New Articles
Iran Responds to U.N. on Nuclear Program
02/13/2013 - 14:17 |
Obama: Time for a Diplomatic Solution
02/13/2013 - 13:40 |
Khamenei: U.S. Policies Have Failed in Mideast
02/13/2013 - 09:39 |
U.S. Sanctions Chinese Firms for Proliferation
02/13/2013 - 08:33 |
Politics Assembly of Experts: Farhi
Military Economy Oil & Gas Charts: Mohamedi Policy Options | Robin Wright
Nuclear Controversy Sanctions U.S. Sanctions: Clawson Sanctions-Details U.S. Sanctions: Starr / Ighani Rights Sanctions: Wright U.N. Resolutions: Starr
| Iran & the Region European Union: Posch
U.S. - Iran
People, Places and Events
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Iran Factbox
Land borders
| 2010 population: 74.5 million
Ethnic divisions:
Religious divisions[1]:
Bordering bodies of water:
[1] According to U.S. State Department's "International Religious Freedom Report 2006." |
The Iran Project
“The Iran Primer: Power, Politics and U.S. Policy” is an unprecedented project by 50 of the world’s top scholars on Iran representing some 20 foreign policy think tanks, eight universities, and senior foreign policy officials from six U.S. administrations. The book has no single political perspective or agenda, as the authors approach the subjects with a wide range of views.
They include scholars at the US Institute of Peace, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Council on Foreign Relations, Brookings Institution, Rand Corp, International Institute for Strategic Studies, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Asia Society, the Center for Strategic and International Studies, American Enterprise Institute, the Institute for Science and International Security, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, New America Foundation, Stimson Center, Center for Naval Analyses, Nixon Center, The Century Foundation, International and Foreign Policy Institute (Berlin), the Foreign Policy Research Institute, and several universities, including Stanford, Michigan, Columbia, Johns Hopkins, Georgetown, Syracuse, and the U.S. Naval Academy.
Two of the authors are former U.N. weapons inspectors. And the national security adviser or top National Security official in charge of Iran from six presidencies also contributed chapters on what happened between the United States and Iran during that administration.
The book is also a living website project, as the entire book is available free on the web. It will also be constantly updated. The goal is to provide information about the many complex sides of a country with which the United States has not had relations for more than three decades.
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"The Iran Primer"--Book Overview
“The Iran Primer” brings together 50 top experts—both Western and Iranian—to offer comprehensive but concise overviews of Iran’s politics, economy, military, foreign policy, and nuclear program. Each link on this site connects to a complete chapter on one of 62 subjects in 10 categories. Printable PDF attachments also are at the bottom of each chapter. New analysis is added weekly, based on recent developments in Iran.
The book also chronicles U.S.-Iran relations under six U.S. presidents. It probes five policy options. And it offers a data base of chronologies, nuclear sites, sanctions resolutions and other information. Since Iran's 1979 revolution, the West has struggled to understand the Islamic Republic and how to deal with it. The challenge looms even larger in the face of Iran’s controversial nuclear program, disputed 2009 election, growing human rights violations, and angry rhetoric. “The Iran Primer” offers context and analysis for what lies ahead.
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