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Iran's Foreign Policy and the Iran-Pakistan-India Gas Pipeline
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iran's Foreign Policy and the Iran-Pakistan-India Gas Pipeline

    Shortly after the revolution in 1979, Iran somewhat irrationally distanced itself from the international community. Partly because of revolutionary fervor, Iran initially made itself vulnerable. The American hostage crisis and the eight-year war with Iraq exposed Iran to economic hardship and international isolation.

    January 29, 2009

    The European Union and Iran
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The European Union and Iran

    European governments initially reacted to Iran’s Islamic revolution by a careful testing of the ground with the new regime. But relations deteriorated quickly, as Iran accused some European countries of siding with Iraq in the Iran-Iraq War and Iranian agents killed Iranian opposition figures in European capitals.

    January 29, 2009

    Iran and Saudi Arabia: Eternal "Gamecocks?"
  • Analysis
  • Iran and Saudi Arabia: Eternal "Gamecocks?"

    Almost immediately after the triumph of the Islamic revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini and the new Iranian leadership turned against Saudi Arabia and its ruling family.

    January 29, 2009

    Iran and France: Shattered Dreams
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iran and France: Shattered Dreams

    When Iran’s 1979 revolution took place, many Iranians predicted that relations between Iran and France would improve in an unprecedented way. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, spent the last four months of his 14-year in exile in France. The revolutionaries in Tehran lauded French leaders for being hospitable toward their spiritual leader. They had no hatred of France, which lacked colonialist aspirations regarding Iran.

    January 29, 2009

    The Spectrum of Perceptions in Iran's Nuclear Issue
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Spectrum of Perceptions in Iran's Nuclear Issue

    The relationship between Iran and the West has been marked by mutual mistrust and confrontation for the past 30 years. Iran’s nuclear standoff with Western countries is currently regarded as the main symbol of that confrontational relationship. Iran insists that its nuclear program is exclusively peaceful, while Western countries are suspicious of Tehran’s intentions. There are polarized and incompatible views about this complicated and multidimensional issue. The main source of incompatibility is that this issue is seen from different perspectives.

    January 29, 2009

    Iran's Islamic Revolution and Its Future
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iran's Islamic Revolution and Its Future

    As one of the most important events of the past three decades in the Middle East, the Islamic Revolution not only has sustained itself, but the Islamic Republic which it spawned celebrated its 30th anniversary in February 2009.

    January 29, 2009

    The Iranian Revolution of February 1979
  • Analysis
  • The Iranian Revolution of February 1979

    The revolution of February 1979 was a revolt of the society against the state. In some of its basic characteristics, the revolution did not conform to the usual norms of Western revolutions, because the state did not represent just an ordinary dictatorship but an absolute and arbitrary system that lacked political legitimacy and a social base virtually across the whole of the society.

    January 29, 2009

    US Relations with Pakistan: The Need for a Strategic Shift
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • US Relations with Pakistan: The Need for a Strategic Shift

    Originally posted May 2008

    Pakistan has come to reflect and affect many of the critical issues in South Asia that worry the US foreign policy establishment, the media, and the public. But US officials are crafting policy responses to deal with Pakistan that are focused excessively narrowly on a single issue — the war on terrorism. In addition to exacerbating Pakistan’s own problems, these efforts have undermined Pakistan’s capacity and political will to fight this war. As a consequence neither America’s nor Pakistan’s best interests are being served.

    May 1, 2008

    Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections Part 1
  • Analysis
  • Iran's March 14, 2008 Majlis Elections Part 1

    Originally posted March 2008

    One of the strangest features of contemporary Iranian politics must surely be the reality that despite the concerted and successful effort to narrow the range of candidates allowed to run for various political offices, competition among individuals and groups has not only remained unabated, it has intensified. The elite jockeying that has taken place in the past few months, leading to the upcoming March 14 Majlis elections, is a good example of the competitive intensity that had come to characterize Iranian politics.

    March 2, 2008

    'Ali Khamene'i: Iran's Most Powerful Man
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • 'Ali Khamene'i: Iran's Most Powerful Man

    Originally posted March 2008

    On January 3, 2008, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah ‘Ali Khamene’i once again sought to remind domestic and foreign audiences about his stature in Tehran. Stating that “cutting off relations with the US” was one of the “principal policies” of the Iranian government, but that he would be the “first person to endorse these relations” if it benefited the Iranian people, Khamene’i secured news headlines.[1]     

    In the Shadow of Benazir Part 1
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • In the Shadow of Benazir Part 1

    Originally posted February 2008

    Pakistan has had so few national elections in its 60-year history that every exercise to elect the national Parliament is exceptional. These relatively rare events are not only a mechanism for effecting a change of government but are also a means for putting the political process back on the rails and redefining the provisions of the 1973 constitution, which has been shredded by four periods of martial law. General (retired) Pervez Musharraf has declared martial law twice, ironically once against his own government.

    February 2, 2008