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For centuries, Iran was the vital bridge between East and West. A future Iran, free from the IRGC and open to the world, isn't just a win for regional peace; it’s the key to a more connected, prosperous global economy.
Today, that potential is largely frozen due to geopolitical isolation and the control of the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps). If Iran were to transition into a transparent, open-market player free from that influence, the global trade map would be fundamentally redrawn.
A "free" Iran would provide the shortest, most cost-effective transit corridor for energy and goods between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf. It would offer a stable alternative to routes that currently depend on more volatile or less efficient territories.
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By Rosha Entezari5
4141 ratings
For centuries, Iran was the vital bridge between East and West. A future Iran, free from the IRGC and open to the world, isn't just a win for regional peace; it’s the key to a more connected, prosperous global economy.
Today, that potential is largely frozen due to geopolitical isolation and the control of the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps). If Iran were to transition into a transparent, open-market player free from that influence, the global trade map would be fundamentally redrawn.
A "free" Iran would provide the shortest, most cost-effective transit corridor for energy and goods between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf. It would offer a stable alternative to routes that currently depend on more volatile or less efficient territories.
Send a text