Getting a bombshell makeover in the Middle East left this siren shellshocked.
Alma Verseau, a content creator from Dubai, ran to Iran for the rhinoplasty of her dreams.
But when the Twelve-Day War with Israel erupted in the country during her post-op stay last June, there was virtually nowhere for the brunette to run.
“Rare aesthetic: You got to Iran for a nose job with your best friend and get stuck in war,” Verseau captioned a recent clip of herself, bandaged and sobbing while chaos ensued.
Footage of the fray has garnered over 2.2 million views, as well as a flurry of rebukes from alarmed onlookers questioning why she’d risk her life by undergoing cosmetic surgery in a notoriously troubled land.
“In a world with Turkey, YOU CHOOSE IRAN???,” barked a confused commenter, noting the trendy popularity of Istanbul-based procedures.
“What possessed u to go to Iran in these times?” another wondered aloud.
“I’ve never heard a single person say ‘I’m going to Iran for a nose job,’” an equally cynical naysayer scoffed.
True, Iran may not seem like the ideal getaway for going under the knife — especially amid the current disarray.
The US launched Operation Epic Fury against the Iranian regimen on Feb. 28, which War Secretary Pete Hegseth has described as, “precise strikes taking out the better part of Iran’s navy, making it combat ineffective, neutralizing missile sites and launchers, and establishing total dominance over the skies we fly over and seas we fly over.”
Still, Iran has been revered as “rhinoplasty capital of the world,” per data, with its capital, Tehran, serving as a top hotspot for a schnoz chop due to low costs.
The price of an Iranian nose job in 2026 runs the gamut from $1,500 to $3,500, compared to Turkey, where the operation ranges between $2,500 and $5,500, according to reports. In the US, the revamp can set folks back upwards of $10,000.
But Verseau told her social media fans she had no clue that opting for the surgery in Iran would nearly cost her life.
“This was not predicted. Nothing like this had happened [in Iran] in over 40 years,” she said. “So it was definitely a shock when it did happen.”
Luckily, Verseau and her grief were able to escape the danger by fleeing to a family member’s house in a nearby village.
“Alor of people are asking why I would get my nose done in Iran instead of a place like Turkey,” the belle acknowledged, revealing that she went to the same Ear Nose and Throat (ENT) doctor that her Iranian friend had previously used. “The procedure was really good.”
And Verseau isn’t the only show-stopper to make a quick, potentially deadly stop in Iran for the facial enhancement.
Liya, a lifestyle influencer, and a gal pal also took their lives into her own hands by traveling to the war zone for a rhino re-do.
“Got a nose job in Iran,” she wrote in the closed-captions of a post.
“Woke up to the sound of bombs for 12 nights.”
