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UN United Nations Security Council

Iranians Brace for UN ‘Snapback’ as Currency Slides and Prices Surge

With UN Security Council sanctions due to be reimposed, ordinary Iranians describe a daily grind of soaring prices, shrinking wages, and a currency testing historic lows. Street-level voices speak of dreams “slipping away,” a phrase that captures the economic and emotional wear of uncertainty. As policymakers trade statements, families in Tehran focus on rent, groceries, and the challenge of stretching paychecks as inflation moves faster than any household can adjust. The squeeze has also been accompanied by reports of intensified repression, leaving many anxious about both livelihood and liberty.

Western capitals argue the sanctions track need not foreclose diplomacy and point to recent steps by the international watchdog to restart inspections. Tehran’s counter-messaging—recalling ambassadors, denouncing the measures as “illegal,” and hinting at hard responses—suggests a period of sharper standoff is ahead. For Israel and regional partners, the calculus is straightforward: pressure on Iran’s nuclear and military apparatus may alter the economics of proxy warfare, but only if enforcement is credible and sustained. Markets, meanwhile, are already pricing in prolonged isolation and supply chain friction.

As measures take effect, attention will turn to whether economic pain shifts Iran’s internal decision-making or, conversely, stiffens resolve to push enrichment and regional adventurism further. For families in Iran, the debate is lived in the checkout line and on the bus to work; for Israel, it is measured in risk, distance to breakout, and the resilience needed to navigate another round of uncertainty.

(TOI/VFI News)

“When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do? The Lord is in His holy temple; the Lord is on His heavenly throne.” – Psalm 11:3–4