Some have even likened the president of Iran to the
prime minister or an actual president. This is in
accordance with the theory of "Wali al-Faqih",
adopted by Iran by Khomeini after his revolution,
which ended the regime of the Shah in 1979. He
devised a system of government not seen in the world
before, declaring clearly and through the constitution
that it aims to apply this system to all countries. Said
countries will be controlled under the name of
"Islamic Jihad" and the "Unification of the Nation"
(Amoun, 2016).
The geographical location of the Islamic Republic
of Iran is important, both politically and economically
in nature, as it links East Asia and West Asia, with
borders overlooking the Arabian Gulf as well as its
proximity to Arab countries including Iraq, Syria,
Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
There are two major geographic regions that are
the focus of Iranian interest; the first is the Caucasus
and the Caspian Sea, Central Asia, located in northern
Iran and the second consists of the Gulf States,
located to the south. The importance of these areas for
Iran is because of the cultural heritage that they
possess, which is represented in the Shiite doctrine,
and in the economic wealth that is found in the
reserves of oil and natural gas (Awaid, 2014).
3.2 Economic Determinant
Economic self-sufficiency means that the state has
reached a stage where it does not have to extend a
request for help to rich countries in order to obtain
financial or in-kind assistance such as weapons,
aircraft etc. Thus therein is the ability of the political
system to withstand, through local production and
self-sufficiency, to produce political power in the
international community by making independent
decisions without any effect regionally or
internationally. The imbalance in this leads the state
to a cage of dependence abroad, pushing it to making
political and security concessions, which threatens
the existence of the state and independent
sovereignty.
This is what Iran is aware of. Energy is an
important element in calculating the power of the
state at the internal and external levels. It must work
seriously to provide the potential energy for life and
economic development, and to find other sources of
petroleum energy. Iran's development of a nuclear
program is one manifestation of this realization. Iran
has been able to achieve some scientific achievements
in this regard. It successfully enriched uranium using
centrifuges.
The Iranian nuclear file is one of the most
important priorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran at
the internal and external levels, especially with regard
to the axis of resistance. With the increase of the
Islamic Republic of Iran, the result is that it is seeking
to increase Iran's political power in the regional arena.
This gives strong impetus to the Palestinian Hamas
movement in the face of the Israeli occupation.
Mahmoud al-Zahar, the Hamas leader closest to Iran,
said that his movement was stronger than during the
recent Israeli war on the Gaza Strip in the summer of
2014. Zahar added that the Palestinian people would
not be broken and that they would continue to resist
the Zionist occupation until the liberation of all of
Palestine. Zahar leads the wing, whose relationship
with Iran has not dissipated even at the height of the
confusion over Hamas' position on the Syrian war,
when the movement announced a stand against Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, Iran's ally. Its offices were
closed in Damascus and moved to Qatar (Middle East
Online, 2015).
3.3 Security and Political Determinants
Iran has adopted a revolutionary foreign policy since
1979, when the ruling class at the time had a vision of
the outside world reflected in its foreign policy. This
vision was carried out with a view of international
isolation and a negative view of Iran. However, by the
end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s, Iran
seemed to be more realistic in its foreign policy,
especially with the rise in real trends. As a result, Iran
sought to restructure its regional and international
relations while retaining its strategic powers. It
moved from the revolutionary role of Khomeini to a
more balanced role in international relations as the
pillar of internal revolutionary support, focusing on
peaceful diplomacy and balance in its foreign
relations. Solid and soft power, away from
sensitivities, in order to rebuild what was destroyed
by the Iraq-Iran war. Nevertheless, neighbouring
countries have continued to meet every Iranian policy
with a look of extreme suspicion and caution.
This turbulent environment has made Iran acquire
the idea of targeting it militarily in the context of what
Washington calls the axis of evil. Iran is still in its
regional and international relations with deep
mistrust. Fifteen neighbours face a tension that makes
Iran and its regional and international actors be in
permanent doubt. This will certainly be reflected in
the effectiveness of Iran's foreign policy, which is
considered to be a relative failure of its overall policy.
Iran continues to feel that it is targeted from both near
and far. This is reflected in its vision of the world,
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