Like Michael Kohl, I believe purely syntactic tags are by and large superfluous. In the case of foreach, though, there is a bit more than mere syntax involved, to the extent it is relevant to discuss iteration over a data structure as a separate subconcept of iteration in general. The foreach tag wiki, language agnostic as it is, fits that interpretation:
foreach is a looping construct that executes a given piece of code for each element in a list/collection/array. In contrast to a for loop, the foreach loop doesn't require the coder to maintain a counter variable to avoid off-by-one (fencepost) bugs. [...]
I believe that is enough to justify the existence of foreach, though those of you with more experience in handling newbie questions in OO languages might be in a better position to judge.
Given this meaning of foreach, it would be appropriate to get rid of any variants of the tag that only differ by syntax or choice of language by synonimising (i.e. option #1 -- and not option #2, which would just give us yet another syntactic tag). Let's consider the tags mentioned here one by one:
each should become a synonym.
for-in-loop should not become a synonym, as JavaScript for..in loops are unlike the typical foreach loops we are discussing here. It is a tricky tag to handle, as there are quite a few languages which, unlike JavaScript use for...in as their typical foreach. We would need to decide whether to retag in such cases, which seem to constitute about a third of the tag, as the "Related Tags" counts in the sidebar suggest. Fortunately, it is a relatively small tag, with 391 questions as of now.
for-of-loop, on the other hand, should become a synonym, as it is about the JavaScript spelling of the typical foreach. It is a very small tag, with only 28 questions as of now.
P.S.: For the sake of convenience, here is a SEDE query for quickly viewing related tag counts (i.e. given a tag, how many questions also have another tag). It can be useful to evaluate how usage of the tags being discussed here is spread across language tags.