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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 Program/Project

 

Science, Technology, and Public Policy

Mark Wilson/Getty

May 21, 2012

"How To Avoid a War with Iran"

Op-Ed, Foreign Policy

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

Observers would be forgiven for dismissing negotiations over Iran's nuclear program as Kabuki theater. Despite years of on-again, off-again efforts, after all, fears of war continue to simmer. Such frustrations are understandable -- but they may not be entirely justified.

 

 

AP Photo

Winter 2010

"Iran's Nuclear File: Recommendations for the Future"

Journal Article, Daedalus, issue 1, volume 139

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

"An ambitious reinvigoration of the grand bargain that was struck 40 years ago in the NPT is needed to usher in a new era of cooperation on preventing proliferation. The renewed grand bargain will need to combine steps that can be taken immediately alongside a vision for the longer term. It will also need to draw in states that are not parties to the NPT. Rather than rushing toward confrontation, with all its risks, all sides must put historic antipathies aside and find face-saving solutions. To give the Iranian advocates of compromise a chance to succeed, the United States and the other major powers need to put offers on the table that will show the people of Iran that nuclear restraint and compliance will put their nation on a path toward peace and prosperity."

 

 

AP Photo

January 29, 2009

"Iran's Islamic Revolution and Its Future"

Journal Article, Viewpoints, The Iranian Revolution at 30 Special Edition

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

"Regime sustainability despite different internal crises and foreign threats underlines the fact that Iran enjoys a relatively rational decision-making process. The central slogan of the Iranian Revolution was "Independence, Freedom, and Islamic Republic." Today, Iran is an independent state, as it does not belong to an Eastern or a Western bloc. Although the country has not realized its ambition of economic independence, the revolution has provided economic welfare. Rural development has improved people's lives by providing villages with water, electricity, and infrastructure. The essence of independence also
referred to the specific relations between the Iranian monarchy and the United States. The US-sponsored 1953 coup against the popular Muhammad Mosaddeq government made Iran an American client state, leading to Iranian dependence in all aspects."

 

 

November 2007

"Energy Supply and Demand in Eurasia: Cooperation between EU and Iran"

Journal Article, China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly, issue 4, volume 5

By Abbas Maleki, Associate, International Security Program

Energy diversification has emerged as one of the most important priorities for a majority of the European countries and the EU. Growing energy demand in Europe combined with a high reliance on Russia as an energy producer have led the EU to look to the Caspian Sea region for alternative energy resources, especially in natural gas. Iran has the 2nd largest natural gas reserves in the world and could assist Europe in diversifying supplies. This article argues that there is substantial potential for energy cooperation between Iran and the European countries, particularly Turkey. Increased Iranian participation in the Eurasian energy market, both as consumer and producer, could lead to other benefits including economic development and more efficient energy extraction.

 

 

September 26, 2007

"How to Build US-Iran Relations"

Op-Ed, Boston Globe

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

"...Iran has not suspended its uranium enrichment program, but it has not ignored the UN Security Council resolutions on Iran either, as can be discerned in the latest report by the International Atomic Energy Agency citing "significant progress" in Iran-IAEA cooperation. With the United States and Iran talking in Iraq and Iran-IAEA cooperation yielding concrete results in terms of Iran's nuclear transparency, the stage is potentially set for de-escalating the US-Iran tensions, particularly if both sides adopt a long-term view and sort out the security dimension."

 

 

September 21, 2007

"U.S., Iran Need to Build Confidence"

Op-Ed, San Francisco Chronicle

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

"...the stage is set for a thaw in U.S.-Iran relations. With sufficient political will on both sides, Washington and Tehran can achieve this by adopting concrete confidence-building measures and by imposing a mutually agreed-upon moratorium on demonizing each other."

 

 

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.

 

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