ABSTRACT

Spanning over a period of more than five decades since its inception, Iran’s nuclear programme is the most protracted civilian nuclear program in the world and one of the most politicized projects in Iran’s history.

'Iran and the Nuclear Question' offers a historiographical portrait of Iran’s early nuclear program under Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. Using declassified archival material, the book thematically chronicles the program’s genesis, evolutionary trajectory, and devolution from the 1950s through to the 1970s. It also catalogues the Revolutionary Iran’s early socialization into the atom and the Islamic Republic’s gradual change of heart about nuclear energy that culminated in the incremental resuscitation of the Shah’s nuclear enterprise in the 1980s.

As the first archive-based account of one of the most long-lasting and capital-intensive nuclear enterprises during the Cold War, ‘Iran and the Nuclear Question’ is a valuable resource for students and scholars of Iranian, Middle East and Security Studies. Written in a clear and accessible format, it will also appeal to those with a more general interest in Iran and its nuclear journey.

chapter 1|7 pages

Atoms for peace: nuclear infancy

chapter 2|6 pages

From Baghdad Pact to CENTO

chapter 3|4 pages

The national security Monarch

chapter 4|6 pages

Nuclear program muddles through

chapter 5|9 pages

Prestige, supremacy and deterrence

chapter 6|8 pages

Birth of AEOI

chapter 7|3 pages

India’s peaceful nuclear explosion

chapter 8|4 pages

Conventional bribery

chapter 9|4 pages

Shah’s foot-in-mouth moment

chapter 10|10 pages

Standoff with Washington

chapter 11|8 pages

Gravitation towards Europe

chapter 12|4 pages

London Club

chapter 13|8 pages

Proliferation red fl ags

chapter 14|10 pages

Indian factor

chapter 15|7 pages

Ford’s quest for breakthrough

chapter 16|4 pages

Carter’s nuclear allergy

chapter 18|10 pages

The devil in details

chapter 19|14 pages

Strategic hedging

chapter 20|9 pages

Israel factor

chapter 21|11 pages

Enterprise under fi re: nuclear retrenchment

chapter 22|10 pages

Nuclear dormancy

chapter 23|4 pages

Designation as intransigent proliferator

chapter 24|12 pages

Conclusion