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E-grāmata: Hegemony and Resistance around the Iranian Nuclear Programme: Analysing Chinese, Russian and Turkish Foreign Policies

(German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Germany.)
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The Iranian nuclear crisis is a proxy arena for competing visions about the functioning of international relations.

This book is the first to provide comprehensive and comparative analyses to conceptualise the interaction between ‘hegemonic structures’ and those actors resisting them using the Iranian nuclear case as an illustration. It analyses the foreign policies of China, Russia and Turkey towards the Iranian nuclear programme and thereby answers the question to what extent these policies are indicative of a security culture that resists hegemony. Based on 70 elite interviews with experts and decision-makers closely involved with the Iranian nuclear file, it analyses resistance to hegemony across its ideational, material and institutional framework conditions. The cases examined show how ‘compliance’ on the part of China, Russia and Turkey with parts of US approaches to the Iranian nuclear conflict has been selective, and how US policy preferences in the Iran dossier have been resisted on other occasions. As such, the Iran nuclear case serves as an illustration to shed light on the contemporaneous interaction of the forces of consent and coercion in international politics.

This book will be of key interest to scholars, students and practitioners in International Relations, Security Studies and Foreign Policy Analysis.

Acknowledgements ix
Note on transliteration and translation xi
List of acronyms
xii
Introduction 1(4)
Outline of the book 5(4)
1 Security discourse on Iran: the power to construct international relations
9(33)
1 Analysing international norm dynamics
10(7)
2 Whose hegemony?
17(4)
3 Discourse and behaviour between doublespeak and `compliance': understanding Chinese, Russian and Turkish Iran policies
21(3)
4 Methods, case selection and data analysis
24(18)
2 Turkish foreign policy towards the Iranian nuclear programme
42(28)
1 `Strategic depth' and the reproach of nuclear double standards: discursive divergence from US policies after 2003
42(4)
2 Turkey as a facilitator in the Iranian nuclear dossier
46(5)
3 Between `gold-for-gas' and sanctions waivers: Turkey's balancing act regarding unilateral Iran sanctions
51(4)
4 Turkey's Iran policy between ideology, geostrategy and alliance management
55(3)
5 Conclusion
58(12)
3 Russian foreign policy towards the Iranian nuclear programme
70(30)
1 Bushehr as burden and leverage: Russian reactions to the 2002 nuclear revelations
70(3)
2 Russia's position on Iran sanctions
73(4)
3 Russia in the Iranian nuclear talks: the notion of `constructive mediation' and the role of technical intermediary
77(3)
4 The impact of the Ukraine crisis on Russian Iran policies
80(2)
5 Derzhavnichestvo in practice: Russia between status quo politics and resistance in the JCPOA implementation
82(6)
6 Conclusion
88(12)
4 Chinese foreign policy towards the Iranian nuclear programme
100(31)
1 `Win--win' and Peaceful Co-existence: Chinese discourse in Iran's nuclear file
100(4)
2 China's position on Iran sanctions
104(6)
3 Chinese--Iranian economic relations and the impact of the JCPOA
110(4)
4 Chinese Iran diplomacy between triangulation and resistance
114(3)
5 Conclusion
117(14)
5 Chinese, Russian and Turkish policies in the Iranian nuclear dossier
131(32)
1 Contesting hegemony: normative opposition to extra-UN instruments
131(4)
2 Material disagreements with Iran sanctions regimes: barter, circumvention and sanctions compliance
135(6)
3 The de-Westernisation of Iran discourses
141(3)
4 `Compliance' with `international norms' or with hegemonic structures?
144(3)
5 Contesting hegemony and moving into a post-American world
147(5)
6 Conclusion
152(11)
6 Conclusion: the `Iran Question' and dissent in world order
163(9)
1 Synthesis and concluding reflections
163(4)
2 Areas for further research
167(5)
Index 172
Moritz Pieper is Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Salford, UK. He has been a visiting Research Fellow at China Foreign Affairs University (CFAU), Beijing, the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Brussels, and at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London.