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A worker with the Iranian Red Crescent Society walks through the rubble of a foreign car repair workshop that was destroyed during a joint US and Israeli attack in Tehran, Iran.
- Iran demanded compensation from the US and Israel for the war.
- It estimated that damages amounted to $270 billion.
- Several infrastructure installations were hit during US and Israeli attacks.
Iran has demanded that it receive compensation for the destruction caused by the US and Israel’s attacks, as the country remains defiant and regional powers continue their attempts to mediate an end to the conflict.
Tehran’s envoy to the United Nations said on Tuesday that five regional countries must pay compensation, based on his accusation that their territories were used for launching attacks on Iran.
Iran has also raised the idea of compensation for damages to come through a Strait of Hormuz protocol, which would include a tax on ships passing through the waterway.
An early estimate indicates that Iran has suffered about $270 billion in direct and indirect damages since the start of the US-Israel war on 28 February, Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said during an interview with Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency, published on Tuesday.
She did not provide further information, such as a breakdown of the damages, but said the issue of compensation was discussed in last week’s negotiations between Tehran and Washington in Pakistan, and will be raised in any potential future talks with the US and mediators.
READ | Iran war ceasefire talks could resume in 2 days, as Trump pushes for ‘grand bargain’
The government has said it is still assessing the extensive damage dealt to Iran’s critical infrastructure, after oil and gas facilities, petrochemical companies, steel plants, and aluminium factories were repeatedly targeted, in addition to military complexes.
These will take years to fully rebuild.
U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers are among the assets executing a blockade mission impacting Iranian ports. The blockade is being enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or leaving coastal areas or ports in Iran. A typical destroyer has a crew of more than… pic.twitter.com/tsu4i322r4
— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) April 15, 2026Bridges, ports and railway networks, universities and research centres, and several power plants and water desalination plants were also directly hit, while a large number of hospitals, schools and civilian homes were damaged or destroyed.
Mohajerani told Iranian state media earlier this week that “existing economic realities” mean that the government does not have the resources to repay civilians if their homes have been damaged or destroyed by US-Israeli attacks.
Meanwhile, the secretary of the Association of Iranian Airlines, Maghsoud Asadi Samani, told Iranian media that 60 civilian aircraft had been put out of commission, with 20 completely destroyed by the US and Israel.
The official said that Iran only has about 160 passenger aircraft still in operation, most of them decades old and kept in the air through maintenance work that has been difficult due to the shortage of parts and services as a result of stringent US sanctions.
Samani said airlines also lost much of the revenue they had expected to come in during the Nowruz or Persian New Year holidays in late March, and that their accumulated losses exceeded 300 trillion rials (about $190 million at the current exchange rate) in 40 days of war.

A crew works to clear rubble in the aftermath of a drone attack on a residential building, in which one civilian was killed in eastern Tehran, Iran.
Majid Saeedi/Getty Images
Several of the country’s international airports, including in Tehran, Tabriz, Urmia and Khorramabad, were significantly damaged after numerous attacks hit their runways, control towers and hangars.
Despite the scope and depth of the damage, as well as the impact of the US naval blockade on Iranian ports that began on Monday, Iranian authorities have signalled that they do not intend to give major concessions in negotiations with Washington, including on nuclear enrichment.
Ebrahim Rezaei, the spokesperson for the hardline-dominated parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, said in a social media post that the two-week ceasefire announced last week must not be extended, arguing that it would give the US and Israel a chance to replenish their arms stocks and improve positions for attack.
“They must either recognise Iran’s rights, including our control over the Strait of Hormuz, or return to war,” he wrote.
Iran dedicated close to $8 billion for military spending in 2024, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) think tank, and officials pledged to triple that budget after missile exchanges with Israel in October that year.
International law applies to all States, without exception.
Respect for its rules is not optional.
Without it, instability spreads, mistrust deepens & conflicts spiral out of control.
This is not the moment to retreat from international law.
It is the moment to reaffirm it. pic.twitter.com/fh8ajktPfT
But the government has also faced years of a budget crunch, linked with local mismanagement and corruption, and paired with US sanctions.
The near-total internet shutdown imposed by the state against more than 90 million Iranians has been compounding Iran’s economic woes and frustrating citizens for a seventh week.
After huge waves of layoffs and lost business opportunities as a result of the blackout, the government has said that it holds no authority over the matter, instead pinning the blame on the Supreme National Security Council.
Afshin Kolahi, the head of an Iran Chamber of Commerce commission, told a video conference with state-affiliated and private executives on Monday that the shutdown was leading to up to $80 million per day in direct and indirect economic damages.
“We are losing [the equivalent of] four B1 bridges every day. We are losing two medium-capacity power plants every day, and we are doing this ourselves,” he said about the cost of the internet shutdown, and in reference to the US-Israeli bombing of a major bridge near Tehran earlier this month.
The Information and Communications Technology Ministry reposted the video of the comments on its social media account.
In January, when the state imposed a 20-day near-total internet shutdown as thousands were killed during nationwide anti-establishment protests, the ministry had said that many online businesses could not last without the internet for more than three weeks.


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