ABSTRACT

Examining Iranian foreign policy, with a focus on the years since 2001, this book analyses the defining feature of Iran’s international and regional posture, its strategic loneliness, and the implications of this for the Islamic Republic’s foreign policy.

Iranian Foreign Policy since 2001 offers an in-depth analysis of the key drivers behind Iran’s foreign policy; power, strategic culture, and ideology. In addition, the authors examine Iran’s relations with key countries and regions, including its often tenuous relations with China, Russia and America, as well as its bilateral relations with non-state actors such as Hezbollah. The common thread running throughout the volume is that Iran is alone in the world: regardless of its political manoeuvrings, the Islamic Republic’s regional and international posture is largely one of strategic loneliness.

Assimilating contributions from the US, Canada, Europe and Iran, this book provides an international perspective, both at the theoretical and practical levels and is essential reading for those with an interest in Middle Eastern Politics, International Relations and Political Science more broadly.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Alone in the world

chapter |22 pages

Iran

Rising but unsustainable power, unfulfilled potential

chapter |16 pages

Iran

Foreign-policy strategic thinking in the twenty-first century

chapter |10 pages

Iran and South Asia

Dealing with a rising India

chapter |12 pages

Iran and Russia

chapter |12 pages

US-Iran relations

Mutually assured estrangement