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Nuclear Talks and Hidden Pressures: Diplomacy, Sanctions, and the Struggle for Agreement in the Iran Nuclear Crisis
Coles
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Nuclear Talks and Hidden Pressures: Diplomacy, Sanctions, and the Struggle for Agreement in the Iran Nuclear Crisis in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $13.99

Coles
Nuclear Talks and Hidden Pressures: Diplomacy, Sanctions, and the Struggle for Agreement in the Iran Nuclear Crisis in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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The negotiations over Iran's nuclear program stand among the most complex diplomatic undertakings of the twenty-first century — conducted simultaneously at the table and through back channels, shaped as much by domestic political pressures in Washington, Tehran, and Brussels as by the technical details of uranium enrichment and inspection regimes. This book reconstructs the full arc of nuclear diplomacy between Iran and the West, from the initial European-led talks of the early 2000s through the tortuous path to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and its subsequent collapse under the weight of competing political interests. Drawing on declassified diplomatic cables, memoirs of lead negotiators, and investigative reporting from multiple national perspectives, it examines the hidden pressures — domestic hardliners, regional rivals, corporate sanctions lobbies, and intelligence operations — that shaped every stage of the negotiating process. The account moves beyond the public record to reveal how agreements were constructed, undermined, and reconstructed under conditions of profound mutual distrust. It asks not whether diplomacy succeeded or failed, but what the process itself reveals about the structural constraints on international negotiation when existential interests, historical grievance, and geopolitical rivalry converge at the same table. For readers seeking a rigorous, evidence-based account of one of modern history's most consequential diplomatic episodes, this book offers clarity where political rhetoric has long produced only noise.
The negotiations over Iran's nuclear program stand among the most complex diplomatic undertakings of the twenty-first century — conducted simultaneously at the table and through back channels, shaped as much by domestic political pressures in Washington, Tehran, and Brussels as by the technical details of uranium enrichment and inspection regimes. This book reconstructs the full arc of nuclear diplomacy between Iran and the West, from the initial European-led talks of the early 2000s through the tortuous path to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and its subsequent collapse under the weight of competing political interests. Drawing on declassified diplomatic cables, memoirs of lead negotiators, and investigative reporting from multiple national perspectives, it examines the hidden pressures — domestic hardliners, regional rivals, corporate sanctions lobbies, and intelligence operations — that shaped every stage of the negotiating process. The account moves beyond the public record to reveal how agreements were constructed, undermined, and reconstructed under conditions of profound mutual distrust. It asks not whether diplomacy succeeded or failed, but what the process itself reveals about the structural constraints on international negotiation when existential interests, historical grievance, and geopolitical rivalry converge at the same table. For readers seeking a rigorous, evidence-based account of one of modern history's most consequential diplomatic episodes, this book offers clarity where political rhetoric has long produced only noise.


















