Friday, March 9, 2012

The Economic Fallout From Bombing Iran


“Nobody’s announced a war, young lady,” President Barack Obama said in New York on March 2, wagging his finger at an audience member who decried the possibility of U.S. military action against Iran. “But we appreciate your sentiment.” The crowd cheered, and a smile crossed the president’s face.

It’s too soon to say when, or whether, the long-simmering dispute over Iran’s nuclear program will erupt in armed conflict. “There is still a window that allows for a diplomatic resolution,” Obama said before meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on March 5. A raft of Western economic sanctions against Tehran, including a looming embargo on Iranian oil exports to the European Union, has made the country’s rulers more willing to “recommence negotiations without preconditions, which isn’t something they were amenable to last year,” according to Karim Sadjadpour, an Iran analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. War with Iran in 2012 “is plausible but not probable,” he says.

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