In Love and in Limbo: Couple Stuck Between US and Iranian Immigration Orders

Order temporarily bars Iranians from entering the U.S., and Iran retaliated.

— -- Mohammad Mesbahi, 27, an Iranian-American from Fairfax, Virginia, crinkles his nose and laughs when asked why he loves his wife.

"There’s a lot of things!" he chuckles. "Every single little thing."

Mesbahi and Iranian citizen Homa Esfandiari were married in Tehran in December 2014. Since then, Mesbahi says they have spent years collecting, filling out and submitting paperwork so she could come join him in the U.S.

"You can imagine how devastated we were, having waited so long," he said.

Iran is one of the nations on the list, potentially putting Esfandiari's case in limbo.

Making matters worse for the couple, Iran’s foreign ministry said in a statement over the weekend that Iran would "implement the principle of reciprocity" until the travel suspension is over, vowing to ban Americans from entering their country.

It’s unclear what the Iranian statement means for Mesbahi, who is a dual citizen of Iran and the U.S.

"We don’t want to be caught up in this feud between these two governments," Mesbahi said. "We just want to live our life."

"There’s hope. That’s all we have right now."