The Oklahoman

As Trump challenges deal, Iran worries

- BY NASSER KARIMI

TEHRAN, IRAN — As U.S. President Donald Trump threatens the Iran nuclear deal, those living in Tehran feel that an accord they have yet to benefit from may already be doomed, hardening their skepticism about America.

Trump is set to deliver a speech on Iran this week in which he is expected to decline to certify Iran’s compliance in the landmark 2015 agreement, referring it to Congress, and perhaps targeting the country’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard with new sanctions.

In the streets of the Iranian capital on Monday, The Associated Press spoke to a series of people about the nuclear deal: students and teachers, young and old, men in fashionabl­e clothes and women in chadors.

Nearly all had the same concerns: Benefits from the 2015 accord have yet to reach Iran’s 80 million people despite its government signing billion-dollar airplane deals. Inflation remains high while job opportunit­ies stay low.

They also said Trump’s threats fall in line with what Iranian leaders since the 1979 Islamic Revolution have warned: Americans can’t be trusted. That feeling has unified hardliners supporting Iran’s clerically overseen government, as well as reformists seeking to change it.

“I have not seen any benefit from the deal, so what is Trump going to add to nothing?” asked Gholamreza Haeri, a 21-year-old architectu­re student. “Is he going to add zero to zero?”

The faith of the average Iranian has eroded over time in the nuclear deal, which saw Iran agree to limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. It was sealed in July 2015 after 18 months of negotiatio­ns by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council — the U.S., Britain, China, France and Russia — as well as Germany.

In September 2015, a telephone survey by the Toronto-based opinion research firm IranPoll for the University of Maryland found 45 percent of 1,000 Iranians said they were not confident the U.S. would live up to its obligation­s in the nuclear deal. By September 2017, an IranPoll telephone survey of 700 urban Iranians found 77 percent were not confident. The margins of error for the polls were 3.1 percentage points and 3.7 percentage points respective­ly.

“The trend has continuous­ly been increasing,” said Amir Farmanesh, the president and CEO of IranPoll.

That suspicion extended to Tehran’s streets Monday. Bahram Safari, a 39-yearold junior high school teacher, said he initially supported the nuclear deal but slowly became disenchant­ed by Trump’s constant attacks. Safari pointed to comments by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who repeatedly called the Americans untrustwor­thy during the negotiatio­ns.

“During the nuclear talks, I was wondering why the supreme leader was saying so, now I understand that he was right,” Safari said. “Americans are not loyal to their signatures.”

Ashkan Ashtari, a 30-year-old electronic­s importer, said breaching the deal will be problemati­c for both sides.

“Iranians are worried about a breach of the nuclear deal because Iran has kept with all of its commitment­s and has been loyal to the agreement,” he said. “Chances are that the U.S. president will break his country’s commitment, as he has done so before.”

For Iranians, they still do not have access to internatio­nal credit cards. While Iranian banks have reconnecte­d to the SWIFT network, which allows for internatio­nal wire transfers, many complain they still don’t have access to global financial markets.

“I know that under the deal, Western banks were supposed to enter Iranian market, but they have not come in practice,” said 31-year-old Zohreh Lavasani, who works at a private bank. “So I do not expect the new move by Trump can lead to a meaningful change.”

Iran’s stock market dropped 1.2 percent in the last week as the price of hard currencies like dollars and euros edged up against the Iranian rial.

 ?? [VAHID SALEMI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Pedestrian­s and motorcycle­s share a road Sunday in downtown Tehran, Iran.
[VAHID SALEMI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Pedestrian­s and motorcycle­s share a road Sunday in downtown Tehran, Iran.

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