Modern Diplomacy: US foreign policy on Iran is outdated.
An analytical website reported that the current US administration’s focus on Iran, Russia and China as the main threats to Washington reflects its outdated foreign policy and past obsolescence.
In a report, the Modern Diplomacy think tank described the new US administration’s focus on China, Russia and Iran as major US threats, a sign of the United States’ outdated foreign policy and outdated history.
The report’s introduction cites a recent note by Frederick Kemp, an American analyst and journalist on the CNBC website, which emphasized that the United States intends to address the challenges posed by China and Russia in 2022. And Iran is coming to concentrate.
Referring to US President Joe Biden’s administration’s focus on Russia, China and Iran as major US threats, the Modern Diplomacy Analytical Base wrote that creating another “axis of evil” that confronts the US is always risky. And it is often misleading.
According to the report, the challenges that each of the three countries, Russia, China and Iran, pose to the United States are different.
According to the report, Russia’s challenge is almost exclusively military and geopolitical, ranging from a strategic nuclear arms race to Moscow’s direct or indirect military conflict in areas such as Syria, Ukraine or Libya.
However, according to the report, China’s challenge to the United States is more economic and technological, ranging from advanced machine building to competition in artificial intelligence.
In his report, Modern Diplomacy then referred to the issue of Iran and wrote that the issue of Iran’s nuclear program is in fact a dilemma that the United States itself has created by its decision to unilaterally withdraw from the IAEA in May 2018.
In his report, Modern Diplomacy then referred to the issue of Iran and wrote that the issue of Iran’s nuclear program is in fact a dilemma that the United States itself has created by its decision to unilaterally withdraw from the IAEA in May 2018.
The report also goes on to say that the escalation of geopolitical competition in the modern world, however real it may be, cannot ignore many of the global problems that are common to the United States and its strategic enemies.