• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Saudi-Iranian relations since the fall of Saddam : rivalry, cooperation, and implications for U.S. policy
  • Contributor: Wehrey, Frederic [Other]
  • Corporation: Rand Corporation ; Rand Corporation, National Security Research Division ; Smith Richardson Foundation
  • imprint: Santa Monica, CA: Rand, 2009
  • Published in: RAND Corporation monograph series
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (xxv, 130 pages)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780833046574; 0833047108; 9781282081659; 1282081659; 9780833047106; 0833046578
  • Keywords: Middle East ; Persian Gulf States ; Saudi Arabia ; United States ; Diplomatic relations ; international relations ; Saudi Arabia ; Iran ; Middle East ; Regions & Countries - Asia & the Middle East ; Iran ; History & Archaeology ; POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Government ; International ; POLITICAL SCIENCE ; International Relations ; General ; United States Foreign relations Persian Gulf States ; Iran Foreign relations Saudi Arabia ; Saudi Arabia Foreign relations Iran ; Persian Gulf States Foreign relations United States ; Persian Gulf States ; Electronic books
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: "Sponsored by the Smith Richardson Foundation
    Issued by: RAND National Security Research Division
    Includes bibliographical references
    Title from PDF title page (viewed Apr. 2, 2009)
  • Description: The often tense relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran has been at the center of many of the major political shifts that have occurred in the Middle East since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. This volume documents a study of how relations between the two powers have unfolded in the Persian Gulf, Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine from 2003 through January 2009. Wehrey et al. detail the complex and multidimensional relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran and its implications for regional stability and U.S. interests. In doing so, the authors challenge conventional thinking about Saudi-Iranian relations, arguing, for example, that Sunni-Shi'a distinctions are not the key driver in dealings between the two nations, that the two states have a tendency to engage on areas of common interest, and that the notion of a watertight bloc of Gulf Arab states opposing Iran is increasingly unrealistic. The study concludes with U.S. policy recommendations for leveraging the Saudi-Iranian relationship, particularly in the context of a U.S. drawdown in Iraq, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and the Iranian nuclear issue

    The often tense relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran has been at the center of many of the major political shifts that have occurred in the Middle East since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. This volume documents a study of how relations between the two powers have unfolded in the Persian Gulf, Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine from 2003 through January 2009. Wehrey et al. detail the complex and multidimensional relationship between Saudi Arabia and Iran and its implications for regional stability and U.S. interests. In doing so, the authors challenge conventional thinking about Saudi-Iranian relations, arguing, for example, that Sunni-Shi'a distinctions are not the key driver in dealings between the two nations, that the two states have a tendency to engage on areas of common interest, and that the notion of a watertight bloc of Gulf Arab states opposing Iran is increasingly unrealistic. The study concludes with U.S. policy recommendations for leveraging the Saudi-Iranian relationship, particularly in the context of a U.S. drawdown in Iraq, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and the Iranian nuclear issue
  • Access State: Open Access