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Iran War Day 35: Pezeshkian Writes to Americans, Leaked Exchange Shows IRGC Blocked Him From Talks, UAE Severs Iran's Dubai Financial Lifeline — US, UK & Australia Count the Cost
Description
Day 35 of Operation Epic Fury. Iran's president took the extraordinary step of writing an open letter directly to the American people, asking whose interests this war is truly serving and challenging the America First framing Trump has used to justify the campaign. It is the first time an Iranian head of state has addressed the American public directly during an active war between the two countries.
The more consequential story, however, came from a leaked internal exchange. Pezeshkian reportedly warned IRGC chief Ahmad Vahidi that without a ceasefire, Iran's economy faces total collapse within three to four weeks. Vahidi's response: you cannot be involved in negotiations because you would give too much away. Pezeshkian reportedly told aides he feels like a hostage. The exchange exposes the central obstacle to any deal — not just Iran's public defiance, but an internal power structure that has stripped the civilian government of the authority to negotiate.
The UAE then severed Iran's primary offshore financial lifeline, arresting dozens of IRGC-linked money changers in Dubai and shutting down the network that has sustained Iran's economy through years of Western sanctions.
This episode also takes stock of how the war is landing on three allied democracies. In the United States, gas is above four dollars per gallon, Bank of America forecasts oil at one hundred dollars a barrel through all of 2026, thirteen service members are dead, and Trump's approval sits at the lowest point of his second term. In the United Kingdom, energy bills are rising sharply from LNG disruption, Starmer is navigating a narrow path between alliance loyalty and domestic opposition, and the Diego Garcia co-belligerence question remains unresolved in Parliament. In Australia, petrol prices are at post-pandemic highs, free public transport has been introduced in Victoria and Tasmania, and the economic exposure is growing — despite zero military involvement.
Three days to April sixth. The internal story inside Iran is now as consequential as anything on the battlefield.