After 12 days of Israel-US-Iran war, what has changed?

Within hours of the end of the 12-day war that Israel launched against Iran – which included unprecedented U.S. strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities – all sides raced to declare victory, with blustery bombast.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that Israel had “achieved a historic victory, which will stand for generations.” Israel had removed two existential threats, he said, of “annihilation by nuclear weapons and … by 20,000 ballistic missiles.”

President Donald Trump said the one night of American strikes “totally obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program and set it back “decades,” not just months, as initial intelligence reports suggested. The first-ever combat use of 30,000-pound bunker-buster munitions “ended the war,” he said, comparing them to the atomic bombs dropped by the United States on Japan to conclude World War II.

Why We Wrote This

Starkly different narratives about the Israel-Iran war’s results point to multiple unresolved issues and underlying tensions that remain. A central question is whether postwar diplomacy, if and when it resumes, returns to square one.

And supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – who hid in a bunker throughout the conflict – on Thursday issued a video saying Iran’s “victory” had “delivered a heavy slap to the face of America.” The U.S. intervened only to prevent Israel’s “annihilation,” he asserted, and he ridiculed Mr. Trump’s demand that Iran surrender, saying it “will never happen.” The well-practiced propagandists of the Islamic Republic even created a Lego-style victory video, which portrayed Iran’s missiles as sending Israelis running for their lives into rat-infested shelters, before striking their strategic targets and melting a plastic Israeli flag with flames.

A U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit stealth bomber takes off during Operation Midnight Hammer, the U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities, at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, June 2025.

The starkly different narratives about the war’s results point to several unresolved issues and underlying tensions that remain. They also suggest mismatched expectations that are likely to influence future decisions about Iran’s nuclear program and security across the Middle East.

Indeed, analysts say that while the shooting may be stopping, for now, the conflict is far from over. If so, what has changed?

Whither diplomacy now?

Among key uncertainties is the fate of Iran’s stockpile of 400 kilograms (880 pounds) of uranium enriched to 60% purity – a short technical step from weapons-grade – which Iran says it successfully moved before it was attacked.

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