Abstract

This chapter labels Iran as the “permanent alternative” in the Armenia’s foreign policy thinking and practice since the beginning of the independence. This term reflects both Iran’s immediate post-1991 role as that of a balancing power vis-à-vis Turkey and Azerbaijan and the Armenians’ perception of their relations with Iran as a political constant. Both countries see each other as one of the paths leading them away from regional marginalization and isolation that results in the use of a similar language of balance and mediation. Armenia uses its relationship with Iran as a semantic tool in formulating and presenting its policy of complementarity. It would have been simply impossible for Armenia to advance this concept and illustrate its raison d’etat without its relationship with this ideological opponent of the West. “Social banks,” consisting of Armenia’s Iran specialists, linguists, and trained diplomatie staff as well as key leadership’s cultural familiarity with the Middle East, grant this relationship certain depth and underlying comfortableness despite certain mutual tensions.KeywordsForeign PolicyMiddle EastForeign MinisterIslamic RepublicMilitary AllianceThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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