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If You Care About Iranians, Why Are Sanctions Always the Last Thing You Want to End?

 

Illustration showing sanctions, human rights rhetoric, and the economic burden carried by ordinary Iranians amid geopolitical conflict.
An editorial illustration examining how sanctions affect ordinary Iranians and why economic pressure receives less scrutiny than political repression.


A comment under a Facebook debate about Iran stopped me cold. Hundreds of people were arguing about freedom, democracy, women's rights, and the future of the Islamic Republic. Then one woman asked a question so simple that it cut through pages of slogans.

Why do people who claim to care about ordinary Iranians rarely demand the lifting of sanctions?

I read the sentence twice. The discussion had been moving in a familiar direction. Critics of Tehran described political repression. Supporters of the regime spoke about foreign threats. Everybody claimed to care about the Iranian people. Yet almost nobody was talking about the economic weapon that lands directly in the lives of those same people.

The omission felt strange.

Karachi teaches a person to pay attention to what is missing from a conversation. Politicians make speeches about development while neighborhoods sit without reliable water. International institutions publish reports about economic reform while families watch food prices climb. Public debates often reveal themselves through silence rather than noise.

Iran sits inside one of those silences.

American sanctions on Iran did not begin yesterday. Washington imposed restrictions after the 1979 revolution and expanded them repeatedly over the decades. Financial sanctions tightened further during disputes over Iran's nuclear program. Banks withdrew. Investment dried up. International transactions became harder. Ordinary Iranians paid the price for decisions made by governments thousands of miles away.

Supporters of sanctions defend them as an alternative to war. The argument sounds reasonable at first. Pressure the government. Avoid military conflict. Force political concessions.

Reality rarely follows the script.

Economic sanctions do not arrive at the office of a cabinet minister and stop there. They move through supply chains. They affect medicine imports. They distort currency markets. A father buying groceries encounters sanctions long before a political elite feels genuine discomfort.

Many people who advocate human rights in Iran understand this. Yet sanctions often receive only passing attention. Political prisoners generate headlines. Protests generate headlines. Currency collapses receive less moral urgency even though millions experience them in daily life.

I find that discrepancy difficult to ignore.

Human rights organizations frequently describe sanctions as a separate issue from political freedom. Life inside Iran does not allow such neat categories. Economic pressure shapes family decisions. It influences access to healthcare. Young people postpone marriage because salaries no longer match prices. A university graduate can spend years watching opportunity drift out of reach.

Freedom becomes an abstract word when rent is due next week.

A sharper question emerges from that reality.

If sanctions hurt ordinary Iranians, why do so many activists treat them as acceptable collateral damage?

The answer is uncomfortable. Human rights language and geopolitical interests sometimes travel together. Not always. Not automatically. Yet the overlap appears often enough that citizens in places like Iran begin to notice patterns.

Washington describes sanctions as tools for encouraging better behavior. Iranian officials describe them as collective punishment. Both sides use moral language. One side controls the global financial system.

I work in banking. Financial infrastructure interests me more than speeches. Money leaves fingerprints. Sanctions are not merely political statements. They operate through correspondent banks, payment channels, compliance departments, and risk calculations. A decision made in Washington can ripple through institutions across continents before reaching a pharmacist in Tehran.

Few people protesting for Iranian freedom spend much time discussing that machinery.

Another contradiction sits nearby.

Western media often presents anti-government demonstrations as authentic expressions of public opinion. Patriotic gatherings receive far more skepticism. State influence certainly exists. Government pressure exists. Yet nationalism does not disappear simply because outsiders dislike a country's rulers.

Many Iranians oppose the Islamic Republic.

Many Iranians also oppose foreign intervention.

Both statements can be true at the same time.

Social media struggles with that reality. People prefer cleaner stories. Heroic protesters fit comfortably into Western narratives. Citizens rallying around national sovereignty complicate the script. Complexity frustrates audiences who want certainty.

Iran refuses to cooperate.

A cautious commentator would stop here. I will not.

Some critics of Tehran appear less interested in improving Iranian lives than in weakening a geopolitical adversary. Human rights become the vocabulary. Strategic interests remain the destination. Once I noticed that pattern, I started seeing it everywhere.

Nobody needs to support the Islamic Republic to recognize the problem.

Nobody needs to admire Ayatollah Khamenei to ask why sanctions receive less outrage than censorship.

Nobody needs to defend Tehran's policies to wonder why suffering caused by hostile governments often receives a different moral accounting.

The comment that started this chain of thought did not defend every action of the Iranian state. It asked a harder question. Why do people who speak passionately about Iranian suffering rarely prioritize ending a policy that contributes directly to that suffering?

I have not found a convincing answer.

Karachi was loud outside my window when I finished reading the discussion. Horns echoed through the street. Vendors argued over prices. Motorcycles squeezed between cars in ways that would terrify traffic engineers. Daily life continued, messy and stubborn.

Iranian families were doing much the same thing on the other side of the region. Paying bills. Looking for work. Worrying about the future. Living inside an argument conducted by governments, activists, journalists, and foreign policy experts.

Everybody claims to stand with the Iranian people.

The question that stays with me is why so many of those voices become strangely quiet when the conversation turns to sanctions.

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