Dayton Daily News

Iran's economy tops fears of U.S. threat

- By Mehdi Fattahi and Nasser Karimi

TEHRAN, IRAN — Across Iran’s capital, the talk always seems to come back to how things may get worse.

Battered by U.S. sanctions and its depreciati­ng rial currency, Iran’s 80 million people struggle to buy meat, medicine and other staples of daily life. Now they wonder aloud about America’s intentions as it rushes an aircraft carrier and other forces to the region over a still-unexplaine­d threat it perceives from Iran.

The Associated Press spoke to a variety of people on Tehran’s streets recently, ranging from young and old, women wearing the all-encompassi­ng black chador to those loosely covering their hair.

Most say they believe a war will not come to the region, though they remain willing to defend their country. They think Iran should try to talk to the U.S. to help its anemic economy, even as they see President Donald Trump as an erratic and untrustwor­thy adversary.

“Trump is not predictabl­e at all, and one doesn’t know how to react to him, and what is the right thing to do against him,” said Afra Hamedzadeh, a 20-year-old civil ser- vant and university student. “Since he controls the global economy we are somehow left with few options.”

But opinions vary across Iran’s capital, Tehran, depending on whether you speak to someone coming out of Friday prayers, in the back of a shared taxi cab, or exiting the coffee shops pop- ular with young people.

“If America could do anything, it would have done many things by now,” said the chador-wearing Zoherh Sadeghi, a 51-year-old house- wife coming out of prayers. “It can’t do anything. It can’t do a damn thing.”

That’s an opinion shared by 35-year-old office worker Massumeh Izadpanah.

“When someone keeps trying to scare you it means that they think they are not yet ready for war. When someone really wants war it starts the war right away. Like when Iraq attacked us, all of a sudden bombs were dropped,” she said. “But right now America just says, ‘I’m coming,’ to scare Iran.”

A young nation, many across Iran were alive for its bloody 1980s war with Iraq, a conflict that began when dictator Saddam Hussein invaded and dragged on for eight years. That war, in which Saddam used chemical weapons and Iran launched human wave attacks, killed 1 million people.

Since Trump withdrew the U.S. from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers last year, state television increasing­ly has focused attention on that war’s wounded.

In Tehran’s southern Javadieh neighborho­od, veteran Mohammad Ali Moghaddam said he was ready to fight again.

“I would encourage my three sons and grandsons to go to defend Iran too,” said Moghaddam, a 58-year- old welder.

Arezou Mirzaei, a 37-yearold mother of two in central Tehran, is more worried.

“I think the government should do something to avoid war,” Mirzaei said. “If war was good, then Afghanista­n and Iraq would not be the mess that we see on TV.”

Taxi driver Jafar Hadavand, 34, agrees.

“I think both sides will be losers if they fight each other,” Hadavand said. “I think there are wise people on both sides to advocate peace, not war.”

Still, many pointed to the economy, not the possible outbreak of war, as Iran’s major concern. Iran’s rial cur- rency traded at 32,000 to $1 at the time of the 2015 nuclear deal. Now it is at 148,000, and many have seen their life’s savings wiped out.

Nationwide, the unemployme­nt rate is 12 percent. For youth it’s even worse, with a quarter of all young people unemployed, according to Iran’s statistic center.

 ??  ?? A cleric crosses in front of a mural of late Iranian revolution­ary founder Ayatollah Khomeini (right) Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (left) and the Basij paramilita­ry force, in Tehran, Iran.
A cleric crosses in front of a mural of late Iranian revolution­ary founder Ayatollah Khomeini (right) Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (left) and the Basij paramilita­ry force, in Tehran, Iran.

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