Often true but not always. Last time I had to upgrade internet, the technician originally came from Iran and had studied in engineering. He unfortunately couldn't work in engineering over here because his formation was probably not recognized and it's a really protected field. Still, he was impressed with my TEA collection and we actually had a chat about Oscilloscope
Probably just the North American protectionism thing kicking in, especially with respect to a country that your southern cousins like to cast as the devil incarnate. Iran, or if you prefer Persia, has always had great respect for scholarship and it shows in the quality of their education system and the quality of their graduates. If your Iranian engineer was anything like the Iranian educated folks I've known he was probably better qualified than someone with the ostensibly equivalent qualification from a local institution.
It's a testament to the ingrained Iranian respect for learning that even after the Mad Mullahs took over in Iran the education system remained intact and largely unharmed (It had its hiccups, but that's to be expected). Imagine what would happen to the universities here in the West if the equivalent stripe of Christian fundamentalists took over here. You don't have to imagine hard, because in some places you can see it happening without the the fundamentalists rising to the level of absolute power that the fundamentalists did in Iran.
Also: Persian food is delicious! If you do get hold of an Iranian, get them to cook you their mum's recipe for Dhansak, you will not be disappointed.
However, don't leave Persian blokes alone with your women - I'm looking at
you Manek Dubash
*.
* As I have mentioned before, Manek
is the kind of man who would regularly Google himself, so I fully expect he'll see this in the fullness of time, even though he's not a member here.