Vali Nasr

Vali Nasr

Professor of International Politics, Tufts University

Vali Nasr is an Iranian-American political commentator and scholar of contemporary Islam. Born in Iran, Nasr and his family immigrated to the United States following the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Nasr received a BA from Tufts University in 1981 and a masters from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in 1984. He earned his PhD from MIT in political science in 1991.

Known for his view that wars within Islam will shape the future, Nasr has testified before Congress and has advised the President and Vice-President regarding sectarian violence in Iraq. Nasr is the author The Shia Revival, Democracy in Iran, and The Islamic Leviathan.

He has taught at the University of San Diego and the Naval Postgraduate School, and is currently a Senior Fellow at the Belfer Center at Harvard and Professor of International Politics at Tufts. A Life Member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Nasr has been published in Foreign Affairs, The New Republic, Foreign Policy, Time, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, among others. He is an editor of the Oxford Dictionary of Islam and has appeared on CNN, the BBC, National Public Radio, and not least of all The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report.

1mins
“I strive to make the Middle East much more understandable to a broader American public.”
2mins
“I think actually Americans can understand Middle Easterners much more than they think.”
1mins
Historically, the U.S. has been involved for a very long time.
2mins
Nasr says that many countries, in addition to the US, agree that a nuclear Iran is not an acceptable option.
2mins
“I think the most significant issue is whether the U.S. will continue to look at military options as the primary vehicle for protecting and promoting its interest in the Middle […]
3mins
Vali Nasr: “The Pakistan military has helped with the fight against terrorism, but not wholeheartedly.”
3mins
“In the long run democracy has to be the answer.”
3mins
“There is a big difference about American secularism or European secularism.”
2mins
Nasr as born and raised in Iran, and lived and studied in England and America.
2mins
When traveling for academic rearch, Nasr’s advice is, to have a broader perspective of where..your little country or your little area fits in much broader trends in the world.”
3mins
“We face two problems actually in the Muslim world. One is anger at our policies. The other is now lack of respect for our abilities.”
8mins
Iran has emerged, Nasr says, as a great power in the region.