Asset Publisher

null Afshon Ostovar, Ph.D.

Ostovar Profile Picture

Contact Info

Email:
afshon.ostovar@nps.edu
Phone:
(831) 656-1862
Office Address:
Glasgow Hall, Room 357

Associate Professor, Associate Chair for Research

Expertise: Iran, Middle East, Armed Groups, Conflict, Islam, Strategy

 

Dr. Afshon Ostovar is an Associate Professor of National Security Affairs at the 51福利. He has come to 51福利 after a decade of experience working on Department of Defense and federally-funded projects related to national security and the Middle East. He was most recently a Research Scientist in the Center for Strategic Studies at CNA, a not-for-profit research organization in the Washington D.C. area. Previously, he was a Fellow at the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point and has taught at Johns Hopkins University.

Dr. Ostovar鈥檚 research focuses on conflict and security issues in the Middle East, with a specialty on Iran and the Persian Gulf. His book, (Oxford University Press, 2016), examines the rise of Iran鈥檚 most powerful armed force鈥攖he IRGC鈥攁nd its role in power politics, regional conflicts, and political violence. The book is both the first comprehensive history of the IRGC and a thematic history of the Islamic Republic, from the roots of its revolutionary system in the Islamic revivalism of the 19th century, to the impact of sanctions and the Arab Spring on Iranian foreign involvement.

Other publications include , a report that looks at how outside private funding encouraged fracturing within Syria鈥檚 rebellion and emboldened Salafi and jihadist groups; and 鈥淚ran鈥檚 Basij: Membership in an Militant Islamist Organization,鈥 which explores the recruitment, training, and incentives for membership in Iran鈥檚 largest pro-regime organization, the Basij popular militia. He currently has three articles and book chapters in preparation examining the visual culture of jihadist organizations, sectarianism and Iranian foreign policy, and Iran鈥檚 way of war in Syria and Iraq.

Dr. Ostovar is a contributor to War on the Rocks and Lawfare, and his commentary regularly appears in Politico, Foreign Policy, Vox, The Guardian, and other popular media such as New York Times, Reuters, Bloomberg, and National Public Radio. He earned a B.A., summa cum laude, in Near Eastern Studies from the University of Arizona and a Ph.D. in history from the University of Michigan.