Despite weeks of intense strikes and escalating war, Israeli officials are now acknowledging something many analysts are beginning to say quietly:

Iran’s government may not fall anytime soon.
According to reporting by Reuters, Israeli officials have told diplomats there is no certainty the war will lead to the collapse of Iran’s ruling system.
Why this matters
When the conflict began, leaders in Israel suggested military pressure could create conditions for Iranians to rise up against their government.
But so far, that has not happened.
Even after heavy airstrikes and the killing of key Iranian leaders, including Ali Khamenei, there has been no large-scale uprising inside Iran, according to officials and intelligence assessments.
Why protests are not happening
Several factors appear to be holding things in place:
- Fear of government crackdown on protests
- National unity during wartime
- Security forces such as the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) maintaining control
Officials say many Iranians who oppose the government may simply be waiting for the war to end before any protest movement can re-emerge.
The bigger question now
This changes how many observers see the war.
If the government in Iran survives despite the bombing campaign, the conflict may end without the political change some leaders expected.
Military analysts say weakening Iran’s military capabilities may be a more realistic goal than regime change, which historically can take years rather than weeks.
What the world is watching
For now, the war continues. Oil markets remain tense. Global governments are watching closely.
But one message is becoming clearer. Wars can destroy infrastructure quickly. Changing governments is a very different story.

