Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 11
Israeli Strikes Idle 20,000 Workers at Iran Steel Plants, Cutting Guards Revenue
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 11

Israeli Strikes Idle 20,000 Workers at Iran Steel Plants, Cutting Guards Revenue

2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 11

Summary

  • Major sections of Iran’s Mobarakeh Steel complex near Isfahan were shut for weeks after Israeli airstrikes on March 27 and again days later, idling more than 20,000 workers.
  • Israel said the strikes were meant to slash Iran’s steelmaking capacity and cut revenue flowing to the Revolutionary Guards, expanding the campaign beyond missile sites, headquarters and air defenses.
  • The shutdown also choked steel supplies to domestic manufacturers, showing how attacks on businesses tied to Iran’s security establishment can quickly hit the wider civilian economy.
  • Mobarakeh captures that tension: profitable industrial groups are intertwined with Iran’s clerical and security elite, yet they also support the livelihoods of millions of ordinary Iranians.

Insights

With global costs nearing $1 trillion, was damaging Iran's steel industry worth the staggering economic price?
As infrastructure becomes a key target, how are nations preparing their economies to survive industrial warfare?
Does international law permit crippling an economy and idling thousands as a legitimate military act?