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- Today human geographers emphasize a thematic approach, concerned with
the location of activities in the world, the reasons for particular
spatial distributions, and the significance of the arrangements.
- Political geographers study how people have organized Earth’s land
surface into countries and alliances, reasons underlying the observed
arrangements, and the conflicts that result from the organization.
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- Key Issues
- Where are states located?
- Why do boundaries between states cause problems?
- Why do states cooperate with each other?
- Why has terrorism increased?
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- With the end of the Cold War in the 1990s, the global political
landscape changed fundamentally.
- Geographic concepts help us to understand this changing political
organization of Earth’s surface.
- We can also use geographic methods to examine the causes of political
change.
- Boundary lines are not painted on Earth, but they might as well be, for
these national divisions are very real.
- To many, national boundaries are more meaningful than natural features.
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- In the post—Cold War era, the familiar division of the world into
countries or states is crumbling.
- Between the mid-1940s and the late 1980s two superpowers—the United
States and the Soviet Union—essentially “ruled” the world.
- But the United States is less dominant in the political landscape of the
twenty-first century, and the Soviet Union no longer exists.
- Today globalization means more connections among states.
- Power is exercised through connections among states created primarily
for economic cooperation.
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- Problems of defining states
- Korea: one state or two?
- China and Taiwan: one state or two?
- Western Sahara
- Varying sizes of states
- Development of the state concept
- Ancient and medieval states
- Colonies
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- Antarctica is the only large landmass on Earth’s surface that is not
part of a state.
- Several states claim portions of Antarctica.
- The United States, Russia, and a number of other states do not recognize
the claims of any country to Antarctica.
- The Treaty of Antarctica, signed in 1959 and renewed in 1991, provides a
legal framework for managing Antarctica.
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- A colony of Japan for many years, Korea was divided into two occupation
zones by the United States and former Soviet Union after they defeated
Japan in World War II.
- Both Korean governments are committed to reuniting the country into one
sovereign state.
- Meanwhile, in 1992, North Korea and South Korea were admitted to the
United Nations as separate countries.
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- According to China’s government officials, Taiwan is not a separate
sovereign state but is a part of China.
- Until 1999 the government of Taiwan agreed.
- This confusing situation arose from a civil war.
- After losing, nationalist leaders in 1949 fled to the island of Taiwan,
200 kilometers (120 miles) off the Chinese coast (and) proclaimed that
they were still the legitimate rulers of the entire country of China.
- Most other governments in the world consider China and Taiwan as two
separate and sovereign states.
- Taiwan’s president announced in 1999 that Taiwan would also regard
itself as a sovereign independent state.
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- The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic is considered by most African
countries as a sovereign state.
- Morocco, however, controls the territory, which it calls Western Sahara.
- The United Nations is sponsoring a referendum for the residents of
Western Sahara to decide whether they want independence or want to
continue to be part of Morocco.
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- The land area occupied by the states of the world varies considerably.
- The largest state is Russia, which encompasses 17.1 million square
kilometers (6.6 million square miles), or 11 percent of the world’s
entire land area.
- (Five) other states with more than 5 million square kilometers (2
million square miles) include China, Canada, United States, Brazil, and
Australia.
- At the other extreme are about two dozen microstates, which are states
with very small land areas.
- The smallest microstate in the United Nations—Monaco—-encompasses only
1.5 square kilometers (0.6 square miles).
- Many of these are islands, which explains both their small size and
sovereignty.
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- The concept of dividing the world into a collection of independent
states is recent.
- Prior to the 1800s, Earth’s surface was organized in other ways, such as
city-states, empires, and tribes.
- Much of Earth’s surface consisted of unorganized territory.
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- The first states to evolve in Mesopotamia were known as city-states.
- A city-state is a sovereign state that comprises a town and the
surrounding countryside.
- Periodically, one city or tribe in Mesopotamia would gain military
dominance over the others and form an empire.
- Meanwhile, the state of Egypt emerged as a separate empire at the
western end of the Fertile Crescent (in a) long, narrow region along the
banks of the Nile River.
- Egypt’s empire lasted from approximately 3000 B .C. until the fourth
century B.C.
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- The United Kingdom assembled by far the largest colonial empire, (with)
colonies on every continent.
- France had the second-largest overseas territory, although its colonies
were concentrated in West Africa and Southeast Asia.
- Both the British and the French also took control of a large number of
strategic islands.
- Portugal, Spain, Germany, Italy, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Belgium
all established colonies outside Europe, but they controlled less
territory than the British and French.
- Germany tried to compete with Britain and France by obtaining African
colonies that would interfere with communications in the rival European
holdings.
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- The colonial practices of European states varied.
- France attempted to assimilate its colonies into French culture.
- The British created different government structures and policies for
various territories of their empire.
- This decentralized approach helped to protect the diverse cultures.
- Most African and Asian colonies became independent after World War II.
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- Shapes of states
- Five basic shapes
- Landlocked states
- Types of boundaries
- Physical boundaries
- Cultural boundaries
- Boundaries inside states
- Unitary and federal states
- Trend toward federal government
- Electoral geography
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- In a compact state, the distance from the center to any boundary does
not vary significantly.
- Compactness is a beneficial characteristic for most smaller states,
because good communications can be more easily established to all
regions.
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- An otherwise compact state with a large projecting extension is a
prorupted state.
- Proruptions are created for two principal reasons.
- First, a proruption can provide a state with access to a resource, such
as water.
- Proruptions can also separate two states that otherwise would share a
boundary.
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- There are a handful of elongated states, or states with a long and
narrow shape.
- The best example is Chile.
- A less extreme example of an elongated state is Italy.
- Elongated states may suffer from poor internal communications.
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- A fragmented state includes several discontinuous pieces of territory.
- There are two kinds of fragmented states: those with areas separated by
water, and those separated by an intervening state.
- A difficult type of fragmentation occurs if the two pieces of territory
are separated by another state.
- Picture the difficulty of communicating between Alaska and the lower 48
states if Canada were not a friendly neighbor.
- For most of the twentieth century, Panama was an example of a fragmented
state divided in two parts by the Canal, built in 1914 by the United
States.
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- A state that completely surrounds another one is a perforated state.
- The one good example of a perforated state is South Africa, which
completely surrounds the state of Lesotho.
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- Lesotho is unique in being completely surrounded by only one state, but
it shares an important feature with several other states in southern
Africa, as well as in other regions: It is landlocked.
- The prevalence of landlocked states in Africa is a remnant of the
colonial era, when Britain and France controlled extensive regions.
- Direct access to an ocean is critical to states because it facilitates
international trade.
- To send and receive goods by sea, a landlocked state must arrange to use
another country’s seaport.
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- Neither type of boundary is better or more “natural,” and many
boundaries are a combination of both types.
- Important physical features on Earth’s surface can make good boundaries
because they are easily seen, both on a map and on the ground.
- Three types of physical elements serve as boundaries between states:
- mountains,
- deserts,
- and water.
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- Mountains can be effective boundaries if they are difficult to cross
(and) because they are rather permanent and usually are sparsely
inhabited.
- Mountains do not always provide for the amicable separation of
neighbors.
- Argentina and Chile agreed to be divided by the crest of the Andes
Mountains but could not decide on the precise location of the crest.
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- Like mountains, deserts are hard to cross and sparsely inhabited.
- Desert boundaries are common in Africa and Asia.
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- Rivers, lakes, and oceans are the physical features most commonly used
as boundaries.
- Water boundaries are especially common in East Africa.
- Boundaries are typically in the middle of the water, although the
boundary between Malawi and Tanzania follows the north shore of Lake
Malawi (Lake Nyasa).
- Again, the boundaries result from nineteenth-century colonial practices:
Malawi was a British colony, whereas Tanzania was German.
- Water boundaries can offer good protection against attack from another
state, because an invading state must secure a landing spot.
- The state being invaded can concentrate its defense at the landing
point.
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- The use of water as boundaries between states can cause difficulties,
though.
- One problem is that the precise position of the water may change over
time.
- Rivers, in particular, can slowly change their course.
- Ocean boundaries also cause problems because states generally claim that
the boundary lies not at the coastline but out at sea.
- The reasons are for defense and for control of valuable fishing
industries.
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- The boundaries between some states coincide with differences in
ethnicity.
- Other cultural boundaries are drawn according to geometry; they simply
are straight lines drawn on a map.
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- Part of the northern U.S. boundary with Canada is a 2,100-kilometer
(1,300- mile) straight line (more precisely, an arc) along 49° north
latitude, . . . established in 1846 by a treaty between the United
States and Great Britain, which still controlled Canada.
- The United States and Canada share an additional 1,100-kilometer
(700-mile) geometric boundary between Alaska and the Yukon Territory
along the north-south arc of 14° west longitude.
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- Language is an important cultural characteristic for drawing boundaries,
especially in Europe.
- By global standards, European languages have substantial literary
traditions and formal rules of grammar and spelling.
- The French language was a major element in the development of France as
a unified state in the seventeenth century.
- In the nineteenth century, Italy and Germany also emerged as states that
unified the speakers of particular languages.
- The movement to identify nationalities on the basis of language spread
throughout Europe in the twentieth century.
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- Within countries, local government boundaries are sometimes drawn to
separate different nationalities or ethnicities.
- They are also drawn sometimes to provide advantage to a political party.
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- In the face of increasing demands by ethnicities for more
self-determination, states have restructured their governments to
transfer some authority from the national government to local government
units.
- The governments of states are organized according to one of two
approaches: the unitary system or the federal system.
- The unitary state places most power in the hands of central government
officials, whereas the federal state allocates strong power to units of
local government within the country.
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- Unitary states are especially common in Europe.
- In reality, multinational states often have adopted unitary systems, so
that the values of one nationality can be imposed on others.
- In a federal state, such as the United States, local governments possess
more authority to adopt their own laws.
- Multinational states may adopt a federal system of government to empower
different nationalities, especially if they live in separate regions of
the country.
- The federal system is also more suitable for very large states because
the national capital may be too remote to provide effective control over
isolated regions.
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- A good example of a nation-state, France has a long tradition of unitary
government in which a very strong national government dominates local
government decisions.
- Their basic local government unit is the département.
- A second tier of local government in France is the commune.
- The French government has granted additional legal powers to the
departments and communes in recent years.
- In addition, 22 regional councils that previously held minimal authority
have been converted into full-fledged local government units.
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- Poland switched from a unitary to a federal system after control of the
national government was wrested from the Communists.
- Under the Communists’ unitary system, local governments held no legal
authority.
- Poland’s 1989 constitution called for a peaceful revolution: creation of
2,400 new municipalities, to be headed by directly elected officials.
- To these municipalities, the national government turned over ownership
of housing, water supplies, transportation systems, and other publicly
owned structures.
- Businesses owned by the national government were either turned over to
the municipalities or converted into private enterprises.
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- The boundaries separating legislative districts within the United States
and other countries are redrawn periodically to ensure that each
district has approximately the same population.
- Boundaries must be redrawn because migration inevitably results in some
districts gaining population, whereas others are losing.
- The job of redrawing boundaries in most European countries is entrusted
to independent commissions.
- In most U.S. states the job of redrawing boundaries is entrusted to the
state legislature.
- The process of redrawing legislative boundaries for the purpose of
benefiting the party in power is called gerrymandering.
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- Gerrymandering takes three forms.
- “Wasted vote” spreads opposition supporters across many districts but in
the minority.
- “Excess vote” concentrates opposition supporters into a few districts.
- “Stacked vote” links distant areas of like-minded voters through oddly
shaped boundaries.
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- Recent gerrymandering in the United States has been primarily “stacked
vote.”
- “Stacked vote” gerrymandering has been especially attractive to create
districts inclined to elect ethnic minorities.
- Through gerrymandering, only about one-tenth of Congressional seats are
competitive, making a shift of more than a few seats increasingly
improbable from one election to another in the United States.
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- Political and military cooperation
- The United Nations
- Regional military alliances
- Economic cooperation
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- U.N. members can vote to establish a peacekeeping force and request
states to contribute military forces.
- During the Cold War era, U.N. peacekeeping efforts were often stymied
because any one of the five permanent members of the Security Council
could veto the operation.
- Because it must rely on individual countries to supply troops, the
United Nations often lacks enough troops to keep peace effectively.
- Despite its shortcomings the United Nations represents a forum where,
for the first time in history, virtually all states of the world can
meet and vote on issues without resorting to war.
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- In addition to joining the United Nations, many states joined regional
military alliances after World War II.
- During the Cold War era, the United States and the Soviet Union were the
world’s two superpowers.
- Before then, the world typically contained more than two superpowers.
- During the Napoleonic Wars in the early 1800s, Europe boasted eight
major powers.
- Before the outbreak of World War I in the early twentieth century, eight
great powers again existed.
- When a large number of states ranked as great powers were of
approximately equal strength, no single state could dominate.
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- Instead, major powers joined together to form temporary alliances.
- A condition of roughly equal strength between opposing alliances is
known as a balance of power.
- Historically, the addition of one or two states to an alliance could tip
the balance of power.
- The British in particular entered alliances to restore the balance of
power and prevent any other state from becoming too strong.
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- In contrast, the post—World War II balance of power was bipolar between
the United States and the Soviet Union.
- Other states lost the ability to tip the scales significantly in favor
of one or the other superpower.
- They were relegated to a new role, that of ally or satellite.
- Both superpowers repeatedly demonstrated that they would use military
force if necessary to prevent an ally from becoming too independent.
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- After World War II, most European states joined one of two military
alliances dominated by the superpowers: NATO or the Warsaw Pact.
- NATO and the Warsaw Pact were designed to maintain a bipolar balance of
power in Europe.
- In a Europe no longer dominated by military confrontation between two
blocs, the Warsaw Pact and NATO became obsolete.
- Rather than disbanding, NATO expanded its membership in 1997 to include
several former Warsaw Pact countries.
- The Organization on Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has 55
members, including the United States, Canada, and Russia, as well as
most European countries.
- Although the OSCE does not directly command armed forces, it can call
upon member states to supply troops if necessary.
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- The Organization of American States (OAS) includes all 35 states in the
Western Hemisphere.
- Cuba is a member but was suspended in 1962.
- The OAS promotes social, cultural, political, and economic links among
member states.
- A similar organization encompassing all countries in Africa is the
Organization for African Unity (OAU).
- Founded in 1963, the OAU has promoted the end of colonialism in Africa.
- The Commonwealth of Nations includes the United Kingdom and 53 other
states that were once British colonies.
- Commonwealth members seek economic and cultural cooperation.
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- The era of a bipolar balance of power formally ended when the Soviet
Union was disbanded in 1992.
- The world has returned to the pattern of more than two superpowers.
- But the contemporary pattern of global power displays two key
differences.
- The most important elements of state power are increasingly economic
rather than military, (and) the leading superpower in the 1990s is not a
single state.
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- Terrorism by individuals and organizations
- State support for terrorism
- Libya
- Afghanistan
- Iraq
- Iran
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- The United States suffered several terrorist attacks during the late
twentieth century.
- With the exception of the Oklahoma City bombing, which killed 168 people
in 1995, Americans generally paid little attention to the attacks and
had only a vague notion of who had committed them.
- It took the attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon on September
11, 2001, for most Americans to feel threatened by terrorism.
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- Some of the terrorists during the 1990s were American citizens operating
alone or with a handful of others.
- Theodore J. Kaczynski, known as the Unabomber, was convicted of killing
3 people and injuring 23 others by sending bombs through the mail during
a 17-year period.
- His targets were mainly academics in technological disciplines and
executives in businesses whose actions he considered to be adversely
affecting the environment.
- Timothy J. McVeigh claimed his terrorist act was provoked by rage
against the U.S. government for such actions as the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s 51-day siege of the Branch Davidian religious compound
near Waco, Texas, culminating with an attack on April 19, 1993, that
resulted in 80 deaths.
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- States sponsored terrorism at three increasing levels of involvement:
- providing sanctuary for terrorists wanted by other countries;
- supplying weapons, money, and intelligence to terrorists;
- planning attacks using terrorists.
- In response to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack against the
United States, the U.S. government accused first Afghanistan, then Iraq,
and then Iran of providing at least one of the three levels of state
support for terrorists.
- As part of its war against terrorism, the U.S. government in cooperation
with other countries attacked Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 to
depose those countries’ government leaders considered supporters of
terrorism.
- A generation earlier, the United States also attacked Libya in
retaliation for using terrorists to plan attacks during the 1980s.
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- Terrorists sponsored by Libya in 1986 bombed a nightclub in Berlin
popular with U.S. military personnel then stationed there, killing two
U.S. soldiers (three, including one civilian).
- In response, U.S. bombers attacked the Libyan cities of Tripoli and
Benghazi in a failed attempt to kill Colonel Qaddafi.
- In 1990, investigators announced that the 1988 destruction of Pan Am
Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, was conducted by Libyan agents.
- Following eight years of U.N. economic sanctions, Colonel Qaddafi turned
over the suspects for a trial that was held in the Netherlands under
Scottish law.
- One of the two was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment, while
the other was acquitted.
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- Taliban (Arabic for “students of Muslim religious schools”) had gained
power in Afghanistan in 1995, temporarily suppressing a civil war that
had lasted for more than two decades and imposing strict Islamic
fundamentalist law on the population.
- Afghanistan’s civil war began when the King was overthrown by a military
coup in 1973 and replaced five years later in a bloody coup by a
government sympathetic to the Soviet Union.
- The Soviet Union sent 115,000 troops to Afghanistan beginning in 1979
after fundamentalist Muslims, known as mujahedeen, or “holy warriors,”
started a rebellion against the pro-Soviet government.
- Unable to subdue the mujahedeen, the Soviet Union withdrew its troops in
1989, and the Soviet- installed government in Afghanistan collapsed in
1992.
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- After several years of infighting among the factions that had defeated
the Soviet Union, Taliban gained control over most of the country.
- The United States attacked Afghanistan in 2001 when its leaders, known
as Taliban, sheltered Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaeda terrorists.
- Six years of Taliban rule came to an end in 2001 following the U.S.
invasion. Destroying Taliban was necessary for the United States in
order to go after al-Qaeda leaders, including Osama bin Laden, who were
living in Afghanistan as guests of the Taliban. Removal of Taliban
unleashed a new struggle for control of Afghanistan among the country’s
many ethnic groups.
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- The United States attacked Iraq in 2003 supposedly to remove from power
the country’s longtime President Saddam Hussein.
- U.S. officials, supported by the United Kingdom, argued that Hussein was
developing weapons of mass destruction that could be turned over to
terrorists.
- The U.S. confrontation with Iraq predated the war on terrorism.
- After Iraq invaded neighboring Kuwait in 1990 and attempted to annex it,
the U.S.-led coalition launched the 1991 Gulf War known as Operation
Desert Storm to drive Iraq out of Kuwait.
- Although Iraq was defeated in the 1991 Gulf War, Saddam Hussein and the
Ba’ath Party remained in power until the 2003 war.
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- In contrast with the 1991 Gulf War, most U.N.-member states did not
support the U.S .-led attack in 2003. Most other countries did not view
as sufficiently strong the evidence that Iraq still possessed weapons of
mass destruction or intended to use them.
- Hussein’s brutal treatment of Iraqis over several decades was widely
acknowledged by other countries but not accepted as justification for
military action against him.
- U.S. assertion that Hussein had close links with al-Qaeda was also
challenged by most other countries, as well as by U.S. intelligence
agencies.
- One reason was that Hussein’s Ba’ath Party, which ruled Iraq between
1968 and 2003, espoused different principles than the al-Qaeda
terrorists.
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- Hostility between the United States and Iran dates from 1979, when a
revolution forced abdication of Iran’s pro-U.S. Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahiavi.
- Iran and Iraq fought a war between 1980 and 1988 over control of the
Shatt al-Arab waterway, formed by the confluence of the Tigris and
Euphrates rivers flowing into the Persian Gulf.
- Because both Iran and Iraq were major oil producers, the war caused a
sharp decline in international oil prices.
- An estimated 1.5 million died in the war, until it ended when the two
countries accepted a UN peace plan.
- As the United States launched its war on terrorism, Iran was a less
immediate target than Afghanistan and Iraq.
- However, the United States accused Iran of harboring al-Qaeda members
and of trying to install a Shiite-dominated government in Iraq after the
United States removed Saddam Hussein from power in 2003.
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- Other states considered by the United States to be state sponsors of
terrorism in recent years have included the following:
- Yemen, which served as a base for al-Qaeda cells and sheltered
terrorists who attacked the USS Cole;
- Sudan, which sheltered Islamic militants, including Osama bin Laden;
- Iran, which had the capability to produce enriched uranium;
- Syria, which was implicated in support of Iranian and Libyan
terrorists;
- North Korea, which was developing nuclear weapons capability.
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