Injecting the Iranian Factor in US-Turkish Relations: A New Player in Town

  • Sotiris Serbos Democritus University of Thrace
Keywords: Asia - Pacific, Middle East, Balance of Power, Iraq.

Abstract

The article attempts to bring forward a framework analysis which elaborates on America’s shifting foreign and defence policy priorities from the Middle East region to the Asia-Pacific. Pulling of resources for sustaining a US rebalancing strategy to Asia is inextricably linked to successfully coordinate a set of alliances in a far from straightforward regional security environment. In an effort to achieve a functional balance of power in the Greater Middle East, Washington’s game-changing for managing regional rivalries and the spillover effects of the Syrian civil war, indicate a necessity for reassessing Middle East’s security system by approaching two non-Arab Muslim countries; Shiite Iran and Sunni Turkey. To avoid Iraq’s disintegration and above all to preserve a regional balance of power, America’s strategy involves engaging Iran in a constructive process of rapprochement with the US, while empowering Turkey to counterbalance its growing leverage in the region.

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Published
2014-04-07
How to Cite
Serbos S. (2014). Injecting the Iranian Factor in US-Turkish Relations: A New Player in Town. UNISCI Discussion Papers, 34, 9-29. https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_UNIS.2014.n34.44830
Section
Articles