Relations (1)
related 3.00 — strongly supporting 7 facts
Iran and Venezuela are linked through their shared status as subjects of U.S. foreign policy, including comparative regime-change strategies [1], [2], and oil profit agreements [3]. They are also frequently analyzed together in the context of modern geopolitical crises [4], [5] and as case studies for cyber warfare [6], [7].
Facts (7)
Sources
Miscellanea: The War in Iran - A Collection of Unmitigated Pedantry acoup.blog 2 facts
claimThe United States' strategy for regime change in Iran was modeled after the operation in Venezuela that installed Delcy Rodriguez in power.
claimThe Trump administration initiated the war in Iran partly due to pressure from Israel and partly based on the assumption that the Iranian regime would collapse, similar to the regime-change scenario in Venezuela.
History of the Central Intelligence Agency - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
claimThe intervention in Iran resulted in an oil profit split of 60/40 in favor of Iran, which was potentially similar to agreements the United States held with Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Media Coverage - News Center - Baruch College newscenter.baruch.cuny.edu 1 fact
claimCarla Anne Robbins contributed to a Chicago Council on Global Affairs report covering the US-Russia prisoner swap, Israel's strikes on Iran and Lebanon, and Venezuela’s election fallout on August 2, 2024.
How Will Cyber Warfare Shape the U.S.-Israel Conflict with Iran? csis.org 1 fact
claimCyber operations in Iran and Venezuela demonstrate that cyberspace is a distinct domain of conflict that plays a central role in modern battlefield dynamics.
United States and Iran on the Brink: What's at Stake? - CSIS csis.org 1 fact
claimDr. Nasr argues that the current U.S. administration is managing multiple simultaneous crises, which means the Iran-U.S. situation does not exist in a vacuum and may be influenced by other domestic and international issues like those in Cuba, Venezuela, or the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Strategic analysis of cyber conflicts: A game-theoretic modelling of ... securityanddefence.pl 1 fact
referenceThe authors of the study 'Strategic analysis of cyber conflicts: A game-theoretic modelling of global cyber' selected six significant cyber conflict cases for analysis: Russian cyber interventions in the 2016 US elections (Jamieson, 2018), Venezuela’s cyberattack on Brazil’s energy grid in 2015 (Bronk and Tikk-Ringas, 2013), the 2007 Estonia–Russia cyber conflict (Herzog, 2011), cyber tensions during the 2020 China–India border crisis (Sharma, 2020), the Stuxnet attack on Iran in 2010 (Farwell and Rohozinski, 2011), and cyber manipulation attempts in the 2019 South African elections (Garnett and James, 2020).