Publications

Iran Courts Latin America

August 4, 2012 Ilan I. Berman Middle East Quarterly

In October 2011, U.S. attorney general Eric Holder and FBI director Robert Mueller revealed the thwarting of an elaborate plot by elements in Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to Washington at a posh D.C. eatery, utilizing members of the Los Zetas Mexican drug cartel.

The foiled terrorist plot, with its Latin American connections, focused new attention on what had until then been a largely overlooked political phenomenon: the intrusion of the Islamic Republic of Iran into the Western Hemisphere. An examination of Tehran's behavioral pattern in the region over the past several years reveals four distinct strategic objectives: loosening the U.S.-led international noose to prevent it from building nuclear weapons; obtaining vital resources for its nuclear project; creating informal networks for influence projection and sanctions evasion; and establishing a terror infrastructure that could target the U.S. homeland.

Eurasia Security Watch: No. 265

July 31, 2012

Israel weighs possible attack on Syria's chemical arsenal;

U.S. hopes for new military base in Tajikistan...;

...while Russia simply hopes to remain;

A way out for Assad;

Sectarian violence surges in Iraq