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Abbas Maleki

Abbas Maleki

Associate, International Security Program

Contact:
Email: abbas_maleki@harvard.edu
Website: http://mail.sharif.edu/~maleki/

 

 

By Date

 

2007 (continued)

September 2007

"Iran-Pakistan-India Pipeline: Is It a Peace Pipeline?"

Magazine or Newspaper Article, MIT Center for International Studies Audit of the Conventional Wisdom, issue 16, volume 7

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

A major natural gas pipeline that would stretch from the fields of southern Iran to Pakistan and India — itself a remarkable prospect — is being planned. But it faces serious hurdles, not least the fierce opposition of the U.S. government.

 

 

August 17, 2007

"Saving the Peace Pipeline"

Op-Ed, Agence Global

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program and Kaveh L. Afrasiabi

"...in light of the IPI’s potential contribution to regional development, complementing the North-South corridor under consideration by the member states of the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), it may be a good idea to revamp the IPI into a consortium that opens the possibility of a future role by other regional parties, both in terms of investment as well as linkage with the regional gas network."

 

 

June 20, 2007

"China-Middle East Dialogue in the Age of Rising Energy"

Book Chapter

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

Abbas Maleki illustrates how China's growing relations with Iran and Saudi Arabia affect Sino-American relations.

 

 

2007

Iran

Book Chapter

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

Iran has not acted as a dragon breathing ideological fire across the region, but rather as a traditional entrepreneur and reliable trader.

 

2006

August 23, 2006

"Iran's Diplomacy in Action"

Op-Ed, Agence Global

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program and Kaveh L. Afrasiabi

In this insider's assessment of Iran's long-awaited response to the incentive package offered by the United States and other world powers, Abbas Maleki and Kaveh Afrasiabi argue that this is an opportunity for diplomacy that could actually halt Iran's nuclear enrichment and address the concerns of the West.

 

 

July 21, 2006

Why Not Involve Iran in Effort To Establish Order in Mideast?

Op-Ed, Forward

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

The world faces different crises all the time, and each generation feels its crises to be the biggest.

 

 

Summer 2006

"Iran: Appearances Can Be Deceiving"

Newsletter Article, Belfer Center Newsletter

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's announcement that his country has completed a uranium enrichment cycle was met with great fanfare in the country, and much worry around the world.

 

 

June 15, 2006

"Finding Compromise in Iran"

Op-Ed, Boston Globe

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program and Matthew Bunn, Associate Professor of Public Policy; Co-Principal Investigator, Project on Managing the Atom

"...If Iran is willing to agree to a deal under which it would remain legally committed not to build nuclear weapons, no more centrifuges would be added, and extensive verification would be allowed, that would be far better for US security than letting insistence on zero propel a drift toward confrontation. After all, failure to reach agreement would mean no limit on Iran's centrifuges, and a drift in the direction of sanctions and potential military strikes, with all the dangers they would hold...."

 

 

May 14, 2006

Jack Straw and Understanding Iran

Magazine or Newspaper Article, Shargh, (East)

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

 

 

May 10, 2006

"Iran Is Eager to Defuse the Nuclear Squabble"

Op-Ed, Financial Times

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

"...the general public does not consider the nuclear issue to be of vital importance. Nuclear technology will do little for the average Iranian — it cannot create more jobs for a country that needs 1m jobs annually, it cannot change the chronic low efficiency, productivity and effectiveness of the economy and management, and it will do nothing to improve Iran's commercial ties with the rest of the world...."

 

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