Dasht-e Kavir
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
Map
Articles
Why Iran Is Running Out of Water
Iran’s water crisis is driven by groundwater depletion, inefficient agriculture, and climate stress.
Iran’s Retaliation in Cold War Mode
How Tehran could turn confrontation in the Gulf into a strategic cost trap.
A European Covenant Draft for Peace in Ukraine
A complementary framework for long-term stability
The Hong Kong fire will change China’s Real Estate sector
China’s real estate sector is shaped by deeper pressures than market cycles alone.
Demographics, oversight consistency, due-diligence gaps and investment confidence now intersect in ways that define the sector’s next phase.
Pokrovsk: Logistics, Pressure and the Geometry of the Eastern Front
Pokrovsk has become the most stressed point on the eastern Ukrainian front.
China’s Fourth Plenum — Xi Tightens Control as Party Sets Course for the Next Five Years
Planning the future – the news between the lines.
Books To read for summer 2025
A summer reading list for those tracing the fractures of empire, freedom, and the European condition.
Event Timeline
Technocratic Governance and Managed Growth
Between 2002 and 2012, China was governed through a technocratic model emphasizing stability, managed economic growth, and incremental reform under collective leadership.
Convention of Peking
The Convention of Peking ended the Second Opium War and ceded the Kowloon Peninsula south of Boundary Street to Britain.
Second Opium War
The Second Opium War expanded Western military pressure on Qing China, resulting in deeper treaty concessions, legalized opium trade, and intensified foreign presence in imperial affairs.
First Opium War
In June 1839, Chinese official Lin Zexu ordered the destruction of British opium stockpiles in Canton, sparking the First Opium War.
The Long March
The Long March was a strategic retreat by Chinese Communist forces that ensured the survival of the CCP and elevated Mao Zedong as its dominant leader.
Comintern Influence on the Chinese Communist Party
From its founding until the mid-1930s, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) operated under strong ideological, organizational, and operational influence from the Soviet-led Comintern, shaping leadership struggles and strategy choices until a gradual break during the Long March era.
First Sino-Japanese War
The First Sino-Japanese War exposed the failure of Qing modernization and marked the transfer of regional leadership in East Asia from China to Japan.
Iranian Revolution
In 1979, a mass movement removed the Pahlavi monarchy and established the Islamic Republic, redefining Iran’s political and ideological system.
Reform Movement and the Khatami Presidency
From 1997 to 2005, Iran experienced a reform era focused on civic openness, political participation, and institutional debate.
The Green Movement
In 2009, large-scale protests challenged the presidential election outcome, marking one of the most significant political mobilizations since 1979.