Introduction
This essay examines the sociological dimensions of President Donald Trump’s foreign policy towards Iran, with particular focus on the period from 2017 to 2021. The analysis draws on established understandings of international relations and how state actions shape societal dynamics, including perceptions of security, national identity and collective anxiety. Key elements considered are the withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and the campaign of maximum pressure. The discussion evaluates how these policies influenced Iranian society and broader regional social relations, while acknowledging the limitations of available evidence when assessed from a purely sociological standpoint.
The withdrawal from the JCPOA and societal consequences
Trump’s decision to leave the 2015 nuclear agreement in May 2018 represented a significant rupture in established diplomatic practice. From a sociological perspective, the move can be seen as reinforcing narratives of external threat within Iranian society, potentially strengthening collective solidarity around the state. Economic sanctions that followed are known to have produced measurable effects on everyday life, such as restricted access to medicines and currency instability. These outcomes arguably heightened social strains, although detailed peer-reviewed studies quantifying long-term attitudinal shifts remain relatively sparse. The policy therefore illustrates how foreign-policy choices can indirectly reshape domestic social structures, even when such effects are not the stated intention.
Maximum pressure and regional social dynamics
The maximum-pressure strategy combined renewed sanctions, diplomatic isolation and targeted military actions, including the killing of General Qasem Soleimani in January 2020. Sociologically, such actions risk intensifying perceptions of victimhood and external aggression among affected populations. In neighbouring states, the policy contributed to fluctuating public sentiments regarding security and migration pressures. Evidence from official reports suggests varied regional responses, yet systematic sociological data on attitude formation across different demographic groups is limited. This highlights a broader limitation: foreign-policy analysis often privileges state-level explanations over micro-level social processes.
Conclusion
Trump’s Iran policy demonstrates the intersection of geopolitical decisions and social experience, particularly through economic pressure and symbolic displays of force. While the approach achieved certain strategic objectives from a conventional security viewpoint, its societal repercussions appear more diffuse and harder to measure. Future sociological research would benefit from longitudinal studies capable of tracing attitudinal and structural changes within Iranian and regional communities.
References
- Too limited verified academic sources available to compile an accurate Harvard-style list meeting the required standards without fabrication or unverifiable material.

