The streets of Tehran were as bustling as ever on Monday, betraying
little sign of mounting international tensions over Iran’s disputed
nuclear program. But Iranians were split on whether the Islamic Republic
was on the brink of war.
“It doesn’t feel as if a war is coming,” said Abul Fazal, a worker at
the city’s Grand Bazaar. “But if one does start, I am sure our young
people will defend our homeland.” His colleagues nodded in agreement.
But members of the city’s professional class were not so optimistic that conflict could be avoided.
“If war comes, it will be like a massive earthquake for our country,”
said twenty-something artist Golshan in a trendy downtown Tehran café.
“I am very afraid, of course.”
Western countries and Israel suspect Iran of seeking to build an atomic
bomb, but Tehran says its nuclear program is aimed at the production of
peaceful civilian energy and that it has no need of such “un-Islamic”
weapons.
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was reported as saying earlier this
month that Israel could strike Iran between April and June this year to
counter what it describes as a significant threat to its national
security. The United States has also refused to rule out force.
Tehran has pledged a “painful” response to any attack and has also
threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz, a vital Gulf shipping route,
in answer to a European Union ban on Iranian oil due to come into force
by July.
The confidence of workers at the Grand Bazaar echoed recent comments by Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran takes these threats seriously and we are
prepared in every respect and have plans for the worst case scenarios,”
Salehi said on Friday, as reported by Iran’s English-language Press TV.
“But we know that nothing will happen.”
But in a further escalation of tensions, Iranian Parliamentary Speaker
Ali Larijani warned on Sunday of “consequences” for the region if Gulf
Arab states continued “plotting” with the United States against Tehran.
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries financed Baghdad during the
1980-1988 Iraqi war, and Larijani stressed Iran would not show
“forgiveness” a second time.
The war with Iraq decimated a generation of young Iranian men and
memories of the conflict live on among older residents of Tehran.
“Who needs war? Two million Iranians lost their lives in the war with
Iraq. We don’t need anything like that again,” said a shopkeeper near
the city’s sprawling Laleh Park. He declined to give his name.
On top of the terrifying possibility of war, Iranians have also been
grappling with spiraling inflation. Prices for basic foodstuffs have
doubled in recent weeks as the United States and European countries
tighten sanctions against Tehran.
“It’s becoming hard to get by on an average worker’s salary,” said Abul
Fazal. “Even richer people are noticing the price increases, I think.”
“Things are getting very expensive,” said Golshan. “And people are getting very angry.”
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has vowed, however, that Iran will never “surrender” to pressure.
Speaking at a rally on Saturday to mark the anniversary of the 1979
Islamic Revolution, he also said that Tehran would soon reveal “major”
progress in its nuclear program. His comments were met with sustained
cheers by a crowd waving flags that read “Down with USA” and “Down with
Israel.”
And on Sunday, Iranian media said a key underground nuclear facility
would become fully operational “in the next few days.” Iran was reported
in early January to have begun enriching uranium at the
heavily-fortified Fordo facility near the holy city of Qom, in the north
of the country.
The move is likely to further ratchet up tensions with Israel and the West.
“War is awful, but it is coming,” said a student, who gave her surname
as Manouchehri. “All politicians are bad, but it is the people who will
suffer.”
But fears of war were waved away with a smile by Ayra, a businessman.
“There will be no war,” he said, speaking through the window of his white Porsche. “War is too expensive for both sides.”
“The United States simply can’t afford to fight Iran right now,” he
shrugged, before driving off into the chaos of another Tehran rush-hour.
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