Crisis Studies of the Islamic World

Crisis Studies of the Islamic World

Anarchy in Cyberspace: A Constructivist Analysis of Iran-Israel Cyber Rivalry

Document Type : Research Paper

Authors
1 Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Faculty of Law and Theology, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, Kerman, Iran
2 Master in Political Science, Shahid Bahonar , University of Kerman, Kerman, Iran
10.27834/CSIW.2510.596.4.40.1
Abstract
This study examines the Iran–Israel cyber rivalry through a constructivist lens, arguing that existing analyses underestimate the social and narrative logics that shape cyber conflict in Southwest Asia. While conventional approaches emphasize capabilities and deterrence, they often overlook how cyber operations acquire meaning through identity, discourse, and ontological security dynamics. Addressing this gap, the article shows that incidents such as the Stuxnet operation functioned as discursive turning points that reinforced Iran’s pre existing self perception as an active cyber actor and intensified a long standing rivalry rather than transforming its identity. Drawing on qualitative analysis of official statements, policy documents, and public narratives from 2010 to 2024, the study finds that ambiguous cyber norms enable both actors to interpret operations as challenges to implicit red lines, producing cycles of reciprocal action and narrative escalation. These patterns extend competition into domains of symbolic signaling, perception management, and the strategic production of ontological insecurity. The article contributes to cybersecurity scholarship by demonstrating how identities and social meanings structure cyber interactions, and by highlighting the need for trust building measures and norm development mechanisms to mitigate spiraling instability in the region.
Keywords

Volume 12, Issue 5 - Serial Number 40
(English issue)
Autumn 2026

  • Receive Date 05 October 2025
  • Revise Date 04 May 2026
  • Accept Date 14 May 2026