The Middle East has entered a critical tipping point, as tensions between Iran, the United States, and Israel escalated into a complex hybrid conflict that blends traditional military operations with cyber and information warfare. The offensive, identified as Operation Epic Fury by the US and Operation Roaring Lion by Israel, demonstrates how modern hostilities can no longer be understood through conventional lenses alone.
Unlike previous confrontations, this campaign combined kinetic strikes, cyber intrusions, psychological operations, and information manipulation into a single, synchronized effort. Cyber capabilities were leveraged as a co-equal domain alongside air and missile strikes, revealing a new level of strategic integration that reshapes the dynamics of regional warfare.
Independent monitoring from Cyble Research and Intelligence Labs (CRIL) highlighted how these combined operations exposed both strengths and vulnerabilities among the actors involved.
Strategic Build-Up and Diplomatic Limitations
In the lead-up to the offensive, the United States mobilized its largest Middle East deployment since the 2003 Iraq invasion, positioning aircraft carriers, fighter squadrons, and intelligence assets near Iran’s borders.
Parallel diplomatic initiatives in Geneva offered a fleeting possibility of negotiation, as Tehran agreed to halt nuclear enrichment under IAEA oversight. However, mutual distrust, strategic imperatives, and long-standing hostilities rendered these measures ineffective, creating conditions ripe for Operation Epic Fury and Operation Roaring Lion.
Hybrid Warfare: The Cyber-Kinetic Nexus in the Middle East
The campaign’s defining feature was the integration of cyber operations with kinetic attacks. Iran’s domestic internet infrastructure was reportedly reduced to 1–4% functionality, as state media, government services, and military communications came under sustained digital assault. Popular services, mobile applications, and religious platforms were compromised, while government websites displayed defaced content intended to undermine Tehran’s official narratives.


Pre-existing cyber actors, including MuddyWater, APT42 (Charming Kitten), Prince of Persia/Infy, UNC6446, and CRESCENTHARVEST, amplified the conflict through phishing, data theft, and server exploitation. Simultaneously, psychological operations extended into Israel, delivering threatening messages about fuel shortages and national ID numbers.
Retaliation and Regional Cyber Convergence
Iran’s response combined missile and drone attacks targeting Israel, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, and US military bases, causing civilian casualties and infrastructure damage, including at Dubai International Airport and an AWS cloud data center.
Hacktivist groups surged in parallel, with over 70 organizations conducting DDoS attacks, website defacements, and credential theft campaigns across multiple countries. Malicious payloads, such as a RedAlert APK mimicking Israel’s missile alert app, showcased tradecraft usually associated with state-sponsored operations.
Pro-Russian groups like NoName057(16) and Russian Legion opportunistically aligned with Iranian interests, while cybercriminal actors exploited chaos to launch ransomware and social engineering campaigns, demonstrating the convergence of ideological and financial motivations in modern hybrid warfare.
Lessons and Implications
The ongoing operations stress several key lessons for the region and global observers: cyber operations now function as coequal with kinetic action; hacktivist networks can act as force multipliers across borders; and opportunistic cybercrime thrives in environments of geopolitical uncertainty. Analysts emphasize the need for continuous vigilance, from credential monitoring and DDoS mitigation to proactive defense against emerging malware campaigns.
Operation Epic Fury and Operation Roaring Lion highlight that the current Middle East conflict extends far beyond conventional warfare. Even as Iran’s networks remain degraded, pre-positioned cyber capabilities and hacktivist activity could sustain prolonged disruption, signaling a persistent and modern threat landscape that will influence regional and global security calculations for months to come.
