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Confronting Iran. The Failure of American Foreign Policy and the Next Great Conflict in the Middle East.

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8vo. New, unread condition. Black paper covered boards with gilt title to spine. Clean, tight interior. Orange dust jacket with black title to spine. Index, 280 pages. MIL/062106

Hardcover

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

Ali M. Ansari

32 books21 followers
Ali Massoud Ansari is professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. He is the founder of the Institute of Iranian Studies.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
74 reviews4 followers
November 19, 2019
Ali Ansari's historical background and social-psychoanalysis is beyond reproach. But the book has nothing to do with "confronting" Iran. Not even with "understanding" Iran!!
The take-away is that Iran has historical grievances and a very fragile national pride that cannot get over these grievances, and the author recommends that the West, and the rest of the world for that matter, should "baby-cuddle" this Iranian wounded psyche.
Iranian murders in Buenos Aires and Beirut, Paris and Berlin, should be assessed as temper tantrums rather than terrorist attacks.
Iranian aggression against its weaker neighbors should be understood as "logical" imperial behavior, that the West should identify with, rather than "confront" on the basis of: two wrongs don't make right.
This Scottish-Iranian author opines that any mistakes Iran does are justified by the historical backdrop, even if mythical. This is a smug opinion that absolves Iran from wrong doing, present or future, since the past cannot, now, be changed. I think this is far more Iranian, than it is Scottish.
While I applaud the patriotic spirit of many "Westernized" Iranian writers, Like Ali Ansari here, and Vali Nasr; I cannot avoid the fact that this spirit ends up clouding their critical analysis, and perverts their thinking into propaganda for the Islamic Republic.
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45 reviews8 followers
May 2, 2019
I have translated this book from English into Urdu for Tayyab Publishers, Urdu Bazar, Lahore, Pakistan. The title of Urdu translation is Iran Amreeka Tasadum ایران امریکا تصادم.
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14 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2009
Brief overview of U.S.-Iranian relations since the mid-19th century, with a focus on the coup in 1953 and Revolution of 1979, and the effects of each on Iranian perceptions of the U.S. and vice-versa.

This is an excellent introduction to U.S.-Iranian relations for anyone who is looking to understand today's events in their historical context without having to devote a full semester to its study. To that end, some detail is sacrificed. For brevity, Ansari spends very little time on Persia's/Iran's relationships with other countries. Discussion of British and Russian imperial activities are mercifully limited to those treaties, business relationships, and political meddling that directly influenced (or may have directly influenced) the way subsequent Iranian governments viewed U.S. activities.

Ansari writes much better than his editor edits, and I tripped over nearly a dozen silly grammatical errors and typos that might have resulted from the publisher's desire to rush this book into print while it was most relevant.

I didn't know much about Iran outside of a very brief study of Persian, and this book influenced my understanding of Iran in a similar way that my attitudes toward the Arabic world changed after I first learned about the Balfour Declaration. All in all, good stuff.
1 review2 followers
December 4, 2008
A brief perspective on US-Iranian relations from the perspective a seemingly neutral observer. As someone with much interest but little knowledge in foreign policy, I thought this book provided great insight into the challenges faced and follies committed by both sides. More generally, the book gave me a greater appreciation for the factors that must align for effective diplomacy to take place between two nations (e.g. a well-educated and well-intentioned corps of diplomats, a political faction whose interests align with the interests of diplomacy, a neutral press, etc.). Overall, I found this book both engaging and enlightening.
4 reviews
December 27, 2007
An excellent discussion of how we got to where we are with Iran. Also a discussion of Iranian internal politics and the way their nascent democracy functions. What can we do to improve the relationship. I gained a whole new understanding of the Iranian people and political context from this book. Very enllightening.
13 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2008
Great contemporary book on Iran that brings the reader from the time of the Shah to the 1979 revolution to present day. Focus is on US-Iran relations. Very readable but also informative--written by one of the leading scholars on Iran, Ali Ansari. Makes a good case for both the US and Iran significantly misinterpreting/perceiving each other.
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60 reviews2 followers
September 23, 2008
Thorough analysis on modern US Iran relations and Iran's relationship with other world powers. Ansari is a known scholar on the subject and weaves many key events/inactions to explain the current situation with Iran.
14 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2009
So far, one of best and balanced books on US-Iran relations I've read.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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