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    Headlines

    Analysis-Despite Israeli Firepower, Netanyahu Struggles for Political Gains in Iran War

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on April 14, 2026

    5 min read

    Last updated: April 14, 2026

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    Tags:FinanceBankingMarketsGeopoliticsMiddle East

    Quick Summary

    Israel’s Iran campaign, though militarily potent alongside the U.S., has not translated into political gains for Netanyahu; domestic approval remains tepid and his coalition’s election prospects unchanged.

    Despite Firepower, Netanyahu Struggles to Gain Politically in Iran War

    Netanyahu’s Political and Military Challenges in the Iran War

    By Samia Nakhoul and Maayan Lubell

    DUBAI, April 14 (Reuters) - The Iran war was meant to deliver a defining victory over Tehran that would secure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's place in history. More than six weeks into the conflict, he has been unable to translate military might into political gain.

    Despite Israel's overwhelming firepower, its enemies across every front have been weakened but not neutralised. Even after heavy Israeli-U.S. airstrikes and the loss of senior leaders, Iran remains intact and defiant.

    Tehran's nuclear stockpiles endure, its missile capability is now proven and it holds sway over the Strait of Hormuz, the artery for a fifth of global oil flows.

    Palestinian Islamist militant group Hamas has not been disarmed or dismantled in Gaza, and Iran-backed Hezbollah continues to fire rockets at northern Israel from Lebanon.

    Strategic Failures and Political Fallout

    "Netanyahu is not winning," said Danny Citrinowicz, a senior researcher on Iran at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies. "This war is a strategic failure. There is a gap between what he promised at the start of the campaign and where we ended up."

    Netanyahu's Approval Ratings Fall

    Netanyahu, 76, is paying a political price for a military campaign launched with U.S. President Donald Trump that has failed to deliver a decisive outcome, political analysts in the region say.

    Netanyahu's approval ratings have slipped and, with legislative elections due by late October, the political risks he faces are rising.

    Netanyahu's office did not respond to a Reuters request for comment for this article. The prime minister has criticised those who he said were diminishing Israel's achievements in Iran, saying Israel has emerged stronger and Iran weaker.

    "There are massive achievements here. This is a historic change. We crushed the nuclear program. We crushed the missiles. We crushed the regime," he said in a statement on Saturday.

    At the start of the war, Netanyahu told Iranians they would be "called upon to take to the streets" and topple their clerical rulers. Security officials have since grown increasingly skeptical such an outcome will materialise any time soon, a senior Israeli military official said.

    Two Israeli officials told Reuters the initial expectation had been for a swift operation to "finish the job" in three weeks. The war has instead expanded into a wider confrontation with regional and global implications.

    Military Power Versus Political Outcomes

    Superior Airpower

    Aviv Bushinsky, a former Netanyahu adviser, said the war on Iran had initially restored Netanyahu’s standing, which had been damaged by the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, that led to the Gaza war.

    In the early stages of the Iran war, his hardline posture towards Hamas and Hezbollah resonated with parts of the Israeli public, but polls show his ratings have slipped since then.

    An April 11 survey by Hebrew University's Agam Labs found only 10% of Israelis viewed the war as successful, while support for Netanyahu was at 34%, down from 40% at the start of the war. More than half rated his leadership as poor or very poor.

    Political analysts in the region say that although the military campaign built almost entirely on airpower has been tactically impressive and produced operational gains, it has not compounded into a coherent and durable strategic endgame.

    Reliance on Targeted Assassinations

    "There is this idea that F-15s and F-35s (fighter jets) can shape or remake the Middle East - that if you kill enough Iranian leaders, the regime will fall," said Citrinowicz. "It’s a flawed assumption, and the cost of it keeps getting higher every time."

    Bushinsky also questioned the value of Israel’s reliance on targeted assassinations although Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was among those killed in such strikes.

    "There is always someone who replaces them," Bushinsky said. "It wakes the bear, it doesn’t kill it."

    Israeli officials and a Western source said Netanyahu had been informed of a ceasefire plan that was agreed last week only when it was in its final stages. The Western source said Netanyahu had been angered by being left out of the process.

    The prime minister has sought since then to counter any perception that he was sidelined in the Pakistan-brokered talks, and on Tuesday issued a statement saying U.S. Vice President JD Vance had called him from his plane to brief him on the talks.

    Netanyahu has also launched a campaign to convince voters the war has been worth the cost.

    The war effort has run up about $11.5 billion in budgetary costs, with a large share spent on defence, Israel's finance ministry said on Sunday.

    Ongoing Regional Instability

    Genie Out of the Bottle

    Netanyahu’s dilemma, diplomats in the region say, is likely to deepen in the absence of decisive military victories, with security problems remaining for Israel in Gaza and the Israel-occupied West Bank, and the conflict with Lebanon continuing.

    Netanyahu could seek to block any immediate diplomatic breakthrough in the war with Iran, calculating that a U.S.–Iran agreement would exacerbate his political troubles, regional diplomats say.

    Netanyahu's office did not immediately respond when asked for comment on this assertion.

    Israel has said it would accept a deal that curbs Iran’s missile and nuclear programmes and removes enriched uranium.

    The war has crossed a critical threshold for Washington, experts on Iran say, with Iran realising it can survive a conflict with the U.S. and threaten its enemy by attacking Gulf infrastructure and controlling the Strait of Hormuz.

    "You can't put the genie back in the bottle," Citrinowicz said of Iran's control of the strait. "The Iranians feel strengthened now, they feel emboldened and they want much more than they were offered in previous talks."

    The biggest losers, said Aaron Dav

    References

    • Survey finds public trust in Netanyahu stayed low, at 40%, even in light of Iran war | The Times of Israel
    • Israeli public overwhelmingly back war on Iran | The National
    • Massive bombardments, reservists called up: Israel prepares to increase its military budget

    Table of Contents

    • Netanyahu’s Political and Military Challenges in the Iran War
    • Strategic Failures and Political Fallout

    Key Takeaways

    • •Despite impressive military action, Netanyahu’s approval rating remains around 40–50% and his coalition lacks majority support in polls, indicating weak political payoff. (timesofisrael.com)
    • •Public support for the Iran war is high—over 90% among Jewish Israelis—but this hasn’t improved Netanyahu’s political standing or altered the electoral balance. ()

    Frequently Asked Questions about Analysis-Despite Israeli firepower, Netanyahu struggles for political gains in Iran war

    1How has the Iran war impacted Netanyahu's approval ratings?

    Netanyahu's approval ratings have slipped from 40% at the start of the war to 34%, with more than half rating his leadership as poor or very poor.

    2What are the main strategic outcomes of the Iran war for Israel?

    Israel's military actions weakened but did not neutralize its enemies. Iran's nuclear and missile capabilities persist, and regional threats remain.

  • Netanyahu's Approval Ratings Fall
  • Military Power Versus Political Outcomes
  • Superior Airpower
  • Reliance on Targeted Assassinations
  • Ongoing Regional Instability
  • Genie Out of the Bottle
  • thenationalnews.com
  • •Israel’s defense spending has surged, with over 30 billion shekels added in March 2026 to a 142 billion-shekel budget, reflecting long-term fiscal strain without yielding political dividends for Netanyahu. (lemonde.fr)
  • 3Did Israeli military actions bring about changes in the region?

    Air strikes and targeted assassinations produced operational gains but failed to achieve a substantial strategic shift or a decisive victory.

    4Is the Iranian regime likely to fall after these operations?

    Security officials and analysts are skeptical the Iranian regime will collapse soon, despite heavy strikes and leadership losses.

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