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The Politics of Economic War Between the United States and Iran

The Politics of Economic War Between the United States and Iran


By Emeka Esogbue


Introduction


This article offers an evidence-based analysis of the enduring conflict between two pivotal states in the international system. From an international relations perspective, the ongoing economic confrontation between the United States and Iran demonstrates how both nations possess the capacity to influence global politics, albeit through vastly different mechanisms.


The United States remains a global superpower, wielding the world's largest economy, a dominant military apparatus, cutting-edge technological capabilities, and systemic leverage over international financial institutions. Through targeted sanctions, trade restrictions, and its architectural control over the global banking system, Washington routinely exerts formidable economic pressure on foreign states.


Iran, while not a superpower, has solidified its status as a resilient regional power with undeniable global relevance. Despite enduring decades of stringent economic isolation, Tehran has maintained political continuity, advanced its indigenous military and nuclear capabilities, and cultivated a robust network of regional alliances. Its capacity to absorb economic shocks and dictate security dynamics in the Middle East ensures that major global powers cannot afford to ignore it.


The Asymmetry of Power and Resilience


The strategic crux of this conflict lies in an asymmetrical dynamic: the United States leverages its financial hegemony to impose sweeping sanctions aimed at curtailing Iran’s economic vitality and regional ambitions, while Iran counters through adaptation. Tehran has mitigated this pressure by pioneering alternative trade networks, deepening strategic alignments with non-Western powers like China and Russia, and expanding its asymmetric influence across the Middle East.


Consequently, while the United States operates with unmatched global structural power, Iran has proven to be an exceptionally resilient regional actor whose strategic shadow extends far beyond its borders. For over four decades, this relationship has been defined not by direct, conventional military engagement, but by a continuous, attritional economic war. Through financial blacklisting, oil embargoes, and diplomatic isolation, Washington has consistently sought to alter Tehran’s regional posture and halt its nuclear program. This prolonged standoff serves as a premier case study in how economic statecraft has bypassed traditional warfare to become a central pillar of modern geopolitical competition.


Historical Context and the "Maximum Pressure" Era


While international relations scholars trace the genesis of this economic friction to the 1979 Iranian Revolution and the subsequent U.S. Embassy hostage crisis, the contemporary phase of this economic warfare crystallized in 2018. In that year, the United States unilaterally withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) commonly known as the Iran nuclear deal and initiated a comprehensive "maximum pressure" campaign.


What began decades ago as specific punitive measures has mutated into one of the most sophisticated and comprehensive sanctions regimes in modern history. Washington views these measures as a vital tool to achieve high-stakes foreign policy goals without triggering a large-scale military conflagration. These sweeping restrictions specifically target: Energy Exports: Severely restricting Iran's crude oil and natural gas sales, which historically formed the backbone of its state revenue.


There was also the cutting off Iranian banking and insurance institutions from international networks like SWIFT,  blacklisting maritime trade infrastructure to isolate Iranian supply chains and freezing assets and restricting travel for key individuals and state-linked organizations, particularly the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). In response, Tehran enacted a "resistance economy" framework. This defensive strategy focuses on boosting domestic production, neutralizing the dollar's dominance via alternative payment mechanisms, and expanding trade volumes with neighbouring countries alongside major Eurasian powers.


The efficacy of this economic warfare remains a deeply polarizing debate among statecraft experts. Proponents argue that sanctions successfully choke government revenues, degrade military procurement, and provide essential leverage for diplomatic negotiations. Conversely, critics contend that such sweeping measures rarely compel major political concessions. Instead, they often induce long-term structural adaptation, harden domestic political resolve, and inflict severe collateral damage on civilian populations.


The Israeli Factor in the Geopolitical Equation


The political dynamics of the U.S.–Iran economic conflict cannot be decoupled from the strategic security calculus of Israel. Tel Aviv views a revisionist Iran as its preeminent existential threat, pointing to Tehran's accelerating nuclear program, advanced ballistic missile architecture, and funding of a regional "Axis of Resistance" including groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.


Accordingly, successive Israeli administrations have intensely advocated for unyielding international pressure on Tehran. Believing that financial deprivation directly diminishes Iran’s capacity to subsidize its regional proxies, Israeli leadership has consistently lobbied Washington and European allies to maintain an aggressive sanctions posture.


While Washington and Tel Aviv share fundamental security objectives regarding Iran, their tactical approaches have occasionally diverged. Indeed, the Obama administration favoured a diplomatic matrix, culminating in the 2015 JCPOA. Israel strongly opposed the deal, arguing that its "sunset clauses" failed to permanently block Iran's path to a nuclear weapon and offered premature sanctions relief.


Operating alongside the U.S. economic offensive, Israel has reportedly conducted an extensive parallel covert campaign, utilizing cyber warfare, intelligence operations, and targeted sabotage to directly disrupt Iran’s military and nuclear infrastructure.


Tehran, conversely, characterizes Israel as a driving architect behind its economic encirclement. Iranian leaders frequently argue that U.S. foreign policy is disproportionately influenced by Israeli security concerns and Washington-based lobbying efforts, framing the U.S.–Israeli alliance as a coordinated campaign to permanently weaken Iran’s state capacity. While Washington ultimately acts on its own broader global interests ranging from maritime security in the Persian Gulf to global non-proliferation standards—Israel remains an indispensable actor within this wider geopolitical framework.


Strategic Choices and Uncertainties


The trajectory of this economic war offers no guaranteed victory for any single actor; rather, it presents a series of critical choices that will dictate the stability of the Middle East and the broader international system.


For the United States


The primary challenge is balancing coercion with viable diplomacy. While economic sanctions can severely constrain Iran's financial liquidity, long-term regional stability requires credible diplomatic off-ramps alongside credible deterrence. Washington must also continuously weigh the systemic humanitarian costs of prolonged economic isolation against its core strategic objectives.


For Iran


The future hinges on its capacity to manage compounding domestic economic strains while continuing to diversify its international partnerships. Tehran’s ability to sustainably navigate its nuclear ambitions and regional alignment will directly dictate whether it can break out of international isolation or face deepening economic stagnation.


For Israel


The core mandate remains absolute long-term security. While many Israeli policymakers maintain that preventing a nuclear Iran requires unyielding pressure and military readiness, true regional stabilization may eventually necessitate comprehensive diplomatic frameworks that mitigate the risk of a catastrophic, multi-front war.


For the International 

Community


The overarching priority is preventing an escalation that could destabilize global trade and energy markets. The ripple effects of this confrontation are already visible globally; disruptions in maritime corridors and shifting energy dynamics have driven up fuel prices internationally, impacting economies as far-reaching as Nigeria.


Conclusion


Ultimately, the politics of economic warfare reveal a fundamental truth of modern international relations: while sanctions can heavily penalize a state's economy and alter its immediate calculus, they rarely resolve deep-seated ideological and geopolitical disagreements on their own.


A durable peace cannot be engineered solely through financial strangulation or economic resistance. It requires sustained diplomacy, verifiable mutual security assurances, adherence to international legal frameworks, and political leadership willing to engage in structured compromise. The future does not promise dominance to any single party. Instead, it offers an opening to replace a volatile cycle of economic confrontation with a more stable regional order anchored in dialogue, structural accountability, and strategic coexistence.


If economic statecraft has become the modern world's preferred alternative to military conflict, it leaves global analysts with a haunting question: 

Can economic warfare truly serve as a bridge to a lasting peace, or does it merely delay an inevitable, far more destructive crisis?

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