Yesterday, just hours before President Trump's announced deadline for widespread destruction of power plants and bridges in Iran, a group of Iranian-American economists circulated this open letter, which I signed on to It began as folows:
An Open Letter to President Trump on Iran Strategy From a Group of Concerned Economists
"Dear President Trump,
While we share the Administration's concerns about the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) nuclear program and destabilizing activities, strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure, including power plants, industries, bridges, and universities, some of which have already begun, are strategically counterproductive, escalating costs to Americans while reducing our ability to achieve America’s objectives.
Iran's ability to disrupt the Strait of Hormuz through mines, fast-attack boats, coastal missiles, and drones does not depend on power plants or refineries. Destroying civilian infrastructure removes Iran's incentive to reopen the Strait; it does not remove its capability to close it.
Striking infrastructure devastates the livelihood of 92 million civilians. Aside from its resulting humanitarian crisis, it will further widen the scope of the war and allow the IRGC to position themselves as defenders of the nation, and rebuild their badly damaged internal support. Infrastructure strikes and a prolonged war also let them blame economic misery on foreign aggression rather than their own mismanagement. "
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This morning I don't find much evidence of it on the internet.
Professor Mostafa Beshkar in Indiana has posted it on Twitter (as X used to be known), and here it is in the Indiana student newspaper, with the signers (who you can also find here):
LETTER: To President Trump on Iran strategy from a group of concerned economists
But open letters aren't just written, circulated and signed to change policies (especially in a matter of hours). They also serve to express solidarity, and even as a shout into the void they let those concerned with Iran, and with America, express their fear and loathing of war crimes and boasts about the intention to commit them.
