The Denver Post

Hot sauce, soda, movies and more: U.S. products make their way into Iran

- By Jon Gambrell

T EHR A N, IR A N » At a trendy restaurant in Iran’s capital, customers sip Coca-cola through bending straws as waiters bring caddies to their tables full of Heinz ketchup and two types of Tabasco sauce.

Welcome to dining in the Islamic Republic, brought to you by America.

Whether at upscale restaurant­s or corner stores, American brands such as Coca-cola and Pepsi can be seen throughout Iran despite the heightened tensions between the two countries.

U.S. sanctions have taken a heavy toll on oil and other major industries in the country of 80 million people, but Western food, movies, music and clothing are still widely available. And 40 years after the Islamic Revolution and the takeover of the U.S. Embassy, despite billboards and rallies declaring “Death to America,” Iranians — particular­ly the young — embrace U.S. products.

“The American lifestyle is very attractive,” said Ahmad Rezaee, a 21-year-old student at Tehran University who drained two bottles of Coke while out with a friend. Coca-cola “portrays that lifestyle for us.”

Tensions have soared following the Trump administra­tion’s decision last year to withdraw from Iran’s 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers and restore sanctions.

Despite that, drinking a “Coca” or a Pepsi after eating kebab in Iran comes as second nature, though the soft drinks don’t taste quite as syrupy or sweet as their American counterpar­ts. Both brands are bottled by local firms — Khoshgovar Mashhad Co. for Coca-cola and Sasan Co. and Neysun Shargh Co. for Pepsi — which are affiliated with the Imam Reza Foundation, an economic conglomera­te tied to the country’s Shiite theocracy.

Coca-cola held a 28 percent market share in Iran, according to a 2016 report by research firm Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, while Pepsi had around 20 percent.

Asked about Coca-cola sales in Iran, the Atlanta-based company said it had sold concentrat­e to Iran for more than 20 years in line with U.S. sanctions policies.

“The authorizat­ions are very restrictiv­e in nature,” Coca-cola said. “The company does not have any ownership interest in the Iran bottler and does not have any tangible assets in Iran.”

Pepsi did not respond to requests for comment. Pittsburgh­based Kraft Heinz Co. said that “like many Western companies, a few of our products are made available via a local Iranian distributo­r.” The Mcilhenny Co. of Avery Island, La., the maker of Tabasco, said it “expressly prohibits its distributo­rs from reselling Tabasco brand products in Iran.”

“Unfortunat­ely, as is the case with all manufactur­ers, Mcilhenny Co. has only a limited ability to stop illegal third-party distributi­on networks from secretly diverting our products to Iran and often must rely on U.S. agencies and law enforcemen­t to identify front companies and individual­s engaged in sanctions evasion,” CEO Harold Osborn told The Associated Press in a statement.

At V Café near Tehran University, diners drank Coca-colas and lathered their food with American condiments as videos played on a giant screen of travel destinatio­ns from around the world. Rezaee and a friend, Sima Najafzadeh, a 21-year-old fellow student, each drank Cokes, saying they enjoyed the taste. They also would like to see more iphones, Mcdonald’s restaurant­s and other trappings of Americana.

“We love Americans,” Najafzadeh said.

That goes for American films as well. Rezaee acknowledg­ed having to find a pirated copy of “Avengers: Endgame” online as it never played in Iran. Others without a strong internet connection can find recently released films such as “John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum” for less than 40 cents apiece on Tehran’s busy Enghelab Street, where hawkers also sell portraits of a young Al Pacino. Western pop and rock music seeps out of the occasional passing car.

Iranian state television channels even air older American movies dubbed in Farsi. The 2000 Dennis Quaid film “Frequency” was on one recent night.

At the city’s Grand Bazaar, the capital’s beating heart, a beach towel showing Mickey Mouse with a surfboard in “So Cal” — Southern California — hung on one rafter. Stacks of blue jeans were also on offer, but American brands such as Levi Strauss have largely disappeare­d in recent months as Iran’s currency has plummeted.

That’s been a boon for the Par Group, a local jean manufactur­er that produces some 3 million square meters of jeans a month from locally sourced and foreign material. Sales associates at their shop in the bazaar acknowledg­ed the product’s roots in American cowboy culture but said jeans remain popular on the streets of Tehran.

“All over the world, people want jeans,” said Amin Moradi, a salesman at the shop. “Iranians are very fashionabl­e.”

At Tehran’s massive Iran Mall, a store called TOMSON sells what appears to be the eponymous slip-on Toms shoes. The firm did not respond to requests for comment.

Of all the American imports, the most unlikely might be the Tehran Research Reactor, a nuclear gift from America that arrived in 1967 as part of its “Atoms for Peace” program, and still runs today.

 ??  ?? Iranian customers drink Coca-cola at a cafe in downtown Tehran, Iran, this summer. Coca-cola held a 28 percent market share in Iran, according to a 2016 report, while Pepsi had around 20 percent.
Iranian customers drink Coca-cola at a cafe in downtown Tehran, Iran, this summer. Coca-cola held a 28 percent market share in Iran, according to a 2016 report, while Pepsi had around 20 percent.
 ?? Photos by Ebrahim Noroozi, The Associated Press ?? An Iranian customer buys Pepsi at a grocery store in Tehran, Iran.
Photos by Ebrahim Noroozi, The Associated Press An Iranian customer buys Pepsi at a grocery store in Tehran, Iran.

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