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Iran ‘Closer to Paralysis’ After Year of War, Sanctions

Iran has come under bombardment, faced the reinstatement of United Nations sanctions, and seen its economy sink deeper into crisis this year.

An analysis published by the AP points to Iran still not taking any major action to halt the slide, restart crucial nuclear negotiations with the West nor fully prepare for possible further hostilities with Israel and the US.

In the past, Iran’s 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei heralded the benefit of Tehran’s “strategic patience” in confronting its enemies.

According to The AP, concern is growing that patience has slipped into paralysis as Iran’s partners in its self-described “Axis of Resistance” have been devastated and there’s no overt sign of materiel support from either China or Russia.

“One of the harms and dangers facing the country is precisely this state of neither war nor peace, which isn’t good,” Khamenei himself warned in September.

But there’s been no move to change that calculus, as Iranians themselves remain fearful of war resuming. Each fire or industrial accident becomes grist for new worry as they watch their life savings further dwindle as Iran’s rial currency falls to historic lows against the US dollar.

“Even if we accept that the possibility of a second war exists, the right approach to governing the country is not to keep public opinion in constant anxiety through recurring alerts every few days,” said Ali Abdullah Khani, an analyst with Iran’s Presidential Strategic Affairs Office, in an interview published in October by the website NourNews.

“Such a policy places the nation in a permanent state of crisis, a condition in which it always seems that war could break out at any moment, and as a result, all managerial and political capacities are consumed by confronting a presumed and hypothetical conflict.”

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