Howard Chua-Eoan, Columnist

Bombing Iran’s Great Mosque Could Cost the World

Courtyard of Isfahan’s Shah mosque, built a few decades earlier than India’s Taj Mahal.

Photograph: De Agostini Editorial/Getty Images

Over the last few weeks, the booming of long-exploded bombs resounded as I walked home from work in London. I live in the Barbican, the cultural-residential complex just ten minutes on foot from the office; it was built on the site of a densely packed urban ward leveled by Luftwaffe attacks in World War II. An old census put the population of what was called Cripplegate at around 35,000 residents. After the war, so many were displaced (or killed) that only 48 remained in the area. There are many plaques commemorating lost buildings. The survival of St. Paul’s Cathedral — just south of Cripplegate and a premeditated target of Germany — is still cherished as a miracle by Londoners.

Today, history echoes when I hear of bombing runs on cities in the ongoing Gulf war. I shudder. Iran alone has 29 UNESCO heritage sites, placing it among the top 10 countries with the most landmarks enjoying the protective status — which alas offers no defense against belligerent air forces. Many have suffered damage.