Benjamin Netanyahu held his first press conference since Operation Epic Fury began on 28 February. Asked about Mojtaba Khamenei — appointed Supreme Leader days earlier — and Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem, he replied: "I wouldn't take out a life insurance policy on any of the leaders of the terror organisations."
The statement extends a documented pattern. On 7 March, the IDF posted in Farsi that it would "pursue every person who seeks to appoint a successor," and Defence Minister Katz stated the new leader would be "a certain target for assassination, no matter his name or where he hides" . Israel subsequently called Mojtaba Khamenei a "tyrant" like his father . The elder Khamenei was killed in the opening strikes of 28 February. Israel has now issued implicit or explicit threats against named adversary leaders three times in this war — rhetoric that, regardless of operational intent, narrows the space for any negotiated outcome by making personal survival a precondition for Iran's leadership to engage.
But Netanyahu's press conference also contained something his government has not previously conceded: he acknowledged he did not know whether the Iranian government would fall. regime collapse is Israel's stated war objective — Katz has said as much explicitly. If the government prosecuting the war cannot guarantee the objective, the war's theory of victory is an aspiration, not a plan. The concession arrived on the same day Mojtaba Khamenei's first public statement confirmed the Hormuz blockade would continue and referenced opening "other fronts." The IRGC pledged "complete obedience" to the new leader within hours of his appointment .
The Council on Foreign Relations assessed that with Russian and Chinese diplomatic cover, IRGC institutional loyalty, and no civilian political figure capable of overriding him, Mojtaba Khamenei holds the minimum viable legitimacy base to sustain the war effort regardless of military outcome . Netanyahu's hedging suggests Israeli intelligence may share that assessment. Two weeks into a war sold as decisive, the prime minister is managing expectations downward — publicly, and at a press conference he chose to hold.
