The geopolitical rivalry between the United States and Iran is rooted in structural conditions that transcend episodic diplomatic crises or isolated military incidents. Three interrelated structural drivers perpetuate this antagonism: (1) asymmetric power configurations; (2) conflicting ideological and normative frameworks; and (3) the entrenchment of regional security dilemmas.
1. Asymmetric Power Configurations
The U.S.–Iran relationship exemplifies the classic dynamics of asymmetric conflict (Arreguín-Toft, 2001). The United States, as the preeminent global military and economic power, wields capabilities that vastly surpass those of Iran. In response, Iran employs asymmetric resistance strategies—leveraging a network of proxy actors such as Hezbollah and the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces—and engaging in irregular warfare tactics (Byman, 2005). From a sociological standpoint, this asymmetry fosters a durable structure of grievance within Iran, where narratives of victimization and anti-imperialism reinforce national cohesion and justify external defiance (Abrahamian, 1993).
2. Conflicting Ideological and Normative Frameworks
At the heart of the rivalry lies an incompatibility between normative and ideological orders. Iran’s revolutionary identity constructs the U.S. as the embodiment of global imperialism and moral decay (Keddie, 2006). Conversely, successive U.S. administrations have framed Iran as a rogue state undermining international norms and security (Gheissari & Nasr, 2006). These opposing frames are not merely rhetorical—they condition foreign policy, constrain diplomatic flexibility, and shape domestic legitimacy claims.
3. Regional Security Dilemmas
The broader security architecture of the Middle East exacerbates the rivalry. Both the U.S. and Iran perceive themselves as defending regional order against the other’s encroachment. The proliferation of proxy conflicts in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Lebanon reflects a regional security dilemma wherein one side’s defensive measures are perceived as offensive by the other, leading to spiraling mistrust and militarization (Walt, 1987).
Strategic Dynamics: Case Studies—The Assassination of Qasem Soleimani (2020).
On January 3, 2020, a U.S. drone strike near Baghdad International Airport killed General Qasem Soleimani, commander of Iran’s Quds Force. The Trump administration justified the operation as an act of preemptive self-defense in response to imminent threats (BBC News, 2020). Sociologically, the assassination can be interpreted as a symbolic decapitation aimed at crippling Iran’s capacity for transnational mobilization (Gerges, 2020). Iran’s retaliatory missile strikes on U.S. bases in Iraq reflected a calibrated response—designed to uphold domestic honor while avoiding full-scale escalation.
The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)
The JCPOA, signed in 2015, marked a rare moment of diplomatic convergence between the U.S. and Iran. From a sociological lens, the agreement represented a temporary suspension of identity-based antagonism, mediated by transnational expert networks and multilateral institutions (Falk, 2016). The U.S. withdrawal in 2018 under the Trump administration reactivated entrenched suspicions and reinstated the structural antagonisms. This episode illustrates how fragile normative accommodations are when underlying structural tensions remain unresolved.
Future Conflict Scenarios and Sociological Implications
The continued presence of structural antagonisms, combined with volatile strategic dynamics, suggests that U.S.–Iran rivalry will persist as a threat to regional and global stability. The following three scenarios outline plausible pathways for future conflict and their sociological implications.
Scenario 1: Accidental Escalation through Proxy Entanglements
A primary risk stems from unintended escalation through loosely coordinated proxy networks. For example, an Israeli strike on Iranian assets in Syria could provoke Hezbollah retaliation, potentially drawing in U.S. forces and prompting direct Iranian involvement. Such dynamics illustrate how fragmented conflict systems—characterized by diffuse agency and opaque chains of command—heighten the risk of miscalculation (Kilcullen, 2016). Sociologically, this would reinforce securitization discourses, justify militarized policy, and deepen hostile collective identities.
Scenario 2: Managed Competition through Normative Bargaining
An alternative trajectory involves tacitly managed rivalry within agreed-upon parameters. This would require both sides to compartmentalize conflict, recognize spheres of influence, and negotiate tacit red lines while engaging in limited normative bargaining on issues such as nuclear proliferation or maritime security (Zarif, 2020). From a sociological perspective, this could partially decouple identity antagonism from policy practice, enabling the emergence of transnational epistemic communities and fostering new norms of competitive coexistence.
Scenario 3: Normative Collapse and Full-Scale Regional War
The worst-case scenario envisions a complete collapse of normative constraints—potentially triggered by a direct Iranian-Israeli confrontation, a U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, or regime instability in Tehran. This could unleash cascading regional realignments, mass displacement, and economic devastation. Sociologically, such an outcome would generate widespread anomie, erode state legitimacy across multiple polities, and reshape collective identities through trauma and forced displacement (Wimmer, 2002).
Sociological Implications
Each scenario highlights the dialectical relationship between material structures and symbolic orders. Accidental escalation demonstrates how decentralized violence reinforces securitized worldviews. Managed competition reveals the contingent plasticity of collective identities amid institutionalized antagonism. Normative collapse underscores the fragility of state legitimacy and the transformative power of trauma. Future research should prioritize granular analyses of identity construction within conflict processes, the role of transnational civil society, and the potential for normative innovation to transform rivalries.
References:
- Abrahamian, E. (1993). Khomeinism: Essays on the Islamic Republic. University of California Press.
- Arreguín-Toft, I. (2001). How the weak win wars: A theory of asymmetric conflict. International Security, 26(1), 93–128.
- BBC News. (2020, January 3). Qasem Soleimani: US kills top Iranian general in Baghdad air strike. Retrieved from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-50979463
- Byman, D. (2005). Deadly connections: States that sponsor terrorism. Cambridge University Press.
- Falk, R. (2016). Iran nuclear deal: A triumph of diplomacy over coercion. Global Policy Journal. https://www.globalpolicyjournal.com
- Gerges, F. A. (2020). America and Iran: Enduring hostility and symbolic power. Foreign Affairs, 99(2), 34–41.
- Gheissari, A., & Nasr, V. (2006). Democracy in Iran: History and the quest for liberty. Oxford University Press.
- Keddie, N. R. (2006). Modern Iran: Roots and results of revolution. Yale University Press.
- Kilcullen, D. (2016). Blood year: Islamic State and the failures of the war on terror. Oxford University Press.
- Walt, S. M. (1987). The origins of alliances. Cornell University Press.