Amid tensions, Ali Larijani guides Iran’s defence strategy, nuclear policy


Ali Larijani: Iran's Defence Strategy & Nuclear Policy — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Ali Larijani — Career Milestones:

Year Event
1994–2004 Head of Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB)
2005–2007 First term as Secretary, Supreme National Security Council (SNSC); Iran's chief nuclear negotiator
2008–2020 Speaker of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) — three consecutive terms
2015 Key architect of the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) nuclear deal alongside Foreign Minister Zarif [S2]
2021 Presidential candidacy; later served as Special Advisor to the Supreme Leader
2025 Re-appointed Secretary, SNSC after Iran-Israel war [S1]
Feb 2026 Orchestrates Iran's negotiating position for US-Iran Geneva talks [S1]
Feb 28, 2026 Khamenei dies; Larijani briefly de facto leader [S2]
Mar 17, 2026 Killed in Israeli airstrike [S3]

Iran's Nuclear Programme — Evolution:


4. Core Static Facts

Supreme National Security Council (SNSC): - Iran's highest security decision-making body - Chaired by the President of Iran; Secretary appointed by and reports to the Supreme Leader - Coordinates defence, intelligence, foreign policy, and nuclear strategy - Members include: President, Speaker of Majlis, Chief Justice, heads of armed forces, Intelligence Minister, Foreign Minister

Iran Nuclear Programme — Key Numbers: - 3.67% — enrichment cap under JCPOA (civilian use) - 20% and 60% — enrichment levels Iran subsequently breached - 90% — weapons-grade enrichment threshold - JCPOA signed: July 14, 2015; US withdrew: May 8, 2018 - Fordow, Natanz, Arak — key nuclear facilities

Key Treaties / Bodies: - NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty): Iran is a signatory; obligations include IAEA safeguards - IAEA: Monitors compliance; has Additional Protocol rights for inspection - JCPOA: Multilateral deal (P5+1 = US, UK, France, Russia, China + Germany + EU) [S2] - 2026 US-Iran MOU: 60-day negotiation window; uranium enrichment limits and non-weaponisation declaration required [S4]

Ali Larijani — Key Identity Facts: - Age: 68 (at time of article, Feb 2026) [S1] - Enjoys confidence of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei [S1] - Career spans: military → media (IRIB chief) → legislature (Parliament Speaker) → security (SNSC) [S1][S2] - Described by International Crisis Group as "a true insider, a canny operator" [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional (Iranian)

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Ali Larijani served as SNSC Secretary in two stints: first 2005–07, second from 2025. [S1][S2]
  2. SNSC = Supreme National Security Council — Iran's apex security body; Secretary is appointed by the Supreme Leader, not elected. [S1]
  3. Larijani described Western concerns over Iran's nuclear programme as a "pretext" for broader confrontation. [S1]
  4. Iran's position in 2026 Geneva talks: negotiations must remain confined to the nuclear file only; missile programme and regional role are off the table. [S1]
  5. JCPOA (2015) capped Iranian enrichment at 3.67% and was signed between Iran and P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China + Germany). [S2]
  6. Iran is a signatory to the NPT (Non-Proliferation Treaty); Article IV of NPT grants rights to peaceful nuclear energy. [S2]
  7. The 2026 US-Iran MOU provides a maximum 60 days for a final nuclear deal. [S4]
  8. Under the 2026 framework, Iran must reaffirm it does not intend to develop a nuclear weapon. [S4]
  9. IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) is the verification body for Iran's nuclear programme — headquartered in Vienna, Austria. [S4]
  10. Fordow and Natanz are Iran's two main uranium enrichment facilities. [S2]
  11. Larijani previously served as Speaker of Iran's Majlis (Parliament) for three consecutive terms (2008–2020). [S2]
  12. Iran's enrichment reached 60% purity post-JCPOA collapse — far above the 3.67% limit but below 90% weapons-grade threshold. [S2]
  13. Strait of Hormuz — critical chokepoint through which ~20% of global oil trade passes; reopening tied to the 2026 Iran deal. [S3]
  14. Ali Vaez (International Crisis Group, Iran Project Director) described Larijani as a "true insider, a canny operator." [S1]
  15. Larijani was killed in an Israeli airstrike on March 17, 2026, weeks after the article was published. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: International Relations — Iran nuclear deal, US-Iran diplomacy, West Asia geopolitics, India's interests in the region - GS-III: Security — nuclear proliferation, non-state actors, Iran's missile and proxy network - GS-I (marginally): World History — Iran's Islamic Revolution and its foreign policy legacy

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "India and its neighbourhood" (India-Iran Chabahar); "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests" - GS-III: "Security challenges and their management"; "Nuclear security"

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "Iran's insistence on confining nuclear negotiations to the 'nuclear file only' reflects a strategic doctrine of compartmentalisation. Analyse the implications of this approach for regional stability in West Asia." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  2. "The death of Ali Larijani in 2026 exposed the structural vulnerability of personalised diplomatic channels in authoritarian systems. Critically examine." (GS-II, 10 marks)

  3. "The repeated cycle of nuclear deal → US withdrawal → Iranian violations → renegotiation suggests systemic failures in the global non-proliferation architecture. Discuss with reference to the NPT and IAEA framework." (GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) Direct predecessor to 2026 Iran deal; understand P5+1 framework
NPT and Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime Legal framework Iran invokes and is bound by; Article IV vs. Article VI tensions
IAEA — Structure and Powers Verification body for Iran's nuclear commitments; 2026 deal depends on it
India-Iran Relations (Chabahar Port) India's strategic stakes in Iran's isolation vs. engagement
West Asia / Middle East Conflict Matrix Iran-Israel-US-Saudi triangle; proxies (Houthis, Hezbollah); India's energy security
Strait of Hormuz Chokepoint geography; India imports ~80% oil via this route
Israel's Security Doctrine (Begin Doctrine) Explains Israeli strikes on nuclear facilities; relevant to Iran strikes
Pakistan's Nuclear Programme Comparative case study; AQ Khan network; NPT violations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. SNSC ≠ National Security Council (India): India's NSA chairs the NSC; Iran's SNSC Secretary is appointed by the Supreme Leader — fundamentally different constitutional basis. Don't conflate.

  2. Larijani ≠ Foreign Minister or President: He was SNSC Secretary, not FM. Iran's FM (e.g., Zarif in 2015) also negotiates but under SNSC oversight. Aspirants confuse these roles.

  3. JCPOA enrichment cap = 3.67%, NOT zero: Iran was not required to abandon enrichment — only cap it. This is a key factual distinction in MCQs. P5+1 ≠ P5 alone (Germany is the "+1").

  4. Iran IS a signatory to NPT (unlike India, Pakistan, Israel, which are not). But Iran has violated IAEA safeguards — NPT membership does not equal compliance.

  5. 2026 MOU ≠ Final Deal: The June 2026 MOU only starts a 60-day negotiation clock — it is not a completed agreement. Aspirants may misread this as a concluded nuclear deal in the vein of JCPOA.


11. Sources


Sources: - Ali Larijani | Britannica - Who was Ali Larijani — Business Standard - US-Iran deal: IAEA — UN News - Iran nuclear deal negotiations 2025–26 — Britannica