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Story Publication logo August 19, 2015

Iranians Have Very Different View on Their National Security

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Image by Reese Erlich. Iran, 2017.
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President Trump's attempts to undermine the nuclear accord have united Iranians against the U.S. A...

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Media file: ruhollah_hossseinian.jpg
Conservative member of parliament strongly opposes the nuclear agreement with the US. Image by Reese Erlich. Iran, 2015.

U.S. and European sanctions have long isolated Iran's economy, raising the costs of even the most basic purchases. The sanctions made it virtually impossible to transfer money through normal banking channels. Students studying abroad, for instance, were stranded when parents could no longer send money for their expenses.

The new nuclear agreement will lift those sanctions. While most Iranians seem to welcome the deal, there are some skeptics.

Pulitzer Center grantee and veteran correspondent Reese Erlich spent 10 days in Iran talking to over two dozen people about the nuclear agreement—controversial in both Washington and Tehran, although for very different reasons. In this video Iranians speak out on the nuclear deal at the Tehran Bazaar and at Friday prayers.

His report, for CBS News, begins at 25:40.

Listen to the report.

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