Dasht-e Kavir

Location:

Intro

Dasht-e Kavir, also known as the Great Salt Desert, is one of the two major deserts of Iran. It covers approximately 77,000 square kilometres in north-central Iran. The terrain consists of salt marshes, mudflats, and sand dunes and is largely impassable.

Background

History

The Dasht-e Kavir has been a barrier and a mystery throughout Iranian history. Its salt crusts, treacherous mud beneath the surface, and extreme temperatures made crossing almost impossible without local knowledge. Caravans avoided the interior and traced routes around the edges, connecting Tehran, Isfahan, and Khorasan through the oasis towns of Qom, Kashan, and Semnan on the northern and western margins. The desert’s isolation made it a natural boundary between the settled plateau cities and the nomadic and semi-nomadic populations of the east. No major empire made systematic use of the interior; it was simply avoided.

Present Day

The Dasht-e Kavir today is sparsely inhabited. Its eastern and southern margins contain small oasis settlements sustained by qanats. The desert is used for military testing and has strategic significance as a vast unpopulated buffer zone. Climate change is expanding the desert’s effective boundary as aquifer depletion reduces the extent of irrigated agriculture on its margins. Salt dust storms from the dried surfaces of seasonal lakes within the desert are an increasing environmental problem for surrounding provinces.

Future Outlook

Population

Map


Articles

report

Russia’s War Machine: How It Fights Without Winning

As negotiations flicker in the background of a grinding war, Russia’s ability to sustain its military effort in Ukraine depends on a fragile web of foreign supply, internal mobilization, and retrofitted Soviet stockpiles. This report examines the current state of Russia’s armed forces in Q2 2025, revealing a system stretched but still operational — and why that matters.

reflection

Don’t Bet on the Bully: Why Europe Must Stop Investing in the U.S.

As European firms like Daimler, Volkswagen, and Siemens expand their investments in the U.S., they risk tying their futures to a volatile partner. Short-term economic incentives and a temporarily favorable exchange rate obscure deeper structural risks: political instability, panic-driven corporate culture, and growing protectionism. Europe is not dependent on the U.S. — not for gas, not for markets, and certainly not for leadership. Strategic autonomy begins with saying no.

report

After the War: The Eurasian Covenant

“After the War: The Eurasian Covenant” is not a deal, nor a surrender — but a framework. A vision for lasting peace between Europe, Ukraine, and Russia rooted in dignity, realism, and historical awareness. As old alliances shift and global power balances evolve, this proposal outlines a European-led path forward: balancing security, rebuilding trust, and preparing for a post-hegemonic world. A beginning — before it’s too late.

Event Timeline

23 October 1722
26-28 November 2025
1991-12-25
1994-12-05

Budapest Memorandum – Ukraine’s Nuclear Gamble

In 1994, Ukraine surrendered the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal in exchange for security assurances. The Budapest Memorandum was a milestone in post-Soviet diplomacy – and later, a haunting example of broken promises.

June 1941
Late November 2025

Battle for Pokrovsk

Pokrovsk has become the central pressure point on the eastern front. Russian forces apply sustained pressure on the city’s flanks under foggy, drone-limiting conditions, while Ukraine holds a shrinking but functional logistics hub essential to the defence of Donetsk.

1841-01-26

The Maidan Revolution – Dignity and Defiance

The Maidan uprising — known in Ukraine as the **Revolution of Dignity** — erupted when President Yanukovych abandoned an EU agreement under Kremlin pressure. What began as a protest for European integration became a national revolt against corruption, repression, and foreign domination.

2004-11-21

The Orange Revolution – Ukraine’s Peaceful Uprising

In late 2004, tens of thousands of Ukrainians filled the streets of Kyiv to protest a rigged presidential election. The Orange Revolution marked a turning point in Ukraine’s democratic identity and exposed the geopolitical tug-of-war between Russia and the West.

1955-05-14

Warsaw Pact Formation – The Eastern Bloc Unites

In May 1955, the Soviet Union and seven Eastern European states signed a mutual defense treaty in Warsaw, creating the Warsaw Pact. It solidified the division of Europe and institutionalized the Soviet bloc in direct opposition to NATO.