Iran and the SCO: The Quest For Legitimacy and Regime Preservation

  • Nicole Bayat Grajewski

    Dr. Grajewski is a Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow with the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs’ Project on Managing the Atom at Harvard's Kennedy School.

 

Abstract

At the 2021 Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit, the Russian- and Chinese-led bloc announced the approval of Iran’s longstanding bid for membership. Iran has viewed its involvement in the organization as a means of bolstering external legitimacy, fostering security-oriented regionalism, and promoting the transition toward the so-called multipolar world order. The SCO has served as a regime-preservation network by providing Iran with a source of solidarity against external pressure. Tehran’s commitment to the normative order, sustained by the SCO’s discourse of noninterference, sovereignty, and countering the “three evils”—terrorism, extremism, and separatism—has galvanized the organization’s role as a common front against the imposition of liberal norms and challenges to regime security.

  • Nicole Bayat Grajewski

    Dr. Grajewski is a Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow with the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs’ Project on Managing the Atom at Harvard's Kennedy School.

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