South Asia Security Monitor: No. 208
North Korea nuclear deal under fire at home;
Al-Qaeda in Pakistan: back in action 
North Korea nuclear deal under fire at home;
Al-Qaeda in Pakistan: back in action 
An untransparent election in the offing;
Russia's suicidal youth
Putin urges higher vigilance from the FSB;
Is Putin Gazprom-bound?
Warsaw's quid pro quo;
Still arming for a conflict in the Strait;
Israel shifts focus to short-range threats...;
...amid a new focus on space security
What can the United States do about Iran? Today that question, fueled by growing international concern over the Islamic Republic’s persistent nuclear ambitions, has emerged at the forefront of the American strategic debate.
In this calculus, economic measures have received comparatively short shrift. This is because conventional wisdom has it that the United States possesses little leverage that it can bring to bear in order to deter and contain Iran’s nuclear ambitions. In this case, however, the conventional wisdom is wrong; the United States has a considerable number of economic tools at its disposal, despite its lack of trade relations with the Islamic Republic.