Iran's Foreign Policy: From Khatami to Ahmadinejad

Iran’s Foreign Policy: From Khatami to Ahmadinejad, a timely publication shedding light on Iran’s foreign policy decisions and their implications

Ithaca Press is pleased to announce the publication of Iran’s Foreign Policy: From Khatami to Ahmadinejad (new paperback edition), edited by Anoushiravan Ehteshami and Mahjoob Zweiri.
The current situation in Iran is escalating, with US sanctions already in place and EU sanctions reputedly also on the table. Iran’s Foreign Minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, has warned European countries against considering these sanctions, saying ‘ I am calling to all countries in the region – please don’t let yourselves be dragged into a dangerous position.’ It was unclear whether he was referring to military or economic danger in this speech.
Iran’s Foreign Policy: From Khatami to Ahmadinejad examines the implications of the foreign policy decisions of Iran, with a new chapter addressing the current situation, particularly with regard to Iran’s unresolved dispute with the international community over its nuclear programme, and to Iran’s role within the new Middle East, which is currently in the throes of revolution and political upheaval. The editors conclude that ‘what one gleans from what has been said and done since 2011 is a better appreciation of the swiftness of the dynamics of change now gripping the Middle East. The ongoing crisis within the region, coupled with Iran’s own unique political problems and complexities, mean that the relationship between Iran’s foreign policy and the domestic balance of political power has never been more relevant or significant’.
This is a highly topical and timely collection of papers by leading academics and prominent government officials, which sheds light on the foreign policy of Iran under President Khatami and into the period of President Ahmadinejad. The book considers key aspects of Iran’s complex internal and domestic forces, such as the impact of mass communication, with its implications for global interdependence, and the desire for greater freedom and democracy. These aspects of Iran’s internal political culture are juxtaposed against its intense and unshakeable national pride, and the book assesses the ongoing impact of these contradictory forces on its external relationships and foreign policy. Iran’s Foreign Policy provides detailed analysis of Iran’s turbulent relationship with the West. The editors argue in their introduction that ‘the principles that guide Iranian foreign policy have created “enemies of Islam and Iran”, as the Islamic Republic regards the West in general and the United States in particular’. In the context of the Islamic Republic’s guiding principles of maintaining territorial and Muslim integrity and independence, the book’s contributors assess ongoing developments such as the War on Terror, the continuing conflict in Iraq, American–Iranian relations, British–Iranian relations and European–Iranian relations.

Read more about the book here

About the editors
Professor Anoushiravan Ehteshami is the Nasser Al-Sabah Chair in International Relations at Durham University and Director of the HH Sheikh Nasser Al-Sabah Programme in International Relations and Regional Security in its School of Government and International Affairs. He is Joint Director of the Durham-Edinburgh-Manchester Universities’ ESRC-funded Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab Sorld (CASAW), 2007-2011.
Dr Mahjoob Zweiri is an Assistant Professor in Contemporary History of Iran and Middle East, and the Head of Humanities Department at Qatar University. He was formerly a Research/Teaching Fellow at the institute for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at the University of Durham and Director of its Centre for Iranian Studies. He also previously worked for the Centre for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan as a senior researcher in Middle Eastern and Iranian Studies.

Security Arrangements in the Persian Gulf: With Special Reference to Iran’s Foreign Policy

Security Arrangements in the Persian Gulf: With Special Reference to Iran’s Foreign Policy  By Dr Mahboubeh Sadeghinia

Security Arrangements in the Persian Gulf: With Special Reference to Iran’s Foreign Policy By Dr Mahboubeh Sadeghinia

from SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS IN THE PERSIAN GULF: With Special Reference to Iran’s Foreign Policy, MAHBOUBEH F. SADEGHINIA, Ithaca Press, 2011

June 2011

About this book

The strategic and economic characteristics of the Persian Gulf have made it of critical importance to all the states bordering its coastline, as well as the entire world’s economy and political life. Its significant geopolitical situation, in addition to its dominant position as an energy source and gateway for global energy, has caused the Gulf to be a worthy rival to outside powers, particularly those in the West, while also being amongst the most unstable and chaotic of any world regions.

The objective of this book is to understand the reasons for the failure of security models in the Persian Gulf and to provide a new model that addresses the need for a stable and peaceful structure of relationships, provides security for all individual littoral states, and also assures the interests of the external powers.

To this end, the book analyses the various security models adopted in this vitally important geopolitical region since 1962, with special reference to Iran’s foreign policy. Particular reference has been made to Iran because of its geostrategic and geopolitical situation and its role as the hegemonic power in the Persian Gulf. Indeed, regardless of its political regimes, Iran has significant national security concerns and plays a determinant role in the overall peace and security of the region.

About the author

Dr Mahboubeh Sadeghinia is the founder/Director of the Centre for the Study of Energy and Security (CSES). Prior to this she was a Visiting Research Fellow at the School of Government and International Affairs at Durham University. Having worked as an international journalist and also political researcher in Iran and Jordan during 1980–2003, her current research interests are foreign policy, political economy, security and strategic issues in Iran and in the Middle East/Persian Gulf. Her major focus is to studying security issues affected by energy and international relations between the Middle East and the West.