FROM THERMOPYLAE TO TEHRAN: THE GEOGRAPHY OF AN ANCIENT RIVALRY
The missiles exchanged between
the United States and Iran appear to belong entirely to the technological
imagination of the modern age. Aircraft carriers patrol the Persian Gulf,
ballistic missiles arc across the night sky, and commentators debate deterrence
in the vocabulary of nuclear strategy and international relations theory. The
confrontation between Washington and Tehran nonetheless, belongs to a
geopolitical pattern far older than the technologies through which it now
manifests itself. Along the ancient corridor that stretches from the Aegean
littoral across the Anatolian plateau toward the plains of Mesopotamia, rival
political systems have confronted one another for more than two millennia. As
such, the present conflict emerges as the most recent expression of a strategic
rivalry that has shaped the eastern Mediterranean and the Iranian plateau since
antiquity, a rivalry in which the Greek world, in its various historical
incarnations, repeatedly encountered the imperial power of Persia.
An appreciation of this
continuity lies in the deeper structures that shape political behaviour across
centuries. Fernand Braudel described such structures as belonging to the longue
durée, the slow rhythm of history in which geography, climate, and patterns of
settlement exert subtle dominion over human affairs. Dynasties and regimes may
collapse with startling speed, but strategic landscapes persist with stubborn
durability. The corridor between the Mediterranean basin and the Iranian
plateau constitutes one of the great geopolitical hinges of Eurasia, a
landscape where the maritime world of the Aegean encounters the continental
interior of Asia. On its western side developed a civilisation of cities whose
orientation toward the sea fostered trade, navigation, and a political culture
grounded in civic autonomy. On its eastern side arose expansive imperial
formations organised around territorial administration, cavalry warfare, and
bureaucratic hierarchy. These contrasting political ecologies pressed against
one another along the Anatolian frontier with relentless regularity.
The first dramatic manifestation
of this tension occurred during the Persian invasions of Greece in the early
fifth century before Christ. The empire founded by Cyrus and extended by Darius
had already incorporated the Greek cities of Asia Minor into its administrative
system, and the Ionian revolt against Persian authority provoked a campaign of
imperial retribution. Herodotus recounts these events in the earliest surviving
masterpiece of historical prose, describing how the Persian kings sought to extend
their dominion across the Aegean and impose imperial order upon the fiercely
independent communities of mainland Greece. The political map of the Greek
world at this moment presented a spectacle of fragmentation, with Athens and
Sparta regarding one another with suspicion, while Corinth, Thebes, and
numerous smaller poleis pursued their rivalries with passionate determination.
Persia thus confronted a landscape whose disunity appeared to promise easy
conquest.
The Persian invasions produced a
transformation whose logic later found expression in the realist tradition of
political thought. Faced with overwhelming imperial power, the Greek cities
suspended their quarrels and formed a defensive coalition. The Hellenic League
arose albeit out of necessity, rather than sentiment. Thucydides, reflecting
upon the ruthless dynamics of interstate competition, observed that relations
between powers ultimately rest upon capacity rather than moral aspiration. In
the stark language of the Melian Dialogue, the strong exercise their power
where they can, while the weak accommodate themselves to necessity. Greek
statesmen recognised that isolation meant subjugation. Cooperation, however,
offered survival.
The victories that followed
revealed the strategic consequences of this alignment. At Salamis the Athenian
commander Themistocles persuaded the allied fleet to engage the Persian navy
within the narrow straits between the island and the Attic coast. The confined
waters neutralised the numerical superiority of the Persian fleet. Greek
triremes rammed and manoeuvred within a maritime corridor where discipline and
seamanship determined the outcome. Aeschylus, who fought in the battle and
later commemorated the event in his tragedy Persians, portrayed the
defeat of Xerxes as the moment when imperial arrogance encountered the stubborn
autonomy of the Greek polis. Thermopylae offered a parallel demonstration on
land. There a narrow mountain pass compressed the invading army into a
constricted space where vast numbers could not deploy effectively. Geography
revealed its capacity to transform weakness into advantage.
Modern military theorists
describe such engagements as examples of asymmetric strategy. The weaker
combatant selects terrain and circumstances that diminish the advantages of the
stronger adversary. Iranian strategic thinking displays a similar awareness of
geographical leverage. The Strait of Hormuz, through which a large proportion
of the world’s energy supply must pass, forms a maritime bottleneck whose
proximity to Iranian territory creates opportunities for disruption. Mines,
missiles, and fast attack vessels transform narrow waters into instruments of
strategic pressure. The technologies may differ dramatically from those of
antiquity but the underlying logic of geography remains strikingly familiar.
Persian imperial policy during
the classical period was also notable in that it demonstrated an appreciation
for indirect influence. Military invasion represented only one element within a
broader strategic repertoire, the Persian rulers recognising that the turbulent
politics of the Greek world could be shaped through diplomacy and financial
patronage. During the Peloponnesian War Persian subsidies helped finance the
construction of Spartan fleets capable of challenging Athenian naval supremacy.
Greek civil conflict thus intersected with Persian imperial calculations, its
empire achieving strategic objectives through the manipulation of rivalries
within the Greek political system. Such policy anticipates the dynamics of
proxy conflict that characterise the contemporary Middle East, where regional
struggles frequently unfold through local actors whose ambitions intersect with
the interests of larger powers, in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen and beyond,
causing untold misery.
The disappearance of classical
Greece did not terminate the strategic encounter between the Mediterranean and
the Iranian plateau. Alexander the Great shattered the Achaemenid Empire in a
series of campaigns that carried Macedonian armies from Asia Minor to the
frontiers of India. Xenophon had earlier revealed to Greek readers, through the
narrative of the Anabasis, the vulnerabilities that lay within the
Persian imperial structure: the structural vulnerabilities of the Persian
imperial system: the political fragmentation of the satrapal provinces, the
reliance upon mercenary forces, and the difficulty of defending an empire
stretched across enormous distances. Yet the destruction of the Achaemenid
state altered the political configuration of the frontier rather than
eliminating the rivalry itself. Hellenistic monarchies may have ruled
territories that had once formed the core of Persian imperial authority, but
the strategic corridor between the Mediterranean and the Iranian interior
continued to generate conflict between successor states. Rome eventually
absorbed these territories and inherited the same geopolitical dilemma. Roman
legions confronted Parthian and later Sasanian forces across the plains of
Mesopotamia and the highlands of Armenia. Languages changed, religions evolved,
and dynasties disappeared, while the strategic landscape remained constant.
Byzantium went on to sustain
this ancient rivalry with Persia for centuries, the conflict reaching its most
dramatic intensity during the reign of the emperor Heraclius in the early
seventh century. The Sasanian ruler Khosrow II launched a series of campaigns
that overwhelmed Byzantine defences with astonishing speed. Syria and Egypt
fell to Persian armies. Jerusalem itself was captured, and the relic of the
True Cross was carried away from the Holy City as a trophy of conquest, an
event sent shockwaves through the Christian world, transforming a geopolitical
conflict into a civilisational crisis. Heraclius responded with a strategy
whose audacity astonished contemporaries. Instead of defending the shrinking
frontiers of his empire, he carried the war into the Persian heartland.
Byzantine armies marched across the Caucasus and descended into the Iranian
interior, striking at the logistical foundations of the Sasanian state. In 627
Heraclius defeated the Persian army near Nineveh, precipitating the collapse of
Khosrow’s regime.
Heraclius’ campaign stands among
the most daring counteroffensives in military history. It also revealed the
tragic logic of prolonged imperial rivalry. Decades of warfare had drained the
economic and institutional strength of both empires. Their armies were
exhausted, their treasuries depleted, and their political systems fragile.
Within a few years Arab armies emerging from the Arabian Peninsula swept across
the same territories that Byzantium and Persia had contested for generations.
Persia vanished from the map of the Near East and Byzantium survived only by
retreating westward toward Anatolia and the Balkans. Historians later described
this phenomenon as imperial overstretch. Prolonged rivalry between great powers
can erode the very foundations upon which their strength depends.
The confrontation between the
United States and Iran unfolds within a technological environment vastly
different from that of antiquity. Nuclear deterrence, cyber warfare, and
globalised financial systems shape the instruments through which power now operates.
The structural patterns that governed earlier encounters between the
Mediterranean and the Iranian plateau remain recognisable. Geography continues
to impose its discipline upon strategy. Just as the narrow waters of Salamis
once neutralised the numerical advantage of the Persian fleet, the confined
passage of the Strait of Hormuz transforms maritime geography into a lever of
political pressure. Coalition politics likewise persists as a determining
force. The Greek poleis that united against Xerxes find their distant analogue
in the alliance structures through which contemporary power is organised in the
Middle East. Indirect conflict also echoes ancient precedent. Persian gold once
flowed into Spartan treasuries during the Peloponnesian War, shaping Greek
rivalries without the presence of Persian armies on the battlefield. Modern
competition between Washington and Tehran frequently unfolds through regional
actors whose struggles intersect with the interests of larger powers, from
Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza to the militias of Iraq’s Popular
Mobilization Forces and the Houthi movement in Yemen while regional powers
aligned with Washington, including Israel, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
monarchies, form a countervailing coalition reminiscent of the alliances that
once gathered against Xerxes. The names of the participants have changed and
the weapons they wield would astonish ancient strategists, yet the deeper
strategic logic continues to move with a rhythm that historians of the Persian
frontier would recognise immediately.
Narrative and memory add another
layer to this enduring encounter. Herodotus framed the Greek resistance to
Persia as a defence of freedom against imperial domination, a narrative that
entered the intellectual bloodstream of Western civilisation. Iranian
historical consciousness preserves its own traditions of resistance to foreign
interference and cultural subjugation. Scholars of international relations
emphasise that states act within frameworks of identity as well as calculations
of material power. Historical memory shapes the political imagination through
which societies interpret the present.
Viewed through the long perspective of history, the conflict between the United States and Iran appears as the latest chapter in a geopolitical drama rooted in the landscapes of the Near East. The corridor between the Mediterranean and the Iranian plateau has served for millennia as a zone where maritime coalitions encounter continental empires. Empires may pass across the stage of history, technologies evolve, and ideologies transform themselves in response to changing circumstances, but geography endures. The Greeks who once confronted the armies of Xerxes could not have imagined aircraft carriers cruising the Persian Gulf or missiles streaking across the sky above the Strait of Hormuz. They would nevertheless have recognised the deeper logic of the confrontation. The structures of rivalry that shaped their world continue to echo across the centuries, a reminder that the landscapes of the Near East retain the imprint of rivalries that successive empires, to their folly, imagine to be new.
DEAN
KALIMNIOU
First published
in NKEE on Saturday 21 March 2026

