Lake Urmia Basin
Intro
Lake Urmia is a hypersaline lake in northwestern Iran, once the largest lake in the Middle East and sixth largest saltwater lake in the world. Since the 1970s it has lost over 80 percent of its surface area due to dam construction on its tributaries, intensive agriculture, and drought. Its collapse has triggered dust storms and soil salinisation across the region.
Background
History
The Lake Urmia basin has been settled since antiquity. The lake, referred to in ancient Assyrian texts and by classical geographers, was a landmark on the routes between Mesopotamia and the Iranian plateau. The region’s mixed ecology of lake, wetland, and mountain supported a diverse population and productive agriculture fed by rivers flowing from the surrounding mountains. In the early twentieth century the basin attracted Western missionaries who established schools and hospitals serving Assyrian, Armenian, and Kurdish communities around the lake’s shores.
Present Day
Lake Urmia itself has lost over 80 percent of its surface area since the 1970s, shrinking from approximately 5,200 square kilometres to under 1,000. The primary causes are dam construction on the eleven rivers feeding the lake, which has reduced inflows by over 40 percent, and intensive irrigation that extracts water before it reaches the lake. The exposed lake bed is a source of toxic salt and dust affecting millions of people in the northwest. The Iranian government has launched restoration programmes including water transfers and agricultural water restrictions, with limited success.
Future Outlook
Map
Articles
Why Ukraine Cannot Lose This War
And why Russia, in a deeper sense, already did
24 Hours in Tbilisi and Mtshketa
Citadel views, sulfur steam, silent prayers — and a capital caught between memory and movement.
The Geographical Pivot of Constraints
How supply chains and constraint, will shape the global struggle
Events that led to the war in Ukraine – a timeline
A 1.000 Years Struggle for An Autonomous National Identity.
Picturing the Past – Postponed Peace in Transnistria
A view inside, in 2010. It’s mainly Smirnov, Sheriff and Medvedev that you see
24 Hours in Vilnius
Baroque echoes, Jewish memory, Soviet scars — and a city that stands without spectacle.
The Baltic’s Burden
What a Nation Remembers in the Morning.
Empire Logic: How Russia Uses Borders, Identity, and Delay
Russia does not need to occupy a country to control it. It only needs to prevent resolution. From Transnistria to Crimea, from narrative warfare to financial systems, Empire Logic shows how modern power is held — not through conquest, but through structural denial.
Event Timeline
Collapse of the Safavid Order and Afghan Conquest of Isfahan
In 1722, Afghan forces from Kandahar captured Isfahan, ending effective Safavid rule and opening a prolonged phase of political fragmentation across Iran.
Collapse of the Soviet Union – The End of an Empire
A red flag lowered, a new world born. The collapse of the Soviet Union ended the Cold War and reshaped the global order.
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.
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.
British Occupation of Hong Kong Island
British forces landed on Hong Kong Island and claimed it in the name of the Crown following the First Opium War.
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.
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.
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.