The Prague Post - Iran and the holy War risk

EUR -
AED 4.233551
AFN 73.201043
ALL 96.095128
AMD 431.675517
ANG 2.06315
AOA 1057.091197
ARS 1653.403273
AUD 1.64817
AWG 2.074988
AZN 1.956396
BAM 1.939515
BBD 2.332322
BDT 140.232563
BGN 1.899358
BHD 0.437066
BIF 3436.545328
BMD 1.152771
BND 1.483822
BOB 7.923472
BRL 6.071873
BSD 1.158049
BTN 105.316728
BWP 15.715666
BYN 3.407747
BYR 22594.311075
BZD 2.329017
CAD 1.563987
CDF 2562.034227
CHF 0.900579
CLF 0.026878
CLP 1061.31026
CNY 7.950373
CNH 7.982015
COP 4349.658492
CRC 552.942276
CUC 1.152771
CUP 30.548431
CVE 109.346889
CZK 24.422028
DJF 206.211431
DKK 7.470238
DOP 68.945021
DZD 153.36529
EGP 58.475118
ERN 17.291565
ETB 179.616703
FJD 2.548199
FKP 0.859752
GBP 0.866189
GEL 3.141275
GGP 0.859752
GHS 12.406828
GIP 0.859752
GMD 84.726795
GNF 10154.203265
GTQ 8.797136
GYD 239.89576
HKD 9.009649
HNL 30.650689
HRK 7.534515
HTG 151.917457
HUF 395.4809
IDR 19574.051125
ILS 3.56582
IMP 0.859752
INR 106.404162
IQD 1516.971268
IRR 1522464.624599
ISK 145.098845
JEP 0.859752
JMD 181.354678
JOD 0.817333
JPY 182.96147
KES 148.084811
KGS 100.810008
KHR 4646.957604
KMF 488.774373
KPW 1037.484094
KRW 1721.536445
KWD 0.35448
KYD 0.965045
KZT 572.136625
LAK 24797.234933
LBP 103699.912871
LKR 360.260959
LRD 209.262963
LSL 19.369885
LTL 3.403833
LVL 0.697299
LYD 7.379144
MAD 10.693514
MDL 20.028074
MGA 4822.261909
MKD 61.126761
MMK 2421.395884
MNT 4113.316453
MOP 9.326965
MRU 46.343588
MUR 54.639997
MVR 17.821707
MWK 2008.02391
MXN 20.722943
MYR 4.571319
MZN 73.658282
NAD 19.369801
NGN 1604.461516
NIO 42.613803
NOK 11.105006
NPR 170.181231
NZD 1.961042
OMR 0.449088
PAB 1.146672
PEN 3.949538
PGK 4.987489
PHP 68.658825
PKR 323.461508
PLN 4.295611
PYG 7576.442328
QAR 4.181491
RON 5.090683
RSD 117.556009
RUB 92.143974
RWF 1689.058228
SAR 4.346164
SBD 9.274253
SCR 16.107817
SDG 693.388621
SEK 10.69534
SGD 1.47878
SHP 0.864877
SLE 28.271761
SLL 24173.030174
SOS 660.600538
SRD 43.40932
STD 23860.03171
STN 24.536844
SVC 10.13217
SYP 127.550594
SZL 19.375262
THB 37.033343
TJS 11.024931
TMT 4.046226
TND 3.368814
TOP 2.775596
TRY 50.81622
TTD 7.846748
TWD 36.722103
TZS 2959.451158
UAH 50.601802
UGX 4231.47124
USD 1.152771
UYU 45.111232
UZS 13983.589396
VES 490.091363
VND 30312.112741
VUV 136.706914
WST 3.159149
XAF 656.952012
XAG 0.013932
XAU 0.000226
XCD 3.115421
XCG 2.087025
XDR 0.81703
XOF 656.949158
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.935292
ZAR 19.397643
ZMK 10376.320368
ZMW 22.389814
ZWL 371.191783
  • RIO

    -0.6200

    90.21

    -0.69%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    57.87

    -1.24%

  • CMSC

    -0.1050

    23.185

    -0.45%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    89.86

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    26.06

    +0.31%

  • BP

    1.1400

    40.44

    +2.82%

  • BCC

    -1.9600

    75.35

    -2.6%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.2

    -0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.7600

    54.51

    -1.39%

  • RELX

    0.5000

    35.68

    +1.4%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    16.96

    -1.42%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    14.51

    -0.76%

  • AZN

    -3.3000

    194.22

    -1.7%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.57

    -1.83%


Iran and the holy War risk




For now, Iran does not appear to be launching a formal holy war. But the question is no longer rhetorical. After the bombings that turned a long shadow conflict into an open regional war, religious language has moved from symbolic background noise toward the center of state messaging. The more important issue is not whether Tehran will suddenly summon the Muslim world into a single, borderless struggle. It is whether the Islamic Republic will fuse military retaliation, political succession, proxy activation and sacred rhetoric into a broader campaign that functions like a holy war without ever formally declaring one.

The current crisis is already historic. Since the joint U.S.-Israeli attack of February 28, which killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and struck Iranian state and military targets, the conflict has spread across Israel, Lebanon, the Gulf and the energy corridors that underpin the global economy. Public death tolls inside Iran alone have climbed into the four figures. Even though international nuclear inspectors said early in the campaign that they had no indication several key nuclear installations had been hit or that radiation had spread beyond normal levels, later stages of the war clearly broadened toward oil storage, airports, command sites and urban infrastructure. This is no longer a contained deterrence exchange. It is a live contest over regime survival, regional order and strategic endurance.

That is precisely why the phrase “holy war” must be handled with care. In January, influential voices inside Iran had already warned that any attack on the Supreme Leader would amount to a declaration of war against the wider Islamic world and could require a jihad decree. That language mattered then, and it matters even more now because the red line was crossed. Tehran can plausibly argue to its own hard-line base that the highest religious and political authority in the Islamic Republic was not merely challenged but assassinated. In ideological terms, that transforms retaliation from a policy choice into a sacred obligation. In political terms, it gives hard-liners a ready-made framework for widening the war.

Yet rhetoric is not the same as doctrine, and doctrine is not the same as operational behavior. Iran’s response so far looks less like an uncontrolled call to universal religious uprising than a grim, state-directed campaign of calibrated punishment. Tehran has struck back with missiles, drones, maritime pressure and pressure on regional hosts of U.S. military power. It has also tried to impose costs on the world economy by turning the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz into instruments of leverage. This is not the behavior of a leadership abandoning strategy for blind zeal. It is the behavior of a regime trying to survive by making the war too costly, too wide and too economically dangerous for its enemies to sustain indefinitely.

That distinction matters. A genuine, formal holy war would imply a sweeping call for open-ended religious mobilization across borders, one that subordinates ordinary state interests to an all-consuming theological struggle. Iran has not done that in any clear, universal sense. It has instead behaved as a revolutionary state that uses sacred language to reinforce legitimacy, discipline supporters and justify retaliation. That model predates the current crisis. The Islamic Republic has always blended theology, nationalism, martyrdom culture, anti-Western resistance and hard security logic. The bombings have intensified that blend, but they have not erased the regime’s instinct for calculation.

The strongest evidence against an immediate full holy-war scenario is inside Iran itself. The system’s first imperative has not been global mobilization; it has been continuity. Even after decapitation strikes, the state moved to preserve command structures, delegate powers downward and push the Assembly of Experts toward selecting a successor. By March 8, that succession process had reportedly advanced to the point where a decision had been reached, even if the name had not yet been publicly revealed. That is a survival reflex. Regimes preparing for limitless religious war do not usually prioritize constitutional succession, elite cohesion and internal control. Regimes fighting for their lives do.

Iran’s regional behavior also shows tension between ideological fury and strategic restraint. President Masoud Pezeshkian’s apology to Gulf neighbors was extraordinary, not because it ended the war, but because it exposed the conflict inside Tehran’s own response. On one side sits the logic of escalation: punish every state that hosts U.S. forces, widen the crisis, raise oil prices, frighten shipping markets and prove that the bombardment of Iran cannot remain geographically contained. On the other side sits the logic of isolation avoidance: do not drive every Arab state irreversibly into the opposing camp, do not convert every neighbor into an active launchpad for anti-Iran operations, and do not make regime survival impossible by fighting the entire region at once.

This internal contradiction is one reason the phrase “holy war” can mislead. What is unfolding is more dangerous in practical terms and more limited in formal terms. Iran may never issue a clean, universal call for a civilizational war against all enemies of Islam, yet it can still encourage clerical sanction, mobilize militias, inspire cross-border attacks, bless cyber retaliation, empower covert cells and unleash proxy violence under a sacred frame. That would be a hybrid escalation: not a single global summons, but a diffuse religious legitimization of a long, dirty regional war. For civilians, ports, airports, desalination plants, shipping lanes and energy markets, the difference may feel almost academic.

The role of Iran’s allied armed networks reinforces that point. Hezbollah has entered the conflict, but not from a position of unchallenged strength. Its intervention has deepened political strain in Lebanon and highlighted how even Iran’s most loyal partners are balancing solidarity against self-preservation. Other aligned groups face similar pressures. The so-called axis can still hurt Israel, U.S. assets and regional infrastructure, but it is not a frictionless machine awaiting one theological command to move in perfect unity. The more Tehran leans on proxies, the more it reveals that its preferred method remains layered coercion, not a single dramatic declaration of holy war.

There is also a sectarian and geopolitical reality that limits the holy-war model. The Muslim world is not a single mobilizable bloc waiting for instructions from Tehran. Iran is a Shiite theocratic state with revolutionary ambitions, but its appeal across Sunni-majority states is uneven at best and sharply contested at worst. Gulf monarchies, already targeted by Iranian missiles and drones, are not natural participants in an Iranian-led sacred struggle. Many of them fear Tehran at least as much as they oppose the bombing campaign against it. That means Iran’s religious messaging may galvanize sympathizers, militants and ideological fellow travelers, but it is unlikely to unify the wider Islamic world behind one war banner.

Still, dismissing the danger would be a grave mistake. The holy-war language matters because words can widen the menu of violence. Once a conflict is framed as sacred defense rather than national retaliation alone, thresholds can drop. Assassinations, sabotage, maritime attacks, strikes on civilian-linked infrastructure and violence by semi-deniable actors all become easier to justify. A state under bombardment, mourning its supreme leader and fighting for institutional survival may decide that conventional retaliation is not enough. If Tehran concludes that it cannot win symmetrically, it may authorize a looser, more ideological pattern of warfare stretching from the Gulf to the Mediterranean and beyond.

The economic front is equally important. Iran understands that energy fear can be weaponized. Even limited disruption in the Strait of Hormuz sends shockwaves through insurance, shipping, aviation and inflation expectations worldwide. That leverage is politically valuable because it turns a military confrontation into a global pressure campaign. A formal holy war would demand maximal ideological mobilization. A survival war, by contrast, rewards selective disruption, ambiguity and controlled chaos. Tehran’s actions so far fit the second model more closely than the first.

This is why the most serious answer to the headline question is not a simple yes or no. Iran is unlikely to launch a classic holy war in the simplistic sense of a formal, total religious call to arms that instantly unites the Muslim world under its banner. But it is already moving toward something more contemporary and, in some ways, more destabilizing: a war of survival wrapped in sacred legitimacy, regional coercion and asymmetric retaliation. The bombings have not merely invited revenge. They have strengthened the argument of those in Tehran who believe compromise invites death and that only resistance sanctified by faith can preserve the system.

So the real risk is not that Iran suddenly abandons strategy for theology. The real risk is that strategy and theology fuse more tightly than before. If that fusion hardens, the war will not remain a sequence of missile exchanges and air raids. It will become a broader contest over succession, legitimacy, energy, maritime freedom, proxy warfare and the right to define resistance as a religious duty. In that environment, the phrase “holy war” may remain officially ambiguous, but its practical effects could become visible across the entire region.



Featured


Marhabaan, welcome to the UAE and Dubai!

Marhabaan, welcome to the UAE and Dubai! The "skyward striving" Dubai next to ancient desert cities. Mysterious Bedouins and magnificent mosques exist peacefully alongside futuristic cities. Discover wadis and oases, golden sandy deserts, paradisiacal beaches and Arabian hospitality. The modern and the ancient Orient united in a book for dreaming.On this journey to Dubai and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, the fairy tales of 1001 Arabian Nights meet the modern Arab world. These cascading cities enchant with their sky-high skyscrapers, fragrant souks, huge shopping centres and the ancient cultural heritage of the sheikhs.You can choose to stay in 4- or 5-star hotels with breakfast and swimming pools. You also have more options to book excursions so you can feel the magic of the East even more. If you want to do something out of the ordinary, you can spend an extra night in an enchanting hotel in the middle of the emirate's desert. Experience your own fairytale from 1001 nights and look forward to a holiday with plenty of casual extravagance in two superlative desert cities!

Trade and business at the Dubai Gold Souk

If Naif Deira is associated with a specific context, organization, or field, providing more details could help me offer more relevant information. Keep in mind that privacy considerations and ethical guidelines limit the amount of information available about private individuals, especially those who are not public figures. The Dubai Gold Souk is one of the most famous gold markets in the world and is located in the heart of Dubai's commercial business district in Deira. It's a traditional market where you can find a wide variety of gold, silver, and precious stone jewelry. The Gold Souk is known for its extensive selection of jewelry, including rings, bracelets, necklaces, and earrings, often crafted with intricate designs.Variety: The Gold Souk offers a vast array of jewelry designs, with a focus on gold. You can find items ranging from traditional to modern styles.Competitive Pricing: The market is known for its competitive pricing, and bargaining is a common practice. Prices are typically based on the weight of the gold and the craftsmanship involved.Gold and More: While gold is the primary focus, the souk also offers other precious metals such as silver and platinum, as well as a selection of gemstones.Cultural Experience: Visiting the Gold Souk provides not only a shopping experience but also a glimpse into the traditional trading culture of Dubai. The vibrant market is a popular destination for both tourists and locals.Security: The market is generally safe, and there are numerous shops with security measures in place. However, as with any crowded area, it's advisable to take standard precautions regarding personal belongings.Gold Souk is just one part of the larger Deira Souk complex, which also includes the Spice Souk and the Textile Souk. It's a must-visit for those interested in jewelry, and it reflects the rich cultural and trading history of Dubai.

Dubai: Amazing City Center, Night Walking Tour

During this excursion, we leisurely explore Dubai Downtown and Burj Khalifa in the evening, giving you the chance to witness the captivating transformation of the district as it comes alive with the vibrant glow of thousands of lights. As the sun sets, the illuminated facade of Burj Khalifa and the enchanting Dubai Fountain collaborate to produce a genuinely magical atmosphere.Dubai Downtown, also known as Downtown Dubai, is a distinguished and iconic district situated in the heart of Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It is a renowned neighborhood celebrated for its striking architecture, luxurious living, and exceptional entertainment options. At the core of Downtown Dubai stands the Burj Khalifa, a towering skyscraper that holds the title of the world's tallest man-made structure and serves as an emblem of modern Dubai.Burj Khalifa: The focal point of Downtown Dubai, Burj Khalifa, is famous for its groundbreaking height, reaching an impressive 828 meters (2,722 feet). Designed by architect Adrian Smith, its distinctive Y-shaped design encompasses a mix of residential, commercial, and hotel spaces.Dubai Mall: Adjacent to Burj Khalifa is the Dubai Mall, one of the largest shopping malls globally, featuring an extensive array of retail outlets, from high-end boutiques to international brands. The mall also provides various dining options, and entertainment attractions like an indoor ice rink and an aquarium, and hosts the mesmerizing Dubai Fountain.Dubai Fountain: Located just outside the Dubai Mall, the Dubai Fountain is a captivating attraction that presents a nightly spectacle of water, music, and light, captivating visitors with its perfectly synchronized performances.Emaar Boulevard: Stretching through Downtown Dubai, this boulevard is adorned with restaurants, cafes, and shops, making it a popular spot for leisurely strolls, dining, and people-watching.Luxury Living: Downtown Dubai boasts numerous upscale residential buildings and hotels, making it an appealing locale for those seeking a sophisticated urban lifestyle.Cultural Attractions: The Dubai Opera, an iconic cultural venue within the district, hosts a diverse range of performances, including opera, ballet, concerts, and theater productions.Transportation: Downtown Dubai is well-connected through public transportation, including the Dubai Metro, facilitating easy access to other parts of the city.In summary, Downtown Dubai is a dynamic and vibrant district that stands as a testament to Dubai's modernity and grandeur. It seamlessly combines architectural wonders with shopping, entertainment, and cultural offerings, creating a truly extraordinary destination.