Las Vegas Review-Journal

IRANIANS INSIST THEIR POLICIES WON’T CHANGE BECAUSE OF TRUMP

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IRAN, FROM PAGE 1:

Iran has played a crucial role in keeping President Bashar Assad in power, three Iranian soldiers were killed this month during battles. For the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Israel is still a “cancerous tumor” that must be removed.

“Trump has this illusion that because he left the nuclear agreement, we are forced to change our behavior in Syria, Yemen, Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine,” said Hossein Sheikholes­lam, a special adviser to Iran’s foreign minister on regional issues. “No way we are doing that. If we ever change our policies, it will have nothing to do with Trump or anyone in the White House or elsewhere.”

Most Western analysts largely agree with that assessment.

“Iran is rethinking its role in the region, but not because of Mr. Trump directly,” said Walter Posch, a Middle East expert at the National Defense Academy in Vienna. “Tehran is becoming overstretc­hed. Iran thought it could hold the ground easily: getting strong in Syria, putting pressure on Israel indirectly but not provoking it to attack. But it is getting more difficult by the day.”

Far away from the conflict zones in the Middle East, in the small alleyways of Tehran’s bazaars and the luxury car dealership­s in the affluent northern parts of the city, Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear agreement has definitely added to economic woes, which are contributi­ng to political tensions.

On Monday, protesters gathered outside the Parliament building in Tehran to complain about the economy, and police fired tear gas to disperse them. On Sunday, the Grand Bazaar had to close because of protests.

Iran’s economy already was in a bad state. In less than a year, the rial, Iran’s currency, has declined by 50 percent in value against the dollar. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund reported that a record amount of capital, $27 billion, was taken out of the country last year. Khamenei, in a sermon recently celebratin­g the end of Ramadan, called upon Iranians to stop taking leisure trips abroad, to make sure no more foreign exchange leaves Iran.

The currency crisis has led to a sharp increase in the prices of Reza Khandan, husband of Nasrin Sotoudeh, a prominent human rights lawyer who was arrested last week

imported goods. In an effort to shield their savings, many people are buying real estate, gold and cars, driving up prices of those assets.

“Finding a safe place for my savings has become nearly impossible,” said Asgar Kouhpaee, 55, a tradesman who for years made his living as an egg wholesaler.

He said he always kept his savings in cars, but this year he missed his chance. A Toyota RAV4, a midscale SUV model that costs around $25,000 in the United States and sold for $68,000 here in August, now costs around $100,000.

“Everything has gone up, even locally produced cars are now 40 percent more expensive,” Kouhpayee said. “Not only am I unable to purchase a new car, but who can afford to buy it from me with these prices?”

The prospect of new sanctions and pressure are terrifying him.

“It just feels as if everything is spinning out of control,” he said. “We must do something to stop this.”

Such feelings are widely shared. Many people seem to be blaming their leaders, rather than Trump or others, for most of the problems, making the government hypersensi­tive to expression­s of dissent.

“The impact of Trump’s pullout from the nuclear deal is very, very low,” said Reza Khandan, the husband of Nasrin Sotoudeh, a prominent human rights lawyer who was arrested last week. “Even if the nuclear agreement was fully implemente­d, and all the money reached here and the banking system was not under sanction, the mismanagem­ent inside the country would have squandered the oil revenue and other transactio­ns. We are in bad economic and social states, and it has nothing to do with Trump and sanctions he imposed or will impose.”

Last week, Iranian authoritie­s were caught off guard when an Instagram post from a former Iranian soccer star, Ali Karimi, calling for a consumer boycott was shared 800,000 times.

“Let’s not buy anything from the market for a month, neither gold, nor cars nor anything that’s gotten more expensive,” Karimi wrote. “All of you support this until the hands of the middle men and the thieves are cut off from this country.”

Karimi, who has criticized authoritie­s for their policies of barring women from soccer stadiums, was promptly hauled into court that handles media-related matters to explain his call for a boycott. His case is still under review.

Numerous editors, journalist­s and prominent figures have been summoned before the same court for questionin­g.

Judicial authoritie­s have also ramped up pressure on dissidents, most notably with the arrest of Sotoudeh.

A man was hanged last Monday, convicted of killing three police officers by running over them with a bus during a protest last winter. The driver, Mohammad Salas, denied the charge, saying his confession was coerced.

His lawyer, Zeynab Taheri, was arrested the day after his client’s execution for undisclose­d reasons.

Khamenei, the supreme leader, in his recent speech, insisted all is well.

“The people are awake. They are motivated, and they are not tired,” he said. “Those who promote the idea, following the enemies’ propaganda, that the people are tired and exhausted are tired themselves. They themselves are exhausted!”

“We are in bad economic and social states, and it has nothing to do with Trump and sanctions he imposed or will impose.”

 ?? IRANIAN LABOR NEWS AGENCY VIA AP ?? Protesters chant slogans Monday at the old grand bazaar in Tehran, Iran. The protests forced shopkeeper­s to close their stalls as apparent anger over the Islamic Republic’s troubled economy spilled over.
IRANIAN LABOR NEWS AGENCY VIA AP Protesters chant slogans Monday at the old grand bazaar in Tehran, Iran. The protests forced shopkeeper­s to close their stalls as apparent anger over the Islamic Republic’s troubled economy spilled over.

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