Strategy Matters

Episode 17: Between Strategic Rivalry and Uneasy Cooperation: How the Relationship Between Iran and Iraq Shapes the Modern Middle East

Feb 13, 2026
Shahin Berenji, Assistant Professor specializing in Middle East strategic rivalries. Samuel Helfont, historian focused on Iraq and the Iraq Wars. They trace Iran–Iraq borderlands and historic rivalry. They discuss the 1980s war's legacy, Iran’s role after 2003, whether Iraq leans toward Tehran, and how instability in Iran could reshape the region.
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INSIGHT

Borderlands Shape Recurrent Rivalry

  • The Iran–Iraq border is a historic frontier with periods of conflict and peaceful cross-border exchange.
  • Longstanding ethnic, religious and waterway disputes shaped recurring tensions rather than constant hostility.
INSIGHT

1979 Remade Regional Strategy

  • The 1979 Iranian Revolution and Saddam's consolidation transformed regional strategy and triggered deeper US involvement.
  • Iran's export of revolution and Saddam's purge made both states more revisionist and confrontational.
INSIGHT

Misreading Opportunity Triggered Quagmire

  • Saddam invaded Iran from mixed offensive and defensive motives, misreading Iran's post-revolution weakness as a window.
  • The miscalculation produced an eight-year quagmire with massive casualties and no decisive gains.
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