The June 2025 war between Israel and Iran captured Turkey’s full attention, not merely as a major regional conflict, but as the first live trial of post‑October 7, 2023-era modern warfare. It combined cyberattacks, air strikes, psychological operations, and diplomatic maneuvers into a cohesive aggression model. Turkish experts recognised it not just as a conflict between enemies, but as a warning sign for the volatile region surrounding Turkey.
Turkey’s Comprehensive Analysis
Turkish security institutions, led by the National Intelligence Academy, dissected the war’s implications through its in‑depth report, “The 12‑Day War and Lessons for Turkey”. Strategic areas of focus:
- Israel’s Multi-Domain Superiority:
The conflict opened with surprise airstrikes using over 200 aircraft—including F‑35s, F‑15s, and F‑16s—backed by drones and elite units. Cyber infiltration and targeted assassinations crippled Iran’s air defences within 72 hours. Even U.S. B‑2 bombers participated in strikes on buried nuclear sites. - Iran’s Response and Limitations:
Tehran deployed hypersonic missiles and drones, but most were intercepted by Israeli air defence systems. Some missiles did strike Israeli cities like Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Beersheba, highlighting vulnerabilities on both sides. - Digital and Psychological Warfare:
Israel hacked Iranian systems, issued deceptive alert messages, and manipulated elite communications. Iran retaliated with deepfakes, propaganda bots, and spam campaigns. Nationwide cyberattacks disrupted banking, disabled ATMs, and saw $81 million stolen from Iran’s Nobitex crypto platform. - Integrated Operational Layers:
The war underscored the importance of combining aerial dominance, electronic warfare, cyber capabilities, and diplomatic leverage. Israeli planes—equipped with systems like Elisra SPS‑3000, PAWS radar warning, and Elta SATCOM—enabled real-time intelligence and jamming efforts.
Lessons for Turkey: National Readiness Imperative
The Academy’s report distilled several priority action areas for Ankara:
1. Strengthening Air Power & Air Defence
Despite advances in drone technology, Turkey was urged to modernise its conventional fighter fleet and integrate manned‑unmanned coordination. Key recommendations included procuring multi‑tiered air defence and developing hypersonic missile capabilities.
2. Upgrading Cybersecurity & Intelligence Resilience
The conflict demonstrated that cyber and digital manipulation can rapidly paralyse national systems. Turkey is advised to invest in defensive cyber infrastructure, offensive capabilities, and routine anti‑espionage audits, particularly within defence industries.
3. Enhancing Civil Defence Infrastructure
Iran’s high civilian death toll—attributed to weak early warning systems and lack of shelters—contrasted with Israel’s robust network that limited casualties to 31. Turkey must build broad early alert networks, community shelters, and integrate civilian readiness into national defence planning.
4. Protecting Critical Leadership & Institutions
The war exposed the lethality of precision targeting of leadership and infrastructure. The report calls for protective air defences around key installations and secured protocols to shield senior figures and strategic sites.
5. Fostering Societal Cohesion and Tactical Preparedness
Strategic stability depends not just on military might, but on social resilience. Efforts such as the “Turkey without Terror” initiative are highlighted as vital in preventing internal fractures that would compromise wartime defence.
6. Elevating Strategic Vigilance and Diplomatic Flexibility
Maintaining mediation roles—especially between Iran and the U.S.—is seen as essential. Turkey is advised to stay alert to regional disruptions, strengthen ties with Iraq, Azerbaijan, and Syria, and prepare for all contingencies while pursuing diplomatic options.
Additional Insight: Mobilising Society for Intelligence
The Academy’s broader scope even recommends cultivating a grassroots “intelligence culture” across Turkish society. Neighbourhood watch systems, local law enforcement, and citizens—including children—are seen as potential information assets in future hybrid warfare scenarios.
Erdogan’s Directive: Boosting Deterrence
In response, President Erdoğan recently declared plans to accelerate domestic missile production—focusing on medium and long-range systems—to close the capability gap with military powers like Israel and the U.S.
Strategic Summary
The March 2025 Iran–Israel war is viewed by Turkish strategists as a catalyst for a comprehensive defence overhaul. The Turkish National Intelligence Academy warns that this conflict model may soon target Ankara. Its message is clear: Turkey must transform its defence posture from reactive to anticipatory, grounded in air defence, cyber resilience, civil readiness, societal cohesion, and strategic diplomacy.