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Water Conflict: Will a Drying Iran Face Syria’s Fate?

The article is showing the picture of Lake Urmia and I also know the lake has water and this picture is old so what now?

The water problems of Iran are real, even common people talk about it, my colleagues routinely express their worries about it specially in these days when winter seasons have forgotten to visit Tehran, although the author tried to use this issue for propaganda but the problem is real. Even for Pakistan water crisis are on horizon.
 
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The water problems of Iran are real, even common people talk about it, my colleagues routinely express their worries about it specially in these days when winter seasons have forgotten to visit Tehran, although the author tried to use this issue for propaganda but the problem is real. Even for Pakistan water crisis are on horizon.

Water crises? This so called water crisis is just a joke that got introduced to the internet recently. It has been there for a long long time and world has moved in this very way and will keep on moving.
 
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@LoveIcon there is currently 3cm snow in Darbandsar which will get 21cm in next 7 day the way it is falling and as the forecast says.

Dizin is 4 cm and still falling at this very moment so you tell me what the hell is going on either you are on the wrong mountain or you don't know what snow looks like.

here don't look around too much standing on a mountain my friend

There's no need to do personal attack, I am living in Tehran since 2009 and don't need weblinks to know about weather when I am sitting in just shorts and haven't turned on heaters in this winter seasons yet.
 
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There's no need to do personal attack, I am living in Tehran since 2009 and don't need weblinks to know about weather when I am sitting in just shorts and haven't turned on heaters in this winter seasons yet.
I am not doing any personal attacks my friend my apologize if you felt so but what I provided you are fact from the internet. if you are feeling warm and don't need heater that is something else there can be many things that might add to that situation but snow is there I just gave you the proof. So still my point stands one should check weather forecast before publishing such articles. It looks really cheap when you say that I am dry standing in rain like the author of OP did.
 
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I am not doing any personal attacks my friend my apologize if you felt so but what I provided you are fact from the internet. if you are feeling warm and don't need heater that is something else there can be many things that might add to that situation but snow is there I just gave you the proof. So still my point stands one should check weather forecast before publishing such articles. It looks really cheap when you say that I am dry standing in rain like the author of OP did.

Dude the locations you pointed obviously have snow, you are trying to say that whole Pakistan is covered with snow because mountains of north are covered with heavy snow. Any Iranian member living in Tehran can confirm you that there's no winter in Tehran till now. Rest you can continue living in your own world.
 
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Dude the locations you pointed obviously have snow, you are trying to say that whole Pakistan is covered with snow because mountains of north are covered with heavy snow. Any Iranian member living in Tehran can confirm you that there's no winter in Tehran till now. Rest you can continue living in your own world.
My friend I agree with you. Now in Pakistan the water comes from the north and snow is needed north. I know there is no winter in Tehran as the google weather i posted says 14C so I would not consider it cold my self it is just pleasant. But in Iran snow is there where it is needed and in Pakistan the Snow is like hell where it is needed.
 
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@The Eagle @Serpentine @waz

The title is misleading and nothing to do with what article says. This is the water crisis in the middle eastern countries, needs governments' attention and more importantly the waste of water in agricultural fields should be controlled and reduced.

I can copy-paste articles about this crisis and it's main causes.

BTW, this is not a political article, the OP is trying to divert the attentions


Why Don't You Try Desalination And RO Plants You Generate Far More Electricity Than You Need Why Not Use It There????
 
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Iran have plenty of water because of the snow they only need you manage it and aslo maybe they can dig rivers from the gulfs and the seas to make it a sweet water
 
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WTF does Israel and USA have to do with less water?

We have less water in Turkey too, it's normal.

Don't make everything about Israel and USA it's getting crazy.
 
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I don't need to check weather forecast when I can look at sky and mountains by turning my head. It's cloudy since morning but no rains and small spots of snow on mountain peaks when it should have been covered fully with snow.
What about today? :enjoy: there will be good amount of rain and snow today and tomorrow.

On topic, Iran's water shortage is real. If we don't deal with it next generations will suffer. Besides mismanagement, drought is also a big factor.
 
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The water shortage of Iran is very real. While others can import food, not Iran as she is persistent under security threats. The easiest way is to dam Tigris at the sea, and use every single drop of it.

Iraq must agree.
 
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مرگ بر آمریکا
مرگ بر انگلیس
بگو مرگ بر اسرائیل
مرگ بر فرانسه
مرگ بر برادر زن صدام
مرگ بر منافق
مرگ بر فتنه گر

آیا مرغ همچنان یک پا دارد؟
 
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Perhaps one of the most quoted predictions regarding the increasing role of water conflicts in global affairs belongs to former vice-president of the World Bank Ismail Serageldin, who in 1995 famously claimed, “Many of the wars of this century were about oil, but wars of the next century will be about water.” While oil has long dominated the geopolitical thinking of world powers, the new millennium promises to elevate the importance of water resources, potentially triggering conflicts in water-starved regions of the globe. The most obvious and fundamental problem with water management is that 97% of water on earth is impractical for drinking or agricultural purposes since it’s enclosed in the world’s oceans. As U.S. Army War College Professor Dr. Butts in his renowned article The Strategic Importance of Water wrote, “Only three percent of the water on the earth is fresh and, of this, more than two is locked away in the polar ice caps, glaciers, or deep groundwater aquifers, and is therefore unavailable to satisfy the needs of man.” The previous century did in fact witness several serious stand-offs between neighboring states that were at odds over sharing adjacent water resources. Consider the conflict between India and Pakistan over the Indus River basin that was exacerbated after the British partition. Had the World Bank not intervened, a violent clash between New Delhi and then the capital Karachi would have been inevitable. The ongoing negotiations brokered by the World Bank resulted in the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960. Among myriad examples of water conflicts is the famous case of the Argentina-Brazil border dispute over the Alto-Parana basin that took decades to resolve. The agreement was finalized in Itaipu-Corpus Multilateral Treaty of 1979.
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Almost exactly the same pattern is apparent in Iran, where recent protests signaled the growing frustration of the populace over some of the pressing issues that remain untackled. Among the most urgent problems such as the skyrocketing prices, costly military expenditures at the expense of social services, and high unemployment, one danger is particularly striking: declining water resources, which is poised to become a major national security threat. There are several factors that explain the causes of the Islamic Republic’s drying water reserves. London’s Imperial College’s Kaveh Madani identifies three main factors that have sent Iran’s water supplies into a downward spiral. Iran’s population, Madani claims, has grown exponentially draining the water reserves. The incompetent agricultural sector too has had detrimental effects. And, of course, the mismanagement of water resources that have brought Iran to the verge of a water crisis.

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Tehran’s unwise exploitation of water resources is not a new phenomenon. The chain of bad decisions has lasted for many years leading to alarming depletion of water bodies throughout the country. Two major water bodies have particularly suffered. Lake Urmia, one of the largest salt lakes in the world, is on the brink of disappearing. The lake has suffered due to incredibly high agricultural consumption, giving rise to serious concerns that if the pattern continues Urmia will soon cease to exist. And, of course, the Zayandehrood river, which flows through central Iran and was the lifeline of the city of Isfahan (the city owes its existence to the river), is drying too. The approximately two million people who live around the basin have suffered immense hardships as declining agriculture has affected their livelihoods.

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But what one cannot ignore is the role of the government that aggravated the water crisis. The Iranian regime has been criticized for deliberately overconsuming water reserves to benefit the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) that was originally created to protect Ayatollah Khomeini from an internal coup. After the Revolution, the IRGC was granted a large stake in Iranian economy which included an ownership of construction companies that freely engaged in various engineering ventures. To illustrate this point in a piecewritten for Washington Post, Seth M. Siegel claims, “Recklessly, these companies began damming major rivers, changing the historical water flows of Iran. This was done to give water preferences to powerful landowners and favored ethnic communities while also transferring billions from the public treasury to IRGC leaders’ accounts. In all, since the 1979 revolution, more than 600 dam projects have been completed, contrasted with 13 dams built in Iran prior to the shah’s fall.”

To alleviate the massive water shortages and halt the coming hydro crisis, Tehran has reached out its neighbors to gain access to the latter’s reserves. For instance, Iran began actively engaging with Armenia to import water from Lake Sevan since 2012. The purpose was to bring enough water to save Lake Urmia from vanishing. The Armenian side decided not to move forward with the proposal due to political reasons. Speaking of Iran’s attempts to gain access to region’s water resources one wouldn’t be wrong to assume that Tehran will try to engage with Artsakh Republic (also known as Nagorno-Karabakh) as well. The Republic’s Shahumian and Kashatagh regions are known for their ample water resources thus serving as water security guarantors for both Armenia and Artsakh. Moving forward, Tehran will take concrete steps to gain access to these water resources.

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In addition to plummeting water resources at home, Iran will face another water related problem as Turkey begins exploiting the Ilisu Dam over the Tigris River. Iranian officials, including President Rouhani, have been quick to condemn Ankara’s construction efforts citing the environmental degradation that it will cause. The Dam is expected to reduce the flow of Tigris into Iraq by 56% which in turn will affect Khuzestan’s Kharkeh River that technically brings life to the Hour-al-Azim Wetland near the Iraq-Iran border.

If Iran’s water crisis continues, the fate of the country could be akin to Syria’s inner migration crisis leading to a massive unrest across the country. It is premature to conclude whether the days of the regime are numbered or not. But the recent protests are symptoms of a growing bubble that can burst at any moment. After all, even local Iranian officials have acknowledged the coming migration crisis due to reckless water use. In 2015, Vice-President of Iran Issa Kalantari (also Head of Department of Environment) warned that if Iran doesn’t dramatically change its water policies close to 50 million people would be forced to leave the republic. Given the current environmental indicators, Kalantari’s predictions are quite alarming.

https://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com/water-conflict-will-a-drying-iran-face-syrias-fate/

Not sure about Iran but i can see this in India. Water will become a major issue here and everything told in the article holds 100% true to India.

But people are yet to wake up.
 
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