Luíza Cerioli
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The Persian Gulf regional system
Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United States as regional actors
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This chapter contextualises the Persian Gulf as a regional system, drawing upon seminal literature from scholars specialising in regional systems and the Middle East. It provides a critical review of this literature to frame the book’s analysis and argue for the analytical value of the concept of regions to explore patterns of intrastate relations, international politics, and security concerns. It depicts the Persian Gulf as a subsystem that emerged following the British departure and defines for it four key characteristics: the interface between Islam and politics, the role of oil in consolidating regimes, militarisation, and the long-standing influence of the United States. Its main outtake is that the Persian Gulf is and has always been multipolar, in the sense that no country managed to accumulate capabilities to become a hegemon. However, it always offered challengers or candidates for regional dominance, which has changed over time. Hence, it highlights five events that have shaped the balance of power: the British withdrawal, the Iranian Revolution, the Gulf War, the 2003 Iraq invasion, and the conflict against ISIS. These events serve as defining moments for subsequent chapters, shaping the trajectory of regional dynamics. Additionally, it reviews the literature on the three dyads that comprise the triangle, namely US–Iran, US–Saudi Arabia, and Iran–Saudi Arabia. It concludes underscoring the importance of ideational, cognitive, and leadership factors as crucial explanatory elements, setting the stage for the operationalisation of these elements as intervening variables in subsequent chapters.

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The Persian Gulf Triangle

The relations between Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United States

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