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US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

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China

US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

2026-03-28 15:17 Last Updated At:16:57

American residents voiced concern over U.S. military actions against Iran, pointing to the human toll abroad and rising costs at home.

On Feb 28, Israel and the United States launched joint attacks on Tehran and several other Iranian cities. Iran's former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed, along with senior military commanders and civilians.

The strikes have not only drawn concern but also driven up living costs, with fuel prices climbing and household budgets squeezed, making the cost of war felt in everyday expenses.

Residents stressed that diplomacy, not war, should guide U.S. policy, voicing anger, fear and frustration over the strikes on Iran.

"To just know that our country is in a war. To know that this is the direction we're heading right now, there is anger. Like I said, I don't think we should be having any part in this war. There shouldn't have been a war started in the first place. And second off, I'm scared. I don't want to be in a war," said Johnny Barajas, a local resident.

"It felt kind of similar, like America's behavior, the United States' behavior, was kind of similar to what the Japanese fascist regime did. When Pearl Harbor occurred, there were Japanese officials meeting with Americans, and then they still bombed Pearl Harbor. It doesn't feel like something patriotic, something I should be proud of," said Katrina Wenninger, another resident.

Since the attacks, wholesale oil and gas prices have surged as missile and drone strikes disrupted energy production and transport across the Middle East, adding to the strain on households. At the same time, residents' voices reflect a growing desire for peace and a rejection of violence as a way to resolve disputes.

"[I'm]not happy about it. But I would rather we hadn't gone into the war. It adds risk of potential retribution, uncertainty, and higher gas prices. It's uncertainty [about] safety, government costs, government debt, things like that. I think diplomacy is always the best bet," said David Schneider, a local resident.

"It's just all around. It's terrible. We're just in this really weird spot where we have to go about our day knowing that our tax dollars are being used for militia and for the deaths of hundreds across the globe. It's a weird space because a lot of us have this overwhelming guilt about what's happening. And so many of us Americans, we don't know how to engage in a way where we could be helping or trying to dismantle this narrative that everything that's going on is normal, which it's not," said Angela Trujillo, another resident.

Across the United States, residents say the war has brought fear into daily life and strain into household budgets, amplifying calls for diplomacy and a return to normalcy.

US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

US strikes on Iran spark concern at home as residents urge diplomacy

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced Friday it had launched the 84th wave of Operation True Promise 4, with the U.S. military base in Saudi Arabia among several targets.

The IRGC said in a statement that its Air Force, in coordination with the Navy, carried out a new round of missile and drone strikes, destroying enemy missile defense systems. The IRGC used both solid and liquid-fueled missiles, as well as drones, to strike the U.S. military base in Saudi Arabia's Al-Kharj governorate. Several large enemy refueling and support aircraft were destroyed or severely damaged in the attack.

The developments came amid heightened tensions following joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran on Feb 28.

Iran launches new missile, drone attacks on U.S. targets in Saudi Arabia

Iran launches new missile, drone attacks on U.S. targets in Saudi Arabia

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