Iran on the edge of the explosion growing popular discontent after the United States retreat from the nuclear deal
The image of the Iranian Revolutionary Guide on Khamini
Iran on the edge of the explosion growing popular discontent after the United States retreat from the nuclear deal
The depth of the US withdrawal from the nuclear deal with Iran was Tehran's economic wounds, and the authorities' concerns about the spread of protests against it increased, especially as recent protests were based mainly on economic reasons.
The price of the Iranian riyal against the US dollar in the money exchangers came at the signing of US President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal with Iran and sell the dollar at 65,000 riyals.
The decline threatens a new spike in food prices, compounding the suffering of consumers, who are already complaining about the rise in prices of eggs, meat and bread more than 10 percent this year, with unemployment close to 14 percent.
The combination of these factors (currency decay, rising prices and rising unemployment) would increase pressure on the Iranians, before this "bomb", which is expanding in the face of the Iranian authorities, explodes.
Observers believe that the re-imposition of US sanctions on Iran again will increase the domestic resentment of Iran, a growing resentment for months because of economic decline and lack of freedoms and the absence of a political horizon to resolve the nuclear problem.
Experts expect Iran to enter its worst historic stages at home, especially the economy, with more immigration, unemployment and impoverished bankruptcy, a recipe that could make living in the country unbearable.
The US national security adviser, John Bolton, said Tuesday that the reinstatement of US sanctions linked to Iran's nuclear program would immediately apply to new contracts, adding that foreign companies had a few months to "get out" of Iran.
The US Treasury Department said sanctions related to the old contracts signed in Iran would take place after a transitional period of 90 to 180 days, shortly after President Donald Trump announced his country's withdrawal from the Iranian nuclear deal.
Renewed deprivation
The imposition of sanctions on Iran will again deprive the local economy of recovery, which would have been achieved by the import of aircraft and ship parts to modernize its air and sea fleet, as well as the denial of large foreign trade deals.
With the return of US sanctions on Iran, the domestic economy is expected to falter again as sanctions have been behind more than 20 percent of Iran's economic problems over the years, most notably unemployment of more than 14 percent.
Iran's oil sector will be the most affected by the re-imposition of sanctions, especially as it highlighted the source of income in the country, and Iran needed the support of Western companies to develop this sector is exhausted.
Iran will not be able to attract foreign investment to the country because of the re-imposition of US sanctions on it, under the tightening of domestic laws with the issues of investment companies from abroad, especially the Western ones.
Among the US sanctions that will be re-imposed on Iran, the freezing of any funds to Tehran abroad, especially in the United States, depriving them of significant revenues that would revive the domestic economy.
While the Iranian nuclear deal halted the idea of a Western war on Tehran, the re-imposition of sanctions again puts this idea on the table again, especially as Iran's involvement in the affairs of the region is expanding.
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