against Tehran's national interests and made clear the country would not give up uranium enrichment. His comments followed the release of an IAEA report released Saturday stating that Iran had carried out covert nuclear activities using undeclared materials at three sites currently under investigation.
"These three sites, and possibly related locations, were part of a classified nuclear program that Iran conducted until the early 2000s – partly using nuclear material that Tehran had not declared," the UN watchdog wrote in the report, which was sent to IAEA member states.
The IAEA also reported that Iran has increased its production of highly enriched uranium in recent months. The agency wrote that Iran had expanded its stockpile of uranium enriched to up to 60% between February and mid-May – a level, according to a statement from Israel's Prime Minister's Office, that exists only in countries actively pursuing nuclear weapons.
Once a country masters uranium enrichment and develops the infrastructure for weaponization, it gains the ability to produce a nuclear bomb quickly – often referred to as "breakout" capability.
North Korea offers a sobering precedent.
Though it joined the NPT in 1985, it later withdrew in 2003 and quickly moved to build and test nuclear weapons. Since then, Pyongyang has conducted six nuclear tests and now commands an arsenal that continues to alarm global powers.
Iran, no less volatile and unpredictable, may be following a similar path. And according to Dr. Liora Hendelman-Baavur, director of the Alliance Center for Iranian Studies at Tel Aviv University, it's time to seriously consider what the region could look like if Iran were to acquire the bomb: "an environment of existential anxieties and competing messianic visions."
Israel has a history of launching preemptive strikes to stop adversaries from acquiring nuclear weapons, including its 1981 attack on Iraq's Osirak reactor and the 2007 strike on Syria's nuclear facility in Deir ez-Zur. But some experts say a similar operation against Iran would be far more complicated due to its geography, advanced air defenses, and the potential for severe political fallout.
"If Iran crosses the threshold indeed, the window of attack might close," making an Iranian nuclear power a reality, Hendelman-Baavur told ALL ISRAEL NEWS (AIN).
Once Iran becomes a nuclear power, other countries in the Middle East will likely seek atomic weapons as well.
Saudi Arabia is already investing heavily in nuclear power as part of its Vision 2030 plan, claiming its goal is to diversify its energy mix and reduce reliance on fossil fuels. While Riyadh does not publicly declare a desire for nuclear weapons – and neither does Tehran – the regional implications are clear: if Iran can build the bomb, others will want the same. In a region already marked by volatility, the Middle East could become a nuclear tinderbox.
It wouldn't stop with Saudi Arabia. The United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and possibly even Turkey could feel abandoned by Western assurances and begin accelerating their nuclear capabilities. This could happen through covert programs or through ostensibly civilian nuclear deals that are later weaponized.
"There is a risk of total regional conflict or what can be termed as a nuclear spiral," Hendelman-Baavur noted.
Such a development could also dismantle the longstanding taboo on nuclear weapons – even for Israel. If Iran goes overt, Israel, which has never officially confirmed having nuclear weapons, might do the same. That shift could involve public declarations, weapons testing, or strategic signaling aimed at reshaping deterrence across the region.
At a minimum, Iran going nuclear would spark a regional buildup of conventional weapons. Countries across the Middle East are likely to invest heavily in missiles, missile defense systems, cyber warfare capabilities, and other advanced forms of weaponry. On the one hand, this arms race would raise the risk of conflict. On the other, it could paradoxically lead to a kind of stability – a mutual deterrence dynamic in which nations like Israel and Saudi Arabia avoid smaller-scale wars to prevent escalation.
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