Iran’s Geopolitical Predicament and Its Consequences

by Shireen Hunter  

For some time now, most Middle East states and a good number of Western countries have portrayed Iran as the main cause of problems in the Middle East and parts of South Asia. Iran emerges from this narrative as the world’s biggest sponsor of terrorism and, in general, an all-around source of evil.

The United States, in particular, has tended to blame all of its setbacks in the Middle East and Afghanistan on Iran. If America’s plans for Iraq did not pan out it was because of Iran, if the Syrian war is not going the way it was intended the fault is Iran’s, if Saudi Arabia is leveling Yemen it is because of Iran, and so on. In Afghanistan, the US does not blame its setbacks on Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, which created and have sustained the Taliban, but Iran.

This perception of Iran as behind every trouble in these regions implies a degree of power and influence that Iran absolutely lacks. Any clear-headed analysis of Iran’s material power—economic, military as well as its so-called soft power—will demonstrate that it does not have any great influence over regional developments. Rather, any influence that Iran might have gained has been largely the outcome of Western mistakes, including a disregard for the ethnic, religious, and political realities of the region.

Take Syria, for example. President Bashar al-Assad would have been willing to abandon Iran if Israel had been willing to compromise on the Golan Heights. In fact, Assad said so many times although perhaps not exactly in such stark language. In Iraq, a government that is supposedly run by Iran refuses to accept the 1975 agreement that settled the issue of the contested waterway of Shatt al-Arab. Among other indignities, Iraq refuses to deal with sand storms that are choking Iran. In Turkey, Iran is called the Persian Satan. Afghanistan refuses to pay Iran’s water rights, thus turning the legendary Hamoon lake into a desert. Iran educates hundreds of thousands of Afghans at great expense and and many work in the country, legally and illegally. Yet Afghanistan’s press attacks Iran, and its government refuses to cooperate on many border issues, including the presence there of groups hostile to the Iranian government.

So, if Iran is so powerful, how can everyone blame, demonize, and scapegoat Iran without paying a price? The simple answer, and the one most frequently offered, is that the Islamic regime is the culprit. True, the behavior of Iran in many areas leaves much to be desired, and it no doubt has greatly contributed to the current conditions. However, this answer is not quite sufficient.

Even before the 1979 revolution, the West in particularly tended to magnify Iran’s faults while ignoring or soft-pedaling the shortcomings of other Middle East states. Gamal Abdul Nasser’s invasion of Yemen did not even receive a slap on the wrist. But when the Shah tried to help Oman fight the Dhofar rebellion, Persian imperialism was allegedly on the march. When the Shah celebrated the 2,500th anniversary of the Persian monarchy, he was accused of a folie de grandeur, although most of the money was spent not on the event itself but on infrastructural projects such as roads and hotels. Yet the billions of dollars that Persian Gulf princes and sheikhs spend on personal luxuries barely received a mention.

Iran’s Cultural Isolation

Despite invasions by the Greeks, Arabs, and a variety of Turko-Mongol armies and the ensuing losses that reduced the country’s Persian core, Iran was not Hellenized, Arabized, or Turkified. On the contrary, Iran’s Arab and Turkic invaders largely became culturally Persianized. As Ada Bozman has said if “Islam conquered Iran, then Iran conquered Islam.” Iran also retained its separate language and culture and, by embracing Shiism, carved out its own unique place within Islam. But Iran has also paid a price: loneliness. In its neighborhood Iran has no natural allies or ethnic kin. Those who are closest, like Afghanistan and Tajikistan, are separated by religion while those who are close by religion like Iraq and Azerbaijan are separated by ethnicity and language. This loneliness also means that one can mistreat Iran without having to face opposition from other states. There is no League of Persian States that would come to Iran’s rescue. Because it is Shia, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation also will not help Iran or protest when it is mistreated.

Meanwhile, Iran’s value to major international players has been derivative: it has been useful in achieving other goals or serving as a buffer and not as an ally for whom one would assume responsibility. Sir Dennis Wright, the one-time British ambassador in Tehran in the 1960s, wrote that Britain never considered Iran of sufficient value to colonize it. British policy was to keep Iran moribund and deny it to Russia. America essentially followed the same policy. The United States did not sign a security treaty with Iran and gave it less money than even to Nasser’s Egypt, which at the time was flirting with the Soviet Union. America has also been much more willing to experiment in Iran than, say, Turkey or Saudi Arabia, as it did both under John Kennedy and Jimmy Carter administrations. Much of the turmoil of the 1970s was the result of the drastic, highly controversial, and quickly implemented reforms in the 1960s in response to America’s urging. The Shah thought that he would lose American support if he didn’t attempt the changes. By and large, Russia too has had the same attitude towards Iran, except when Stalin tried to turn Iran into a constellation of Soviet Republics in the shape of current “Stans.”

Iran is both too big and too small. It is too big for the comfort of both its neighbors and the great powers. At the same time, it is too small to deter aggression. Iran is no China or India whose sheer size inhibits aggressors.

Iran’s Geopolitical Challenge

Iran’s geopolitical predicament, and the fact that it is blocked both on its eastern and Western fronts, means that any Iranian effort to escape its confinement prompts accusations of expansionism or imperialism. When Saddam Hussein, before Kuwait’s invasion, was sabotaging the Gulf Sheikdoms nobody called that “illegitimate interference.” But Iran cannot even have a school or a mosque in Bahrain without begin accused of terrorism.

As Napoleon said, “Geography is destiny.” But one can mitigate one’s geographic, and in Iran’s case, cultural misfortune. Given its predicament, Iran needs an essentially nationalist, self –contained, pragmatic, and non-ideological approach to foreign policy. . It needs to avoid entanglement in others’ disputes, especially when its direct security interests are not threatened. It may not be able to avoid some entanglement in the Persian Gulf, given that some regional states are interfering in Iran itself and the Persian Gulf is vital for Iran’s security. But it should not become embroiled in disputes in the Levant such as the Arab-Israeli conflict. Iran needs to have good relations with all major players so that regional players cannot manipulate its difficulties. In this context, its refusal to deal with America is highly destructive. If Iran wants to voice its concerns, it should do so through accepted international fora.

Sadly, the likelihood that the government in Tehran will heed this advice is nearly zero. On the contrary, since the revolution, Iran’s foreign policy behavior has done nothing but exacerbate its geopolitical predicament. The current government’s distorted priorities, which emphasize vague and unattainable Islamist goals instead of focusing on the country’s survival and prosperity, has brought Iran to the point when just about everybody uses and abuses it for their own selfish purposes and no one raises its voice to defend it.

Shireen Hunter

Shireen Hunter is an affiliate fellow at the Center For Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service. From 2005 to 2007 she was a senior visiting fellow at the center. From 2007 to 2014, she was a visiting Professor and from 2014 to July 2019 a research professor. Before joining she was director of the Islam program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a program she had been associated since 1983. She is the author and editor of 27 books and monographs. Her latest book is Arab-Iranian Relations: Dynamics of Conflict and Accommodation, Rowman & Littlefield International, 2019.

SHOW 46 COMMENTS

46 Comments

  1. JC,
    “Hezbollah has made clear it will not attack Israel unless Israel attacks first. Hezbollah is not a threat to the US.”

    Proof of this outlandish statement?

    To the contrary, plenty of bluster recently from Hezbollah’s leader including
    “Nasrallah boasted last Thursday that his rockets can reach Israel’s nuclear reactor in the southern city of Dimona, and that he would turn Israel’s reported nuclear arsenal against it.

    Nasrallah, who has in the past threatened to target an ammonia tank in Haifa, claimed credit for an Israeli court decision to shut down that facility this week and said he would do the same with the nuclear reactor.
    “I call upon the Israeli not only to evacuate the ammonia tank from Haifa, but also to dismantle Dimona nuclear facility,” Nasrallah said at a rally. “The Israeli nuclear weapon that represents a threat to the entire region, we will turn it into a threat to Israel,” he declared.”

    In 1967 Arabs leaders made all sorts of threats to annihilate Israel and moved troops into position to do so. Even though Israel does not occupy Lebanon, Hezbollah has amassed a massive arsenal of missiles (larger than numerous European countries) and repeatedly made genocidal threats.

    Maybe you are suggesting these threats are mere posturing but isn’t that really reckless? At some point, Israel may decide it has not choice but to strike first.

    Do Arabs EVER learn about the wisdom of threatening to exterminate the Jews?

    As for the US, Hezbollah did launch terrorist attacks in the 1980s, it was involved with the the 1996 Khobar Towers attack that killed 19 U.S. servicemen, and helped anti-US forces in Iraq. If we break the Iran nuclear agreement, Hezbollah may become more active again against the USA.

  2. JW: “Really, where is your proof. Hezbollah has attacked Western targets since the 1980s and it is a Shia group.”

    Simply untrue.

    Hezbollah attacked “Western targets in the 1980s” because at that time those same “Western” powers were militarily **IN** Lebanon.

    It has not done so “since the 1980s”, which is when that “Western” intervention ended.

    JW: “And that is not the only Shia extremist group”

    It isn’t even “a Shia extremist group”.

    It is a Shia militia group.

    It fights, and when it fights it fights just like any other militia would fight.

    Honestly, Jeffrey, you do know that the 20th Century finished quite some time ago, right?

  3. Yeah Right,

    The Arab League,[47] United States,[48] France,[49] the Gulf Cooperation Council,[50][51] Australia,[52] Canada,[53] the Netherlands,[54] and Israel[55] have classified Hezbollah as a terrorist organization. The European Union, New Zealand and the United Kingdom[56] have proscribed Hezbollah’s military wing as a terrorist organization, while making a distinction with Hezbollah’s political wing.[57][58] [From Wikipedia]

    The United States Department of State has designated Hezbollah a terrorist organization since 1995. The group remains on Foreign Terrorist Organization and Specially Designated Terrorist lists. According to the Congressional Research Service, “The U.S. government holds Hezbollah responsible for a number of attacks and hostage takings targeting Americans in Lebanon during the 1980s, including the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut in April 1983 and the bombing of the U.S. Marine barracks in October 1983, which together killed 258 Americans. Hezbollah’s operations outside of Lebanon, including its participation in bombings of Israeli and Jewish targets in Argentina during the 1990s and more recent training and liaison activities with Shiite insurgents in Iraq, have cemented the organization’s reputation among U.S. policy makers as a capable and deadly adversary with potential global reach.”

    Training of Shia insurgents in Iraq in 2003? I thought Hezbollah was just defending Lebanon from Israel?

    On February 14, 2005, former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri was killed, along with 21 others, when his motorcade was struck by a roadside bomb in Beirut. He had been PM during 1992–1998 and 2000–2004. In 2009, the United Nations special tribunal investigating the murder of Hariri reportedly found evidence linking Hezbollah to the murder.[257]

    Assassinating Lebanese leaders?

    Of course the best evidence of all. How would you like it if 10,000 known members of Hezbollah were admitted to your country and took up residence in your neighborhood?

    Why don’t you man up and stop evading my questions that would expose your hypocrisy?

  4. Mrs Hunter once again you’ve written about the obvious and your own observations of the events without giving or describing the reasons for the isolation of Iran!
    The first and foremost, Iran has supported the disadvantaged people against the west no matter where on earth. This regime has also demanded respect in its dealing with other governments and has refused to kiss up to them or bribe any government officials especially those in west! This happened to be a major weakness amongst the politicians in the west that Iran has its fingers on it! Secondly,
    Reagan strategy of isolating Iran militarily from north, south east and west has actually backfired and failed and the west doesn’t admit to it! The current Iran president, Rouhani, when he was the head of strategic and national security of Iran, he developed a strategy to counter Reagan’s strategy! The strategy that he developed was to surround and financially support its own surrogate groups like Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, Hamas in West Bank and Syria to surround Israel!
    Today Hezbollah is a power house in the ME and it has stopped Israel aggression into Lebanon and kicked them out of southern Lebanon in 30 days a few years ago. Hamas has been peeled off from Iran by the Saudis but Iran has replaced Hamas with the Shia militias in Iraq! Syria is a different story and Iran is helping Dr Bashar to kill ISIS to the chagrin of the west, Saudis, Turkey and Israel!

  5. James Canning, John O & Yeah Right should take note of Monty Ahwazi’s comments if you want an example of the aggressive perspective of Shia Muslims.

    Iran does not support “the disadvantaged people against the west no matter where on earth.” Let’s start with Iran itself. Iran has persecuted and continues to persecute women, gays, Bahá’ís, Jews (Protocols of the Elders of Zion and other anti-Semitic material is widely promoted), and certain other ethnic minorities, there is no free speech or press, and has executed dozens of children convicted of crimes.

    Maybe Reagan did not have anti-Iran policy but maybe you should have taken our hostages. Had the Mullahs retained the friendly relations with the USA and Israel, Iran would have been much better off.

    Your last statement that killing ISIS is to the “chagrin” of the USA, Israel and other nations is absurd. We are very happy you guys are killing each other off.

    To refer to an old Star Trek episode, it does not matter to use that one group of Jihadis is black on the left side of their face and the other is black on the right side of the their face.

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