Article

Common enemy, colliding policies: neoclassical realism's perspective on Turkey and Iraq during the Mosul operation against ISIS

Details

Citation

Tziarras Z & Gul Z (2025) Common enemy, colliding policies: neoclassical realism's perspective on Turkey and Iraq during the Mosul operation against ISIS. Asian Journal of Political Science. https://doi.org/10.1080/02185377.2025.2602425

Abstract
This paper examines the divergent foreign policy responses of Turkey and Iraq to the common threat posed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Al-Sham(ISIS) during the 2016–2017 Mosul Operation, utilizing Neoclassical Realism (NcR) as the analytical framework. Contrary to Neorealist expectations that common threats lead to alignment and cooperation, Turkey and Iraq pursued markedly different strategies. Turkey espoused a revisionist foreign policy aimed at redesigning the regional geopolitical landscape in its favour, leveraging ideological and historical ties to Mosul. This strategy comprised keeping a military presence in northern Iraq and backing local ‘kin’ groups and actors, in spite of facing defiance from Iraq’s federal government, pro-Iran Shia militias and concerns from the international community. In contrast, Iraq’s responses were characterized by under-balancing, with internal fragmentation and elite disagreements undermining a coherent and effective foreign policy. The systemic pressures of regional instability and the ascent of IS were filtered via different intervening variables, namely leader images, state-society relations, and institutional strength, eventually determining both countries’ diverse foreign policy outputs.

Keywords
Neoclassical Realism; Turkey; Iraq; conflict; ISIS; Mosul

Journal
Asian Journal of Political Science

StatusEarly Online
FundersUniversity of Stirling
Publication date online31/12/2025
Date accepted by journal10/10/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37821
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN0218-5377
eISSN1750-7812

People (1)

Dr Zana Gul

Dr Zana Gul

Lecturer in International Politics, Politics

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