000 03608nam a22002777a 4500
003 KOHA_MİRAKIL
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008 211019d2021 cy ||||| m||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aCY-NiCIU
_beng
_cCY-NiCIU
_erda
041 _aeng
090 _aD 263
_bA23 2021
100 1 _aAbabakr, Amer
245 1 4 _aTHE SAUDI-IRANIAN RIVALTY AND ITS IMPACT ON THE REGIONAL ORDER IN THE MIDDLE EAST? /
_cAMER ABABAKR; SUPERVISOR: ASSOCIATE PROF. DR. M. MONCEF KHADDAR
264 _c2021
300 _a333 sheets;
_c31 cm.
_eIncludes CD
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
_btxt
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
_bn
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
_bnc
502 _aThesis (PHD) - Cyprus International University. Institute of Graduate Studies and Research International Relations Department
504 _aIncludes bibliography (sheets 267-322)
520 _aABSTRACT Over the past four decades, Saudi Iranian relations were characterized by a geopolitical and ideological rivalry that remains a constant element of a dual strategy of cooperation and confrontation. In the aftermath of 'the Arab Uprisings', Iran and Saudi Arabia played a prominent role that impacted the Middle East regional order facing turmoil, change, and an undeclared multilayered 'Cold War'. It is in this context that this research is investigating the securitization of the 'threat' of ('Saudi Arabia and its 'Sunni identity and Wahhabism ideology) and (Iran and its Shia identity and Khomeinism ideology) led by Iran and Saudi Arabia's speech acts. Almost no research has touched on the drive toward Iran and Saudi Arabia rivalry from the perspective of 'securitization' of identity-based on the Copenhagen school's approach. The novelty of this thesis is the attention it pays to the involvement of trans-border non-state actors as referent objects. This thesis examines the role of the audience in the process of securitization. Previous studies have focused on the state's securitization in relation to domestic audiences in the country itself. However, this study aims to broaden the state's scope in the direction of non-state actors' audiences in a third country. Additionally, the thesis examines how those two rival state actors succeeded in defining two different models in the post-2011 struggle for re-shaping the regional order in their favor? This thesis uses a qualitative descriptive-analytical case study research method and data collection to explore the 'securitization' of identity as an independent variable and the political behavior of the two regional rivals as a dependent variable. Beyond the reductive interpretation of the Saudi Iranian rivalry stemming from a 'sectarian' split between Shia and Sunni, this thesis argues that it is instead all about competition for regional leadership. Iran and Saudi Arabia construed their respective foreign policies as a 'threat' to each other, delegitimizing thus their regional ambitions. In Iraq and Syria, Saudis thought they could roll back Iranian influence. The same is true for Iran in Bahrain and Yemen. The complex fragility of Middle Eastern states reveals the cogency of the interplay between domestic, regional, and international politics ('intermestics'). Finally, due to the decades-long rivalry between Iran and Saudi Arabia, a post-Arab uprisings' reconfiguration of the regional order is gradually emerging, and it may be described as a contested structure in flux.
650 0 _aGeopolitics
_vDissertations, Academic
700 1 _aKaddar, M. Monchef
_esupervisor
942 _2ddc
_cTS
999 _c282946
_d282946