'It feels like we’re sinking deeper into a swamp': Iranians speak to BBCpublished at 07:22 BST
Ghoncheh Habibiazad
Senior reporter, BBC Persian
Image source, Getty ImagesSmoke rises from a residential area in Tehran, Iran, following strikes
I spoke yesterday with residents in Iran's capital Tehran and the nearby city of Karaj who tell me of their fears for the future after US President Donald Trump issues new threats on infrastructure.
"It feels like we’re sinking deeper into a swamp. What can we do as ordinary people? We can’t do anything. We can’t stop him," one man in his 20s tells me.
Trump has threatened to hit the country's civilian infrastructure and says Iranians will be "living in hell" unless the Strait of Hormuz is reopened.
Some in Iran have been stockpiling resources. One woman in her 20s tells me her mum "is filling every bottle she can find in the house with water", while another woman whose family only has enough supplies for a few days says: "Without electricity, nothing will be possible. Nothing at all. I just hope he won’t hit Iran too hard."
A man in Tehran whose family have also been stockpiling is concerned that, if Trump attacks Iran's infrastructure, "these efforts are pointless".
Another Iranian man, in his 30s, tells me he doesn't see a bright future for the Iranian people. "With all these attacks, Iran won't be a place we can live in anymore. It’s going to be impossible to go back to how things were before the war."






