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Thursday, June 25, 2026

VOICES FROM IRAN: Don’t feed us, free us: Iranians hit back at Vance over 'hunger' remarks


After Donald Trump said Iran has “a hunger problem” and JD Vance said unfrozen Iranian assets could help “feed the Iranian people,” Iranians pushed back, saying the country’s real crisis is repression, corruption and the fight for freedom, not hunger. Speaking in Switzerland on Monday, Vance said Washington could agree to release frozen Iranian funds for purchases of US agricultural products such as wheat, corn and soybeans. "If Iranian assets are ever unfrozen, they're going to go to make American farmers richer and to feed the Iranian people," Vance said. He said the United States and Qatar would oversee the process, though Iranian officials have disputed that characterization. Trump made similar remarks on Tuesday, saying money taken out of Iran would go to American farmers to provide “corn, soybeans, wheat to Iran.”

“They have a hunger problem, they have a food problem, they have a medicine problem, they got a lot of problems,” Trump said, adding that inflation in Iran had “hit 300%.” remarks sparked widespread reactions from Iran International's viewers, many of whom said the country's struggle cannot be reduced to hunger. "American officials talk about hunger in Iran as if our problem is a lack of food. Everything exists here. Government policies have made food unaffordable. Sending grain won't solve our problems," one viewer told Iran International,

While many respondents acknowledged the country's worsening economic crisis, they argued that inflation, corruption and decades of mismanagement—not a shortage of food—have made life increasingly difficult. Others said they have little faith that any economic relief provided to the Islamic Republic would ultimately benefit ordinary citizens. "Right now the Islamic Republic is probably figuring out how to send that wheat to Lebanon and Iraq," one viewer wrote. The comment was a reference to the Islamic Republic's long-standing support for regional militant allies and proxy groups. Many respondents argued that Tehran has repeatedly prioritized its regional strategy over the welfare of its own citizens. Several viewers also objected to what they saw as a portrayal of Iranians as a population waiting to be fed. "The people of Iran are not hungry. They sacrificed their lives and shed blood for freedom," one respondent said. (Read More)