JOURNAL OF CURRENT RESEARCH IN SCIENCE ISSN CODEN (USA): JCRSDJ Available at

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "JOURNAL OF CURRENT RESEARCH IN SCIENCE ISSN CODEN (USA): JCRSDJ Available at"

Transcription

1 JOURNAL OF CURRENT RESEARCH IN SCIENCE ISSN CODEN (USA): JCRSDJ Available at JCRS 4 (2), 2016: Political Economy of Iran and Saudi Arabia Conflicts Based on the Social Constructivism Theory Afshin Mottaghi Assistant Professor of Political Geography, Kharazmi University, Tehran, Iran Corresponding Author a.motaghi@khu.ac.ir K E Y W O R D S: Political Economy, Social Constructivism, Iran, Saudi Arabia ABSTRACT: While there are many Middle Eastern topics that are beyond the scope of Iran and Saudi Arabia, these two states not only have competed with one another for what they might view as regional supremacy (there are other regional military and economic powers as well such as Israel, Egypt, etc ), but these two states have also been in disagreement on a number of specific issues in the region; whether it is Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Bahrain, Yemen, or the production of oil, the regimes of Saudi Arabia and Iran tend to have different political interests on these matters. In the context of this historical analysis, the paper describes three core factors that have had the most influence on the relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran: (1) identity differences between the Wahhabism and Shiism; (2) geo-economy of oil and petroleum and (3) geopolitical hegemony in Middle East. Introduction Iran and Saudi Arabia by their geopolitical position and geographical features are two determinant states in the region. The two states from 1950 onwards have roughly intense competition. Tension between Tehran and Riyadh is significant, given the various parts and implications of the hostilities between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The two countries, at odds since the 1979 revolution in Iran and ever more so in the wake of the Arab Spring, are competing for dominance in global energy markets and nuclear technology and for political influence in the Persian Gulf and the Levant (Milani, 2011: 3). Following World War I, Iran and much of what is today Saudi Arabia were both independent (The Hijaz in Saudi Arabia was influenced by Britain). Both states had good relations with Britain and the United States throughout the post-world War I period, and then into World War II. The situation changed however, in 1953 in Iran, with the United States and Britain helping stage a coup to overthrow Mohammad Mosaddegh (F.M, 2016: 2). Following this, the United States gave great support for the Shah (in part through military weapons). This infuriated many who saw an authoritarian leader backed by Western powers. In 1978, Iranians went to the streets to protest the Shah, and it was in early 1979 that the Shah was overthrown, then leading to the installation of the Islamic theocracy, led by Ayatollah Khomeini. After the Islamic revolution in Iran, Saudi Arabia with its US alliance and abundance of oil dollars, has a very different economic story to that of Iran, which despite enormous natural gas reserves, has been hit hard by economic, trade and military sanctions since its 1979 revolution (Mason, 2014: 2). Saudi Arabia and Iran are divided by long-standing structural tensions. Each has aspirations for Islamic leadership, and each possesses different visions of regional order. Whereas Tehran regards Riyadh as America s proxy and a buffer against Iran s rightful primacy in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia worries about Iran s asymmetric power and regional ambitions, especially its expanding influence in post-saddam Iraq and its alleged pursuit of a nuclear weapon (Wehrey, et al, 2009: 2). By examining the foreign policies of Saudi Arabia and Iran towards each other, and towards the wider Middle East and beyond, Mason seeks to highlight how oil policy, including oil production, pricing and security of supply and demand, is the paramount economic factor which drives the diplomacy and rivalry of these two pivotal regional powers. By comparing the foreign policy of Saudi Arabia and Iran towards the international community and the US in particular, Mason presents the very different economic and political trajectories of these two countries. In the case of Saudi Arabia, it has long been oil which has given the country importance both within the region and on an international scale (Mason, 2014: 3). The analysis and evidence presented will demonstrate that while in recent years the relationship with Saudi Arabia and Iran has been improving, conflicting interests will result in a continued competition between the two nations as they seek to guarantee alliances within the Persian Gulf and secure the perpetuity of their own regimes (Jahner, 2012: 38).

2 Methodology This study is intended to examine the role of political economy in competition and rivalry of Iran and Saudi Arabia. The research methodology adopted is descriptive-analytic and the data gathering procedure is librarian. Literature Review Political Economy and International Relations World history does not disclose the primacy of either economic or political forces, but rather reveals an equal interaction of the two. The economic and political fate of nations can no longer be discussed in isolation: the place of every nation in the global web of economic exchanges and political relations must also be considered. Technological change and global commerce have brought societies closer together. Business is conducted on a global scale, with multinational companies maintaining production facilities in several countries and goods being traded across the globe. Capital markets respond within seconds to market signals in faraway continents (Falkner, 2011: 10). Therefore, the interaction of International Politics and International Economics is today widely appreciated and the subject of much theoretical research and applied policy analysis. Nation-states clearly affect international trade and monetary flows, which in turn affect the environment in which nation-states make political choices and businesses make economic decisions (Veseth, 2004: 3). There seem to be three main kinds of change which the developing international economy has brought about and which directly affect inter- national relations (Strange, 2012: 307). First, there are the direct effects on states of their common involvement in the expanding international economic network. Richard Cooper, subdividing again, finds three different ways in which states are affected.' One is by what he calls the 'disturbance ' effects-the increase in the disturbance, originating externally in some other part of the inter- national economy, of some important part of the domestic economy- whether it is the level of employment, of prices, of interest rates, or of the country's monetary reserves. Second, there are the hindrance effects, when the mutual sensitivity of national economies to each other slows down or diminishes the effectiveness of national economic policies-as when a credit squeeze and tight money policy which is intended to dampen domestic demand pulls in foreign funds which will tend (unless sterilized, insulated or counteracted) to frustrate the policy-makers' intentions. And third, there are competitive or what used to be called 'beggar- my-neighbor' policies, by which states seeking to serve their own national economic interests (as by trying to control overseas investments, or by trying to regulate mergers and takeovers) coincidentally damage the national economic interests of other states, and thus risk creating new sources of international conflict. The rise of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the Arab oil embargo of illustrated dramatically at least five key dimensions of International Politics and International Economics (Veseth, 2004: 6-7): First, it showed the power and influence of economic tools in foreign policy. After OPEC no state could dare make political policy without taking into account potential foreign economic retaliation or reaction. Second, the oil embargo showed that East-West issues were not always the state's most important concerns -- North- South political and economic problems could no longer be ignored or dealt with as ancillary to Cold War strategy. To the extent that economic issues were closer to the surface in North-South relations, this reinforced the notion that politics was really political economy. Third, the oil embargo revealed the complex interdependence between and among domestic politics, domestic economics, international politics, and international economics. Fourth, the oil embargo raised questions about the role of multinational corporations (MNCs) in international economics and politics. MNCs had previously been viewed by many scholars as agents of influence of their home country governments (this was especially true of US-based MNCs), but now their political allegiance appeared to be more ambiguous. Were the oil MNCs tools of their western home governments, agents of their OPEC host governments, or were they acting as pure economic actors independent of home or host political ties? Finally, the shifting international payments flows that the oil embargo stimulated were the start of the movement towards a global financial system and, with it, economic globalization generally. Increasingly, economic and political problems would be seen as global, not just international, and beyond the control of individual nation-states. Constructivism Constructivism is the idea that mental structures such as cognition and perception are actively built by one s mind rather than passively acquired. However, constructivist approaches vary in function of how much influence they attribute to constructions. Many assume a dualistic relationship between reality and constructed elements. They maintain that constructed mental structures gradually adapt to the structures of the real world. The social world of a political actor includes the people that directly affect that person, including teachers, friends, students, administrators, and participants in all forms of activity. This takes into account the social nature of both the local processes in collaborative political acting and in the discussion of wider social collaboration in a given subject, such as science. Constructivism has a critical method and despite important 69

3 ontological and epistemological differences, critical theorists who employ qualitative research methods share several assumptions with more humanistic-oriented qualitative researchers (Clark, 2015: 3-4): Scholars in both humanistic and critical qualitative research traditions affirm that social relations, as well as analyses constructed by researchers, must be interpreted. Both traditions are thus more interested in offering interpretations than in elucidating natural laws of causality. 2. Both, therefore, offer a challenge to logical positivism, arguing that dynamic social and cultural structures, rather than certain distinguishable variables, constrain human actions. Thus, both are open to the possibility of social change. As a further challenge to logical positivism, both eschew the problem of bias in research. Humanistic, constructivist researchers argue that bias should be re-conceptualized in light of the subjective position of the researcher, viewed as that which informs and strengthens one s interpretation. Critical researchers, particularly those operating within postcolonialist and feminist paradigms, tend to insist upon a recognition of power differentials between research participants and those conducting the research, thus locating bias in social systems rather than or in addition to a particular research situation. Both traditions stress that meaning and language are socially constructed (although critical researchers are quick to point out that while interpretations may be constructed, forces of oppression are real in their consequences and hence may be understood as such). Both are also interested in how meanings may remain the same or change over time. Both are concerned with a reasoned analysis of social life (although critical theorists extend this concern to relate such a reasoned analysis with emancipation). Scholars in both traditions evaluate their arguments in light of a community of researchers of which they are a part. As a result of the prior two commonalities, both are at some distance from the postmodernist turn that engenders skepticism toward such reasoned analyses and affirms radical relativism over a measure of credibility lodged in authoritative consensus Many of the authors that identify with social constructivism trace their ideas back to Vygotsky (e.g., 2003), a pioneering theorist in psychology who focused on the roles that society played in the development of an individual. Cobb (2011) examines whether the "mind" is located in the head or in social action, and argues that both perspectives should be used in concert, as they are each as useful as the other. What is seen from one perspective as reasoning of a collection of individuals mutually adapting to each other's actions can be seen in another as the norms and practices of a space community (Cobb, 2013). This dialectic is examined in more detail in a strong paper by Salomon and Perkins (2015), who suggest ways that these "acquisition" and "participation" metaphors of political acting interrelate and interact in synergistic ways. They model the social entity as a political actor (for example, a political party, a representative or a state), compare it with the political acting of an Individual/national in a social setting, and identify three main types of relations: Individual/national political acting can be less or more socially-mediated political acting. Actors can participate in the political acting of a collective, sometimes with what is learned distributed throughout the collective more than in the mind of any one individual. Actors and social aspects of political acting in both of these senses, can interact over time to strengthen one another in a 'reciprocal spiral relationship'. History of Iran-Saudi Arabia Conflicts While there are many Middle Eastern topics that are beyond the scope of Iran and Saudi Arabia, these two states not only have competed with one another for what they might view as regional supremacy (there are other regional military and economic powers as well (such as Israel, Egypt, etc ), but these two states have also been in disagreement on a number of specific issues in the region; whether it is Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Bahrain, Yemen, or the production of oil, the regimes of Saudi Arabia and Iran tend to have different political interests on these matters (F.M, 2016: 4). The Saudi Arabia-Iran relationship can be better understood by looking at the geopolitical history of the region, and how those two states entreated with one another, as well as their relations with foreign powers. In 1987 Relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran were strained almost to breaking point in July 1987 when 402 pilgrims, 275 of whom were Iranian, died during clashes in the Muslim holy city of Mecca. Protesters took to the streets of Tehran, occupied the Saudi embassy and set fire to Kuwait's embassy. A Saudi diplomat, Mousa'ad al-ghamdi, died in Tehran of wounds sustained when he fell out of an embassy window and Riyadh accused Tehran of delaying his transfer to a hospital in Saudi Arabia. Diplomatic relations were severed by Saudi Arabia's King Fahd in April 1988 (McDowall, 2016: 4-5). Following World War I, Iran and much of what is today Saudi Arabia were both independent (The Hijaz in Saudi Arabia was influenced by Britain). Both states had good relations with Britain and the United States throughout the post-world War I period, and then into World War II. The situation changed however in 1953 in Iran, with the United States and Britain helping stage a coup to overthrow Mohammad Mosaddegh. Following this, the United States gave great support for the Shah (in part 70

4 through military weapons). This infuriated many who saw an authoritarian leader backed by Western powers. In 1978, Iranians went to the streets to protest the Shah, and it was in early 1979 that the Shah was overthrown, then leading to the installation of the Islamic theocracy, led by Ayatollah Khomeini. Khomeini then began calling for similar overthrows in other parts of the Middle East. This rise in Iranian power, in the name of an Islamic theocracy (and a Shia government), troubled other countries such as Iraq, as well as Saudi Arabia. In fact, after the Shah was overthrown, Saudi Arabia s leadership became frightened by the Ayatollah Khomenei s denunciation of the Saudi monarchy as antithetical to Islam and his ambition to export to the revolution to the Arab world. Saudi Arabia remained an ally of the United States; Iran became an implacable foe. Thereafter, the rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia became defined by the new U.S. strategy ally with Saudi Arabia to offset Iran (Milani, 2011: 33). In beginnings of 2016, Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic relations with Iran on Sunday over the storming of the Saudi embassy in Tehran, in a deepening crisis between the regional adversaries following the kingdom's execution of a prominent Shi'ite Muslim cleric. Iranian protesters stormed the Saudi embassy for the execution of Sheikh Nimr al-nimr, an outspoken opponent of the kingdom's ruling Al Saudi family. So, there are political, economic, as well as religious aspects to the Iran- Saudi Arabia relations. Finding There are also geo-economy factors related to the Saudi Arabia and Iran rivalry. This is evident when looking at the geo-economy of these countries. As Milani (2011) argues, This struggle has played out most prominently in the energy sector, in which both Iran and Saudi Arabia are major forces. At first glance, Iran would seem to be on par with Saudi Arabia; the two countries combined oil and natural gas reserves are roughly the same, and Iran has the strategic advantage of sitting between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf, as well as controlling the 34-mile wide Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 40 percent of the oil traded worldwide is transported. Saudi Arabia faces another challenge in the face of domestic pressure, however: its relationship with Iran. Iranian nuclear activities are a prime concern of the Saudis. Even if the United States chose to live with a certain level of uranium enrichment, the Saudis are deeply suspicious and fearful of any indigenous Iranian nuclear fuel cycle capability (Airlie Center Warrenton, 2005: 11). Iran, for its part, appears to see the nuclear impasse as manageable. Through its official and unofficial press outlets, Iran has portrayed mutual harmony with Saudi Arabia on the issue, often citing what it perceives to be Riyadh s acceptance of the program s peaceful nature. In fact, looking at more recent events regarding OPEC, Saudi Arabia has continued to produce high levels of oil per day (roughly 10.3 million barrels) for many reasons, one of which being an attempt to minimize Iran s economy; i.e. who is much more reliant on higher oil sale prices given the sanctions on them (F.M.2016: 5). However, Pollock (2016) argues that this high production of oil has the government worried, since they know that these lower prices for them are not sustainable for their yearly geo-economy expenditures. He argues that this may be driving their behavior, given that such a geo-economy state might make them vulnerable to domestic uprisings. The dissonance with Iran is, in part, tied to religious, ideological, and identity schisms between the two countries. Despite their normalized relations over the past several years the official Saudi religious establishment and the young, populist, dissident clerics are virulently anti-shia and Iran is officially a theocratic Shia state. These potentially destabilizing factors will have to be addressed in order to succeed in establishing a new Gulf Persian framework. The status of the Saudi-Iranian relationship is yet to be determined as these two countries, along with the rest of the world, await the outcome of the political revolutions in the Arab world (Jahner, 2012: 46). As historical evidence has presented, the oscillating nature of Saudi-Iranian affairs could mean that Iran and Saudi Arabia overlook past differences to work in cooperation toward the achievement of common goals, or that previous trust issues and desires for power and influence will lead to a cessation of their diplomatic relations once again. The Saudi regime faces pressure from Salafi clerics to take an anti-shi a position in its dealings with Iran, and in late 2006 there was indeed mounting Saudi public pressure to protect Sunnis in Iraq. At the same time, the ruling elite in Saudi Arabia appear to have exploited or tacitly endorsed this rhetoric as a way to counter the greater threat of Iran s pan-islamist populism. Put differently, faced with a contender for symbolic leadership in the Middle East, Saudi Arabia has tried to paint Iran as a cultural and ideological aberration from the rest of the region, and the most expeditious means of doing this has been to cast the Islamic Republic s Shi a/persian ambitions as a threat to Sunnis everywhere (Wehrey, et al, 2009: 31). The most likely result, however, will be a Saudi-Iranian relationship that is somewhere in between. While both countries yearn for regional predominance, Iranian reliance on Saudi Arabia for geo-economy reasons and Saudi Arabia s fear of Iranian nuclear potential might precipitate a balanced power structure once again, as each party proves unwilling to confront the other directly. Overall, the current Saudi-Iranian competition for the Arab hearts and minds of the Middle East will cause friction between the two powers in the future but an interest in regime survival will ensure that their relationship will not devolve into outright animosity (Falker, 2011: 23). Either way, the result of their relations will have an enormous impact on the stability of the region in addition to the rest of the world due to Saudi oil control. It will be interesting for the world to see 71

5 how the confrontation between two fundamentalist and rather recent forms of governance (a revolutionary Shi ite Republic and a reactionary Sunni Wahhabist monarchy) and their competition for regional predominance will proceed, especially in light of the events of 2011 and the continued Iranian threat to shut off the Strait of Hormuz (Jahner, 2012: 46). Shi a-sunni tensions and ideological differences are important factors in the Saudi-Iranian relationship, which shape the two states policy outlooks and behavior throughout the Middle East. Yet as this chapter has demonstrated, they are not the principle determinant that predisposes the two countries toward confrontation. For both countries, ideology and religion have a certain instrumentality and utility regimes in Tehran and Riyadh can emphasize, highlight, or minimize differences to serve broader geopolitical aims (Wehrey, et al, 2009: 43). There are considerable uncertainties surrounding the outlook for the oil market. Demand for oil is set to increase, driven by strong growth in emerging markets, but supply increases from the United States and other countries have also surprised on the upside. However, the economic viability of unconventional oil production will depend on the future trend in oil prices. If oil prices remain at current levels, this could result in downward revisions in the medium-term outlook for unconventional oil supply. Figure 1. Political Economy of oil in Saudi Arabia and Other OPEC (Sources: JODI database, Bloomberg; and IMF staff calculations) This creates further uncertainty regarding the outlook for U.S. production, which will depend on oil prices and technological and policy developments. Other uncertainties are also considerable, including from the global growth outlook, and the political situations in a number of key oil-producing countries. Indeed, there have been many negative supply shocks in the recent history of the global oil market (Al-Darwish, 2016: 16). Conclusion Political Economy in Iran and Suadi Arabia has geopolitical, economic and ideological dimensions. Iran and Saudi Arabia oil exporters are only just beginning to tackle the associated fiscal challenge posed by a sizable and persistent drop in oil prices. Much more progress is needed to formulate and implement significant medium-term fiscal adjustment. Countries with fiscal space are using their buffers appropriately, but medium-term plans to put fiscal finances on a stronger footing are lacking, including in those countries with the largest adjustment needs. Some countries without fiscal space have started to meet some of their funding needs through monetary financing, which creates inflation risks. Some non-gcc countries could also benefit from exchange rate depreciation, which would facilitate the needed fiscal adjustment and improve the competitiveness of their non-oil export sectors. In devising adjustment policies, attention should be paid to growth and distributional effects. Medium-term policies to deal with lower oil prices include formulating medium-term frameworks to secure fiscal sustainability and intergenerational equity, gradually rebuilding buffers, lowering the rigidity of budget spending, increasing fiscal transparency through greater disclosure, and moving off-budget entities onto the budget, especially in the energy sector. Contingency plans are crucial, given the uncertainty over longer-term oil prices. Policymakers should also strengthen diversification efforts to boost non-oil growth and revenues. There are heavy legacies from the 1980s that will take decades to overcome. For instance, in response to the Iranian revolution and Ayatollah Khamenei s promise to spread Iran s brand of theocratic, political Shiism to all quarters of the Middle East, then-king Fahd funded the construction of seven large religious universities with the sole purpose of inculcating orthodox Sunni doctrine among its students. Also, the crisis in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Bahrain and ground battle in Lebanon 72

6 represents a hegemonic space of Iran and Saudi vast scope conflicts. But among them all, political economy of oil and Shiism- Vahabism is in top. References Airlie Center Warrenton The United States, Iran, and Saudi Arabia: Necessary Steps Toward a New Gulf Security Order, 46th Strategy for Peace Conference, October 20-22, 2005, Airlie Center Warrenton, VA. Al-Darwish A Saudi Arabia: tackling emerging economic challenges to sustain strong growth, International Monetary Fund, IMF, Washington, D.C. Clark LS Critical Theory and Constructivism: Theory and Methods for the Teens and the New Media, The International Hospitality Research Centre, Vo. 3, No. 4, pp Cobb P Where is the mind? Constructivist and Sociocultural Perspectives on Mathematical Development, Educational Researcher, 23(7), pp Cobb P Analyzing the mathematical learning of the classroom community: the case of statistical data analysis, In: Proceedings of the 22 nd Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education 1, pp 33-48, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa F.M Saudi Arabia and Iran, Published in international relations, URL: Falkner R International political economy, The University of London International Programs, Published by University of London. International Monetary Fund Regional economic outlook. Middle East and Central Asia, Economic forecasting Middle East Periodicals, IMF, Washington, D.C. Jahner A Saudi Arabia and Iran: The Struggle for Power and Influence in the Persian Gulf, INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS REVIEW VOLUME XX, NUMBER 3, pp Mason R Foreign Policy in Iran and Saudi Arabia: Economics and Diplomacy in the Middle East, I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd: Library of Modern Middle East Studies McDowall A Troubled history of Iran-Saudi relations, Reuters Agency, Jan 4, 2016 URL: Milani MM Explaining the Iran-Saudi Rivalry. CNN, October 12th, Available Online: Pollock KM Fear and Loathing in Saudi Arabia. Yahoo, January 7th, Available Online: html?nf=1 Salomon G, Perkins D Individual and Social Aspects of Learning, In: P. Pearson and A. Iran-Nejad (Eds) Review of Research in Education 23, pp 1-24, American Educational Research Association, Washington, DC Strange S Internatinal Economics and International Relations: A Case of Mutual Neglect, International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-), Vol. 46, No. 2(Apr., 1970), pp , Accessed: 03/01/2012 at: Veseth M What is International Political Economy? UNESCO international encyclopedia project, UNESCO. Vygotsky LS Mind in society. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, second edition. Wehrey F, et al Saudi-Iranian Relations since the fall of Saddam: Rivalry, Cooperation, and Implications for U.S. Policy, Sponsored by the Smith Richardson Foundation, RAND Corporation. 73

A Sustained Period of Low Oil Prices? Back to the 1980s? Oil Price Collapse in 1986 It was preceded by a period of high oil prices. Resulted in global

A Sustained Period of Low Oil Prices? Back to the 1980s? Oil Price Collapse in 1986 It was preceded by a period of high oil prices. Resulted in global Geopolitical Developments in the Middle East 10 Years in the Future Dr. Steven Wright Associate Professor Associate Dean Qatar University A Sustained Period of Low Oil Prices? Back to the 1980s? Oil Price

More information

Report. Iran's Foreign Policy Following the Nuclear Argreement and the Advent of Trump: Priorities and Future Directions.

Report. Iran's Foreign Policy Following the Nuclear Argreement and the Advent of Trump: Priorities and Future Directions. Report Iran's Foreign Policy Following the Nuclear Argreement and the Advent of Trump: Priorities and Future Directions Fatima Al-Smadi* 20 May 2017 Al Jazeera Centre for Studies Tel: +974 40158384 jcforstudies@aljazeera.net

More information

Chapter 6 Foreign Aid

Chapter 6 Foreign Aid Chapter 6 Foreign Aid FOREIGN AID REPRESENTS JUST 1% OF THE FEDERAL BUDGET FOREIGN AID 1% Defense 19% Education 4% Health 10% Medicare 13% Income Security 16% Social Security 21% Net Interest 6% Veterans

More information

The Carter Administration and the Arc of Crisis : Iran, Afghanistan and the Cold War in Southwest Asia, A Critical Oral History Workshop

The Carter Administration and the Arc of Crisis : Iran, Afghanistan and the Cold War in Southwest Asia, A Critical Oral History Workshop The Carter Administration and the Arc of Crisis : Iran, Afghanistan and the Cold War in Southwest Asia, 1977-1981 A Critical Oral History Workshop The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars July

More information

The Iranian political elite, state and society relations, and foreign relations since the Islamic revolution Rakel, E.P.

The Iranian political elite, state and society relations, and foreign relations since the Islamic revolution Rakel, E.P. UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) The Iranian political elite, state and society relations, and foreign relations since the Islamic revolution Rakel, E.P. Link to publication Citation for published

More information

CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 1800 K Street N.W. Washington, DC (202)

CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 1800 K Street N.W. Washington, DC (202) CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 18 K Street N.W. Washington, DC 6 (22) 775-327 Acordesman@aol.com The US and the Middle East: Energy Dependence and Demographics Anthony H. Cordesman

More information

A New US Persian Gulf Strategy?

A New US Persian Gulf Strategy? 11 February 2010 A New US Persian Gulf Strategy? John Hartley FDI Institute Director Summary The United States recently announced moves to improve its defensive capabilities in the Persian Gulf. This involves

More information

The Gulf s International Relations: Interests, Alliances, Dilemmas and Paradoxes (ARI)

The Gulf s International Relations: Interests, Alliances, Dilemmas and Paradoxes (ARI) The Gulf s International Relations: Interests, Alliances, Dilemmas and Paradoxes (ARI) Haizam Amirah-Fernández * Theme: Security and the intervention of external powers are at the heart of the Gulf countries

More information

ASSESSMENT REPORT. Obama s Visit to Saudi Arabia

ASSESSMENT REPORT. Obama s Visit to Saudi Arabia ASSESSMENT REPORT Obama s Visit to Saudi Arabia Policy Analysis Unit - ACRPS April 2014 Obama s Visit to Saudi Arabia Series: Assessment Report Policy Analysis Unit ACRPS April 2014 Copyright 2014 Arab

More information

Press Release Political unrest in the Arab world shakes up regional economy UN report

Press Release Political unrest in the Arab world shakes up regional economy UN report Press Release Political unrest in the Arab world shakes up regional economy UN report Economies of countries experiencing unrest sapped, but higher oil prices helped exporters; expansion is declining region-wide

More information

President Jimmy Carter

President Jimmy Carter President Jimmy Carter E. America Enters World War II (1945-Present) g. Analyze the origins of the Cold War, foreign policy developments, and major events of the administrations from Truman to present

More information

Discussion paper Christian-Peter Hanelt and Almut Möller

Discussion paper Christian-Peter Hanelt and Almut Möller Security Situation in the Gulf Region Involving Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia as Regional Powers. Policy Recommendations for the European Union and the International Community Discussion paper Christian-Peter

More information

Domestic Crises

Domestic Crises Domestic Crises 1968-1980 In 1968 conservative Richard Nixon became President. One of Nixon s greatest accomplishments was his 1972 visit to communist China. Visit opened China to American markets and

More information

Middle East and Central Asia Regional Economic Outlook. Learning To Live With Cheaper Oil Amid Weaker Demand. January 2015 Update

Middle East and Central Asia Regional Economic Outlook. Learning To Live With Cheaper Oil Amid Weaker Demand. January 2015 Update 1/22/215 Middle East and Central Asia Regional Economic Outlook Learning To Live With Cheaper Oil Amid Weaker Demand January 215 Update Outline Recent Global Developments and Implications for the Region

More information

Foreign Policy Changes

Foreign Policy Changes Carter Presidency Foreign Policy Changes Containment & Brinkmanship Cold War Detente Crusader & Conciliator Truman, Eisenhower & Kennedy Contain, Coercion, M.A.D., Arm and Space race Nixon & Carter manage

More information

Global Economic Prospects. Managing the Next Wave of Globalization

Global Economic Prospects. Managing the Next Wave of Globalization Global Economic Prospects Managing the Next Wave of Globalization 2007 REGIONAL ECONOMIC PROSPECTS Middle East and North Africa regional prospects 5 Recent developments Thanks to oil revenues surging in

More information

The Impact of Decline in Oil Prices on the Middle Eastern Countries

The Impact of Decline in Oil Prices on the Middle Eastern Countries The Impact of Decline in Oil Prices on the Middle Eastern Countries Dr. Shah Mehrabi Professor of Economics Montgomery College Senior Economic Consultant and Member of the Supreme Council of the Central

More information

The veiled threats against Iran

The veiled threats against Iran The veiled threats against Iran Alasdair Hynd 1 MnM Commentary No 16 The stand-off on Iran s nuclear program has reached a new crescendo this week after President Obama s speech to the powerful Jewish

More information

Iran Nuclear Programme: Revisiting the Nuclear Debate

Iran Nuclear Programme: Revisiting the Nuclear Debate Journal of Power, Politics & Governance June 2014, Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 223-227 ISSN: 2372-4919 (Print), 2372-4927 (Online) Copyright The Author(s). 2014. All Rights Reserved. Published by American Research

More information

Bahrain India Forum 2015: The Changing Geo-Economics of Gulf and Asia. Session I: Changing Dynamics of Gulf-Asia Economic Links

Bahrain India Forum 2015: The Changing Geo-Economics of Gulf and Asia. Session I: Changing Dynamics of Gulf-Asia Economic Links Bahrain India Forum 2015: The Changing Geo-Economics of Gulf and Asia Session I: Changing Dynamics of Gulf-Asia Economic Links Prof P R Kumaraswamy Middle East Institute, Jawaharlal Nehru University P

More information

Winners and Losers in the Middle East Economy Paul Rivlin

Winners and Losers in the Middle East Economy Paul Rivlin Editors: Paul Rivlin and Yitzhak Gal Assistant Editors: Teresa Harings and Gal Buyanover Vol. 2, No. 4 May 2012 Winners and Losers in the Middle East Economy Paul Rivlin The Middle East economy has been

More information

The Islamic Republic of Iran's Foreign Policy and Developmental Activities in Sub-Saharan Africa, Islam in Africa

The Islamic Republic of Iran's Foreign Policy and Developmental Activities in Sub-Saharan Africa, Islam in Africa Florida International University FIU Digital Commons African & African Diaspora Studies Program Faculty Scholarly Presentations African and African Diaspora Studies 4-23-2015 The Islamic Republic of Iran's

More information

Recent developments. Note: This section is prepared by Lei Sandy Ye. Research assistance is provided by Julia Roseman. 1

Recent developments. Note: This section is prepared by Lei Sandy Ye. Research assistance is provided by Julia Roseman. 1 Growth in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is projected to pick up to 3 percent in 2018 from 1.6 percent in 2017 as oil exporters ease fiscal adjustments amid firming oil prices. The region

More information

The United States and Russia in the Greater Middle East

The United States and Russia in the Greater Middle East MARCH 2019 The United States and Russia in the Greater Middle East James Dobbins & Ivan Timofeev Though the Middle East has not been the trigger of the current U.S.-Russia crisis, it is an area of competition.

More information

IPIS & Aleksanteri Institute Roundtable 11 April 2016 IPIS Tehran, Iran

IPIS & Aleksanteri Institute Roundtable 11 April 2016 IPIS Tehran, Iran IPIS & Aleksanteri Institute Roundtable 11 April 2016 IPIS Tehran, Iran The joint roundtable between the Institute for Political and International Studies (IPIS) and Aleksanteri Institute from Finland

More information

ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL. Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future. Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst. January Zogby International

ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL. Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future. Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst. January Zogby International ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst January 2006 2006 Zogby International INTRODUCTION Significant developments are taking place in

More information

ABSTRACT. The study Oil, Industrialization and Development. study the above aspects in the GCC countries. It analyzes

ABSTRACT. The study Oil, Industrialization and Development. study the above aspects in the GCC countries. It analyzes ABSTRACT The study Oil, Industrialization and Development in the GCC countries is a modest attempt to objectively study the above aspects in the GCC countries. It analyzes the historical and political

More information

report THE ROLE OF RUSSIA IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA: STRATEGY OR OPPORTUNISM? Milan, 12 October 2018 from the Dialogue Workshop

report THE ROLE OF RUSSIA IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA: STRATEGY OR OPPORTUNISM? Milan, 12 October 2018 from the Dialogue Workshop THE ROLE OF RUSSIA IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA: STRATEGY OR OPPORTUNISM? Milan, 12 October 2018 report from the Dialogue Workshop REPORT No. 23 November 2018 www.euromesco.net report from the Dialogue

More information

The Iran Equation: Using Analytical tools and DIME analysis to inform Policy

The Iran Equation: Using Analytical tools and DIME analysis to inform Policy 1 The Iran Equation: Using Analytical tools and DIME analysis to inform Policy Alfred W. Pinkerton III 2 Introduction: Regime Change and National Security Stability in the Middle East is coupled with US

More information

Emerging Challenges in International Relations and Transnational Politics of the GCC

Emerging Challenges in International Relations and Transnational Politics of the GCC Workshop 5 Emerging Challenges in International Relations and Transnational Politics of the GCC Workshop Directors: Dr. Jessie Moritz Lecturer at the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies Australian National

More information

Qatar diplomatic crisis what you need to know

Qatar diplomatic crisis what you need to know Qatar diplomatic crisis what you need to know Doha is a huge investor in overseas markets, and has committed to spending 5bn in the UK in the run-up to Brexit. Photograph: Kamran Jebreili/AP Patrick Wintour

More information

Statistical Appendix

Statistical Appendix Statistical Appendix The IMF s Middle East and Central Asia Department (MCD) countries and territories comprise Afghanistan, Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Djibouti, Egypt, Georgia, Iran, Iraq,

More information

AMERICAN MILITARY UNIVERSITY

AMERICAN MILITARY UNIVERSITY AMERICAN MILITARY UNIVERSITY THE IRANIAN REVOLUTION OF 1979: AN ESSAY ON R. K. RAMAZANI S 1980 ARTICLE, IRAN S REVOLUTION: PATTERNS, PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS A CRITICAL ESSAY SUBMITTED TO: DR. FIONA DAVE

More information

Alex Mintz Dean Lauder School of Government IDC Presented at the Herzliya Conference, January How Rational is Ahmadinejad?

Alex Mintz Dean Lauder School of Government IDC Presented at the Herzliya Conference, January How Rational is Ahmadinejad? Alex Mintz Dean Lauder School of Government IDC Presented at the Herzliya Conference, January 2008 How Rational is Ahmadinejad? The Research Project In this project, our team analyzes every decision taken

More information

COMMERCIAL INTERESTS, POLITICAL INFLUENCE, AND THE ARMS TRADE

COMMERCIAL INTERESTS, POLITICAL INFLUENCE, AND THE ARMS TRADE COMMERCIAL INTERESTS, POLITICAL INFLUENCE, AND THE ARMS TRADE Abstract Given the importance of the global defense trade to geopolitics, the global economy, and international relations at large, this paper

More information

Confronting the Terror Finance Challenge in Today s Middle East

Confronting the Terror Finance Challenge in Today s Middle East AP PHOTO/MANU BRABO Confronting the Terror Finance Challenge in Today s Middle East By Hardin Lang, Peter Juul, and Trevor Sutton November 2015 WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG Introduction and summary In the

More information

U.S. Challenges and Choices in the Gulf: Unilateral U.S. Sanctions

U.S. Challenges and Choices in the Gulf: Unilateral U.S. Sanctions Policy Brief #10 The Atlantic Council of the United States, The Middle East Institute, The Middle East Policy Council, and The Stanley Foundation U.S. Challenges and Choices in the Gulf: Unilateral U.S.

More information

CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 1800 K Street N.W. Washington, DC (202)

CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 1800 K Street N.W. Washington, DC (202) CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies 1800 K Street N.W. Washington, DC 20006 (202) 775-3284 lmeyer@csis.org After an Attack on Iraq: The Economic Consequences Review and Update Laurence

More information

Transatlantic Relations

Transatlantic Relations Chatham House Report Xenia Wickett Transatlantic Relations Converging or Diverging? Executive summary Executive Summary Published in an environment of significant political uncertainty in both the US and

More information

On the Iran Nuclear Agreement and Its Consequences

On the Iran Nuclear Agreement and Its Consequences August 4, 2015 On the Iran Nuclear Agreement and Its Consequences Prepared statement by Richard N. Haass President Council on Foreign Relations Before the Committee on Armed Services United States Senate

More information

THE QATAR DIPLOPMATIC CRISIS AND THE POLITICS OF ENERGY

THE QATAR DIPLOPMATIC CRISIS AND THE POLITICS OF ENERGY THE QATAR DIPLOPMATIC CRISIS AND THE POLITICS OF ENERGY The prolongation of the diplomatic crisis between Qatar and its Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) allies which saw Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and

More information

SAUDI-RUSSIA RELATIONS: OIL AND BEYOND

SAUDI-RUSSIA RELATIONS: OIL AND BEYOND SAUDI-RUSSIA RELATIONS: OIL AND BEYOND Pierre Terzian Director PETROSTRATEGIES Paris JOGMEC International Seminar Tokyo February 2018 A brief comparison Saudi Arabia Russia Country area (sq. km) 2,150,000

More information

Future Trends in the Gulf

Future Trends in the Gulf Chatham House Report Executive Summary Jane Kinninmont February 2015 Future Trends in the Gulf Politics in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states will be significantly transformed in the coming decade.

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 18 April 2018 Original: English Second session Geneva,

More information

THE GCC: ENERGY, ECONOMY AND GEOPOLITICS IN 2017

THE GCC: ENERGY, ECONOMY AND GEOPOLITICS IN 2017 COLUMBIA GLOBAL ENERGY DIALOGUES THE GCC: ENERGY, ECONOMY AND GEOPOLITICS IN 2017 In February 2017, the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University SIPA convened a roundtable of energy and regional

More information

Foreign Policy Insight. July 29, 2015 Issue 19

Foreign Policy Insight. July 29, 2015 Issue 19 Issue 19 The Iran Nuclear Deal: implications for Ukraine https://www.flickr.com/photos/minoritenplatz8/19680862152/in/photostream/ On July 14, 2015, a group of six major powers (the US, Russia, China,

More information

Saudi Arabia 2030 Plan: No More Dependency on Oil and USA

Saudi Arabia 2030 Plan: No More Dependency on Oil and USA Saudi Arabia 2030 Plan: No More Dependency on Oil and USA May 2016 Ramy Jabbour Gulf and KSA Office Addiction to oil has disturbed the development of many sectors in the past years. By this meaningful

More information

Impact of Low Oil Prices and Recalibration of U.S. Policy Jean-François Seznec

Impact of Low Oil Prices and Recalibration of U.S. Policy Jean-François Seznec Middle East Institute MEI Policy Focus 2016-1 Impact of Low Oil Prices and Recalibration of U.S. Policy Jean-François Seznec The Middle East and the 2016 Presidential Elections series January 2016 Professor

More information

Use the chart to answer questions 1-2.

Use the chart to answer questions 1-2. Use the chart to answer questions -. Country Total Literacy. Which two Southwest Asian countries have the highest literacy rates? A. Turkey and Qatar B. Israel and Kuwait C. United States and Yemen D.

More information

MONTHLY INSIGHTS May 2016

MONTHLY INSIGHTS May 2016 MONTHLY INSIGHTS May 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS A Word from the Director of the Analytic Community Wikistrat in the Media The End of the U.S.-Saudi Relationship After Mansour's Death: What's Next for the Taliban?

More information

IRAN S REGIONAL POLICY: INTERESTS, CHALLENGES AND AMBITIONS

IRAN S REGIONAL POLICY: INTERESTS, CHALLENGES AND AMBITIONS Analysis No. 275, November 2014 IRAN S REGIONAL POLICY: INTERESTS, CHALLENGES AND AMBITIONS Sara Bazoobandi Iran s regional strategy has been a matter of controversy over the past decades. The country

More information

Updating U.S.-Saudi Ties to Reflect the New Realities of Today s Middle East

Updating U.S.-Saudi Ties to Reflect the New Realities of Today s Middle East AP PHOTO/HASAN JAMALI Updating U.S.-Saudi Ties to Reflect the New Realities of Today s Middle East By Brian Katulis, Rudy deleon, Peter Juul, Mokhtar Awad, and John Craig April 2016 WWW.AMERICANPROGRESS.ORG

More information

Egypt and the GCC: Renewing an Alliance amidst Shifting Policy Pressures

Egypt and the GCC: Renewing an Alliance amidst Shifting Policy Pressures Workshop 1 Egypt and the GCC: Renewing an Alliance amidst Shifting Policy Pressures Workshop Directors: Christian Henderson Department of Development Studies School of Oriental and African Studies United

More information

Period 9 Notes. Coach Hoshour

Period 9 Notes. Coach Hoshour 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Unit 9: 1980-present Chapters 40-42 Election 1988 George Bush Republican 426 47,946,000 Michael S. Dukakis Democratic 111 41,016,000 1988-1992 Domestic Issues The Only Remaining

More information

GCC labour Migration governance

GCC labour Migration governance GCC labour Migration governance UNITED NATIONS EXPERT GROUP MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA AND THE PACIFIC United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific

More information

EMERGING SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NATO S SOUTH: HOW CAN THE ALLIANCE RESPOND?

EMERGING SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NATO S SOUTH: HOW CAN THE ALLIANCE RESPOND? EMERGING SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NATO S SOUTH: HOW CAN THE ALLIANCE RESPOND? Given the complexity and diversity of the security environment in NATO s South, the Alliance must adopt a multi-dimensional approach

More information

Con!:,rressional Research Service The Library of Congress

Con!:,rressional Research Service The Library of Congress ....... " CRS ~ort for_ C o_n~_e_s_s_ Con!:,rressional Research Service The Library of Congress OVERVIEW Conventional Arms Transfers in the Post-Cold War Era Richard F. Grimmett Specialist in National

More information

Redefining a Nation: The Conflict of Identity and Federalism in Iraq

Redefining a Nation: The Conflict of Identity and Federalism in Iraq ISSN: 2036-5438 Redefining a Nation: The Conflict of Identity and Federalism in Iraq by Harith Al-Qarawee Perspectives on Federalism, Vol. 2, issue 1, 2010. N- 32 Abstract The debate on federalism in Iraq

More information

2. Realism is important to study because it continues to guide much thought regarding international relations.

2. Realism is important to study because it continues to guide much thought regarding international relations. Chapter 2: Theories of World Politics TRUE/FALSE 1. A theory is an example, model, or essential pattern that structures thought about an area of inquiry. F DIF: High REF: 30 2. Realism is important to

More information

Americans on the Middle East

Americans on the Middle East Americans on the Middle East A Study of American Public Opinion October 8, 2012 PRIMARY INVESTIGATORS: SHIBLEY TELHAMI, STEVEN KULL STAFF: CLAY RAMSAY, EVAN LEWIS, STEFAN SUBIAS The Anwar Sadat Chair for

More information

DOCUMENT. Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984)

DOCUMENT. Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984) DOCUMENT Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984) TOP SECRET! Made in: 12 copies Sent to: Comrade Várkonyi Comrade Roska

More information

Business Leaders: Thought and Action. A Stand Against Unilateral Sanctions

Business Leaders: Thought and Action. A Stand Against Unilateral Sanctions The CEO SERIES Business Leaders: Thought and Action A Stand Against Unilateral Sanctions An Original Essay Written for the Weidenbaum Center by Archie W. Dunham Chairman, President, and Chief Executive

More information

ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN THE BEGINNING OF A NEW STAGE OF POLITICAL TURBULENCE LEVAN ASATIANI

ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN THE BEGINNING OF A NEW STAGE OF POLITICAL TURBULENCE LEVAN ASATIANI ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN THE BEGINNING OF A NEW STAGE OF POLITICAL TURBULENCE LEVAN ASATIANI 91 EXPERT OPINION ÓÀØÀÒÈÅÄËÏÓ ÓÔÒÀÔÄÂÉÉÓÀ ÃÀ ÓÀÄÒÈÀÛÏÒÉÓÏ ÖÒÈÉÄÒÈÏÁÀÈÀ ÊÅËÄÅÉÓ ÏÍÃÉ GEORGIAN FOUNDATION FOR

More information

Reasons Trump Breaks Nuclear-Sanction Agreement with Iran. Declares Trade War with China and Meets with North Korea. James Petras

Reasons Trump Breaks Nuclear-Sanction Agreement with Iran. Declares Trade War with China and Meets with North Korea. James Petras Reasons Trump Breaks Nuclear-Sanction Agreement with Iran Declares Trade War with China and Meets with North Korea James Petras Introduction For some time, critics of President Trump s policies have attributed

More information

MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA

MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA MIDDLE EAST and NORTH AFRICA After an easing in tensions in early 214, the Middle East and North Africa region is again experiencing major and increasing security challenges. In addition, since mid-214,

More information

MIDDLE EAST NORTH AFRICA

MIDDLE EAST NORTH AFRICA MIDDLE EAST NORTH AFRICA MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA Stretching from Morocco s Atlantic shores to Iran and Yemen s beaches on the Arabian Sea, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region remains central

More information

Dr Neil Partrick East Sussex United Kingdom

Dr Neil Partrick East Sussex United Kingdom Dr Neil Partrick East Sussex United Kingdom admin@neilpartrick.com Nationality/birth year: British, 1964 Employment: Consultant, Gulf & wider Middle East affairs, 2002-present (Since 2010 a regular freelance

More information

Jordan in the GCC. Our Initial Thoughts. Economic Research Jordan. Initial Opinion. The Invitation. The Gulf Cooperation Council: A Brief History

Jordan in the GCC. Our Initial Thoughts. Economic Research Jordan. Initial Opinion. The Invitation. The Gulf Cooperation Council: A Brief History Economic Research Jordan Initial Opinion 6 September 211 Jordan in the GCC Our Initial Thoughts The Invitation The Gulf Cooperation Council s (GCC) announcement during the Heads of State summit held last

More information

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DESIGNING INSTITUTIONS TO DEAL WITH TERRORISM IN THE UNITED STATES. Martin S. Feldstein

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DESIGNING INSTITUTIONS TO DEAL WITH TERRORISM IN THE UNITED STATES. Martin S. Feldstein NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES DESIGNING INSTITUTIONS TO DEAL WITH TERRORISM IN THE UNITED STATES Martin S. Feldstein Working Paper 13729 http://www.nber.org/papers/w13729 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH

More information

1953 Coup. In 1953, the Shah, with the support of the CIA, overthrew the democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh.

1953 Coup. In 1953, the Shah, with the support of the CIA, overthrew the democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh. Iran 1953 Coup In 1953, the Shah, with the support of the CIA, overthrew the democratically elected prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddegh. Pahlavi White Revolution White to counter influence of red communists

More information

THE FUTURE OF MIDEAST CYBERTERRORISM MALI IN PERIL. Policy & Practice

THE FUTURE OF MIDEAST CYBERTERRORISM MALI IN PERIL. Policy & Practice THE FUTURE OF MIDEAST CYBERTERRORISM MALI IN PERIL Policy & Practice August 2012 www.policyandpractice.com THE KILLING How to start a revolution and take Iran PLUS THE AIDS ANNIVERSARY MODERN CHINESE SOFT

More information

Russian and Western Engagement in the Broader Middle East

Russian and Western Engagement in the Broader Middle East Chapter 8 Russian and Western Engagement in the Broader Middle East Mark N. Katz There are many problems in the greater Middle East that would be in the common interest of the United States, its EU/NATO

More information

Theory and the Levels of Analysis

Theory and the Levels of Analysis Theory and the Levels of Analysis Chapter 3 Ø Not be frightened by the word theory Ø Definitions of theory: p A theory is a proposition, or set of propositions, that tries to analyze, explain or predict

More information

The Decline of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: Middle East Politics and the Quest for. Gad Barzilai, Tel Aviv University

The Decline of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: Middle East Politics and the Quest for. Gad Barzilai, Tel Aviv University The Decline of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: Middle East Politics and the Quest for Regional Order. By Avraham Sela. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1998. 423pp. Gad Barzilai, Tel Aviv University

More information

History of US Interest History Since End of WWII

History of US Interest History Since End of WWII 17.906 The Geopolitics and Geoeconomics of Global Energy, Spring 2007 Prof. Flynt Leverett Lecture 4: Markets, Cartels, and Consumers History of US Interest History Since End of WWII - US political commitment

More information

Anxious Allies: The Iran Nuclear Framework in its Regional Context

Anxious Allies: The Iran Nuclear Framework in its Regional Context Anxious Allies: The Iran Nuclear Framework in its Regional Context Hussein Ibish The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington (AGSIW), established in 2014, is an independent, nonprofit institution dedicated

More information

Cherokee County School District Student Performance Standards Unit Guides - Social Studies: Seventh Grade

Cherokee County School District Student Performance Standards Unit Guides - Social Studies: Seventh Grade Unit The Modern Middle East SS7H2. SS7G5. SS7G7. SS7G8. The student will analyze continuity and change in Southwest Asia (Middle East) leading to the 21st century. b) Explain the historical reasons for

More information

Lessons from the Gulf s Twin Shocks

Lessons from the Gulf s Twin Shocks Lessons from the Gulf s Twin Shocks Ibrahim Saif Stanford April 26, 2012 Outlining the Twin Crisis The oil-rich economies of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are facing a twin challenge to their stability

More information

War in the Middle East. Raymond Hinnebusch University of St Andrews

War in the Middle East. Raymond Hinnebusch University of St Andrews War in the Middle East Raymond Hinnebusch University of St Andrews Middle East War Proness 1946-92, 9 of 21 inter-state wars were in MENA 4 of the 5 in the 1980s and 1990s (if Afghanistan is included in

More information

Scott D. Sagan Stanford University Herzliya Conference, Herzliya, Israel,

Scott D. Sagan Stanford University Herzliya Conference, Herzliya, Israel, Scott D. Sagan Stanford University Herzliya Conference, Herzliya, Israel, 2009 02 04 Thank you for this invitation to speak with you today about the nuclear crisis with Iran, perhaps the most important

More information

Rowhani s Election: Promise of Change or More of the Same?

Rowhani s Election: Promise of Change or More of the Same? ROWHANI S ELECTION: PROMISE OF CHANGE OR MORE OF THE SAME? Rowhani s Election: Promise of Change or More of the Same? MAHMOOD MONSHIPOURI * ABSTRACT Rowhani s victory in Iran s 2013 presidential election

More information

The Cause and Effect of the Iran Nuclear Crisis. The blood of the Americans and the Iranians has boiled to a potential war.

The Cause and Effect of the Iran Nuclear Crisis. The blood of the Americans and the Iranians has boiled to a potential war. Mr. Williams British Literature 6 April 2012 The Cause and Effect of the Iran Nuclear Crisis The blood of the Americans and the Iranians has boiled to a potential war. The Iranian government is developing

More information

GCC Summit: Reviewing Policies, Addressing Challenges

GCC Summit: Reviewing Policies, Addressing Challenges Report GCC Summit: Reviewing Policies, Addressing Challenges This paper was originally written in Arabic by: Dr. Jamal Abdullah* Translated into English by: AMEC Al Jazeera Center for Studies Tel: +974-44663454

More information

An Introduction to Saudi Arabia

An Introduction to Saudi Arabia An Introduction to Saudi Arabia Page 1 of 7 An Introduction to Saudi Arabia Geography & Population The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia lies between the Red Sea and the Arabian Gulf and has a land mass about the

More information

Arab Opinion Index 2015

Arab Opinion Index 2015 www.dohainstitute.orgte.org Arab Public Opinion Program Arab Opinion Index 2015 In Brief The 2015 Arab Opinion Index: In Brief The 2015 Arab Opinion Index is the fourth in a series of yearly public opinion

More information

1) Is the "Clash of Civilizations" too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not?

1) Is the Clash of Civilizations too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not? 1) Is the "Clash of Civilizations" too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not? Huntington makes good points about the clash of civilizations and ideologies being a cause of conflict

More information

Saudi Arabia and the Illusion of Security 5. Introduction. Title

Saudi Arabia and the Illusion of Security 5. Introduction. Title Introduction Saudi Arabia and the Illusion of Security 5 Title It is a truism that, for much of the world, the Gulf has been a central strategic consideration for decades. 1 A perceived Soviet threat to

More information

Eagle s Landing Middle School 7 th Grade Social Studies Pacing Guide

Eagle s Landing Middle School 7 th Grade Social Studies Pacing Guide Getting to Know You/ Establishing Procedures July 30 th August 3rd Fundamentals of Economics and Government August 6 th -August 20 th SS7E1a-b, SS7E4a-b, SS6E7a-b Analyze different economic systems. Terminology

More information

The Rise of GCC s Soft Power and China s Humanities Diplomacy

The Rise of GCC s Soft Power and China s Humanities Diplomacy The Rise of GCC s Soft Power and China s Humanities Diplomacy MA Lirong 1 (Middle East Studies Institute, Shanghai International Studies University) Abstract: Since the establishment of the GCC, its member

More information

Current Developments in Middle Eastern Politics and Religion

Current Developments in Middle Eastern Politics and Religion Current Developments in Middle Eastern Politics and Religion A Conversation with Shai Feldman BOISI CENTER FOR RELIGION AND AMERICAN PUBLIC LIFE BOSTON COLLEGE, CHESTNUT HILL, MASSACHUSETTS APRIL 18, 2007

More information

Why was 1968 an important year in American history?

Why was 1968 an important year in American history? Essential Question: In what ways did President Nixon represent a change towards conservative politics & how did his foreign policy alter the U.S. relationship with USSR & China? Warm-Up Question: Why was

More information

The Presidency of Richard Nixon. The Election of Richard Nixon

The Presidency of Richard Nixon. The Election of Richard Nixon Essential Question: In what ways did President Nixon represent a change towards conservative politics & how did his foreign policy alter the U.S. relationship with USSR & China? Warm-Up Question: Why was

More information

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA Eric Her INTRODUCTION There is an ongoing debate among American scholars and politicians on the United States foreign policy and its changing role in East Asia. This

More information

Canada and the Middle East

Canada and the Middle East A POLICY PAPER 2016 POLICY REVIEW SERIES CGAI Fellow This essay is one in a series commissioned by Canadian Global Affairs Institute in the context of defence, security and assistance reviews by the Trudeau

More information

1. OIL DEMAND. Why the world worries about oil prices. IMF World Economic Outlook, Sept. 2003, Chapter 1

1. OIL DEMAND. Why the world worries about oil prices. IMF World Economic Outlook, Sept. 2003, Chapter 1 Lessons 5&6: Oil 1. Demand 2. Supply 3. Shifting market power monopsony to monopoly 4. Leadup to the 1973 Crisis 5. The 1973 Crisis 6. The 1980s 7. The Gulf Wars 1. OIL DEMAND Why the world worries about

More information

Reports. A Balance of Power or a Balance of Threats in Turbulent Middle East?

Reports. A Balance of Power or a Balance of Threats in Turbulent Middle East? Reports A Balance of Power or a Balance of Threats in Turbulent Middle East? *Ezzeddine Abdelmoula 13 June 2018 Al Jazeera Centre for Studies Tel: +974-40158384 jcforstudies@aljazeera.net http://studies.aljazeera.n

More information

Strategic Folly in the Framework Agreement with Iran

Strategic Folly in the Framework Agreement with Iran Strategic Folly in the Framework Agreement with Iran by Maj. Gen. (res.) Yaacov Amidror BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 296, April 20, 2015 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Only a profound misunderstanding of the

More information

Turkish Foreign Policy and Russian-Turkish Relations. Dr. Emre Erşen Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey

Turkish Foreign Policy and Russian-Turkish Relations. Dr. Emre Erşen Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey Turkish Foreign Policy and Russian-Turkish Relations Dr. Emre Erşen Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey E-mail: eersen@marmara.edu.tr Domestic Dynamics --- 2002 elections --- (general) Only two parties

More information

CHAPTER 3: Theories of International Relations: Realism and Liberalism

CHAPTER 3: Theories of International Relations: Realism and Liberalism 1. According to the author, the state of theory in international politics is characterized by a. misunderstanding and fear. b. widespread agreement and cooperation. c. disagreement and debate. d. misperception

More information

Investigating the Geology and Geography of Oil

Investigating the Geology and Geography of Oil S t u d e n t H a n d o u t a Investigating the Geology and Geography of Oil Land Area of Oil Countries of Southwest Asia Examine the map at right. It shows the locations of 10 oil countries in Southwest

More information