THE MIDDLE EAST

Recent history (19th-21st Century)
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kmaherali
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Saudi Arabia witnesses first onager birth in more than a century

The initiative aims to restore biodiversity and revive native wildlife

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The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve witnessed the first birth of an onager, one of the world's rarest wild equids, in more than 100 years, marking a milestone in efforts to restore species that disappeared from the Arabian Peninsula.

Saudi Arabia has witnessed the first birth of an onager, one of the world's rarest wild equids, on its soil in more than 100 years, marking a milestone in efforts to restore species that disappeared from the Arabian Peninsula.

The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve said a male onager (Equus hemionus) was born in June 2025 as part of its Arabian rewilding programme, which aims to reintroduce 23 native species to their historic habitats.

The reserve announced the birth only after the animal successfully completed its first year, a period considered critical for survival, with mortality rates among young onagers often exceeding 50 per cent.

The birth represents the return of a species that vanished from Arabia's deserts more than a century ago. The reserve said it expects two more onager births this winter, underscoring the success of ongoing breeding and conservation efforts.

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, fewer than 600 onagers remain in the wild, and the species was upgraded to Critically Endangered status in 2025 amid projections of a steep population decline by mid-century.

The reserve is expanding its breeding programme to strengthen genetic diversity, including the planned introduction of a female onager from Jordan later this year. The initiative forms part of Saudi Arabia's broader environmental strategy to restore biodiversity and revive native wildlife populations across the kingdom.

https://gulfnews.com/world/gulf/saudi/s ... .500560226
kmaherali
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Re: THE MIDDLE EAST

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How Tehran Won the World
June 16, 2026

A group of men wave Iranian flags outside a building in Tehran.
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Credit...Photo illustration by Tam Stockton for The New York Times; source photograph by Vahid Salemi/Associated Press

By Azadeh Moaveni

Ms. Moaveni is a contributing Opinion writer.

On Oct. 22, 1951, Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh of Iran stood before the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia. Addressing a crowd of hundreds at Independence Hall, Mossadegh spoke admiringly of American liberty, drawing parallels between the U.S. struggle for independence and Iran’s then-continuing struggle to break free of British control over its affairs and natural resources.

“The creed of national independence is a universal one, and it is held by all peoples,” he declared in his morose, trademark whisper.

Two years later, the United States and Britain deposed the Iranian prime minister in a coup over his decision to nationalize Iranian oil and take control of the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. As large swathes of the world embraced new national identities in the wake of colonialism, Mossadegh’s name became synonymous with the quest for independence and the fight against Western imperialism, his ouster still bitterly invoked across the global south to conjure the misadventures of American foreign policy.

Today, Iran’s defiance in the face of Western coercion has once again become a rallying cry. President Trump’s feckless war has rendered America’s targeting of Iran into a premonitory tale — a violent punishment that could befall any disorderly state. This spring, solidarity, support and indignation on behalf of Iran have reverberated across the non-Western world. Even countries that do not at all admire the Iranian regime’s treatment of its own people, or its conduct in the region, are experiencing a “Je suis Iran” moment.

This sense of outrage is due in no small part to the fact that the United States and Israel went to war against Iran as the world was again reordering itself — this time, to adapt to Mr. Trump’s transactional and predatory behavior. Small and middle powers are thinking about ways to assert their sovereignty, in some cases by reducing their dependence on the United States and cultivating trade and relations with China and other powers.

The war against Iran rapidly became an inflection point in this trajectory. Not only has Iran shown that it can control a major maritime chokepoint, squeeze the global economy and withstand aerial assault by the world’s strongest military, the conflict has also offered its leaders a new place in the emerging global realignment. From the blackest margins of the old order — isolated, sanctioned, ignored and reviled as a ruthless, repressive state — Iran has become, in the eyes of many, an example of necessary defiance, and courage.

The deposal of Mossadegh in 1953 left Iran traumatized and its people deeply wary of Washington’s designs. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi never recovered the legitimacy he lost by cooperating with America, and doubts about his true independence coalesced into the 1979 revolution. After that, the tension between the new Islamic republic and America turned to violent enmity.

The language of political contestation between the nations transformed from the courtly phrases of the earlier Mossadegh era to the new leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s describing America as “the Great Satan, the wounded snake” and “the No. 1 enemy of the deprived and oppressed people of the world.” American rhetoric deteriorated as well. President Ronald Reagan referred to Iran’s leaders — along with the rulers of Cuba, Libya, North Korea and Nicaragua — as “misfits, Looney Tunes and squalid criminals.” By the late 2000s, John McCain and Hillary Clinton made casual, violent threats to bomb Iran normal foreign policy talk.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Khomeini’s successor as supreme leader, kept up the same coarse, fulminating tone until his assassination in an American-Israeli airstrike on Feb. 28. Eleven days before his death, Ayatollah Khamenei, 86, called the United States “an empire that is heading toward collapse.”

When Iran’s newest group of leaders look out, they must hear this narrative echoing across the world. While China’s and Russia’s interests in the Middle East are vastly different — Beijing has extensive economic interests in the region, and disfavors high oil prices, neither of which is true for Moscow — both benefit when America overextends itself, and they have cast themselves as major powers ready to expand ties with the regional blocs that have suffered from and disapproved of the war.

When China’s president, Xi Jinping, hosted his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in Beijing last month, the two leaders condemned “treacherous” U.S. strikes against other countries, and Mr. Xi warned against the world “regressing to the law of the jungle.” While Beijing prudently preferred to condemn the war rather than openly back Iran, it found a subtle way to express its support: In March, in a highly unusual move, the Chinese state broadcaster put out an artificial intelligence video featuring America as the villainous “White Eagle” and Iran as the hunted but proud “Persian Cat.” The video became a crossover hit on Western social platforms.

Some smaller countries have been more explicit. In March, the Malaysian Parliament observed a minute of silence over the killings of Ayatollah Khamenei, other Iranian leaders and, in an airstrike on a school in Minab, approximately 120 children. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim sent condolences to both the regime and the Iranian people and warned of a “dangerous precedent” that would weaken the norms of the international order.

In Pakistan, the editorial pages of the leading English-language newspaper, Dawn, concluded that countries of the global south “should stand with Iran” and condemn the war because “they may be next.” Pro-Iran demonstrations erupted across the nation in March, leaving more than 20 people dead.

In Turkey, an overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim country, 93 percent of the people polled opposed the attack on Iran, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that the “senseless, unlawful” war was starting to weaken Europe.

In India, while the government of Narendra Modi has professed itself a close ally of Israel, the people, who share a historical and cultural affinity with Iran, have responded differently. Residents of New Delhi, including Hindu nationalist supporters of Mr. Modi, brought enough donations to the door of the Iranian Embassy to fund a shipment of medication. In Kashmir, farmers donated their sheep, and women donated their gold bangles and daughters’ trousseaux to an aid collection drive.

In other parts of the world, the war quickly kicked up long-simmering concerns about sovereignty. In Africa, autonomy-seeking movements are already driving politics in West Africa and the Sahel, seeking to reduce dependence on Europe’s donors and end partnerships with its militaries. Those movements now look prescient, as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has exacted a brutal price across the continent.

The war in Iran is a “warning,” wrote Faiez Jacobs, a former South African lawmaker, arguing that wars “now arrive in households through petrol prices, electricity insecurity, bread costs and job losses.” His argument, echoed widely in the continent’s press, is that Africa must detach from “systems designed elsewhere and controlled elsewhere,” and turn to continental and BRICS cooperation on everything from payment alternatives and industrial corridors to maritime strategies.

There are exceptions, of course, especially among countries that are deeply polarized along religious lines, or those that have strong ties to Israel and the Persian Gulf states. Many governments have chosen to simply say nothing, in some cases, perhaps, out of concern over where Mr. Trump will turn his attention next.

In Cuba, people follow the conflict avidly during the short hours of the day when they have electricity, the historian Sara Kozameh told me. “For Cubans, it matters whether Iran wins, since a defeat of the United States could reduce the likelihood of an attack on Cuba,” she said. “But they also understand that Trump needs to feel like he got a win, so that he doesn’t attack Cuba to get one.”

Iran has played the role of iconoclastic challenger to an unjust world order before. In the wake of decolonization, it was the first major Middle Eastern oil-producing country to attempt the nationalization of its oil sector. When Mossadegh stopped in Egypt in 1951, 250,000 people reportedly lined the streets of Cairo, many of them chanting, “Long live the leader of anti-imperialism!”

Then came the coup. Mossadegh failed, but his audacity helped usher in a new world order. An inspired Egyptian president, Gamal Abdel Nasser, closely studied his approach and missteps, and triumphantly nationalized the Suez Canal three years after Mossadegh was overthrown.

Today there are no great crowds cheering an adversary of empire. We have, instead, an online public sphere that Iran’s propagandists have flooded with Lego videos to make its case to the world’s young people. Some people have claimed Iran is “winning the vibe war.”

It is mostly bookish elites who remember the 1950s, and the earlier round of Iran versus Empire. “Does tonight resemble last night?” asked the veteran Egyptian diplomat Walid Abdelnasser in the newspaper Al-Ahram, recalling Mossadegh’s visit to Cairo and suggesting that this time around, it would be a military attack, not a stealthy coup, that would come for Iran’s oil wealth. In fact, the governments in Washington and Tel Aviv contemplated a mini-regime change, too, with a plot to install the former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

What unites disparate small and medium-size countries in parsing the lessons of this war is the belief that they are standing on shaky ground. They now know with certainty, if they did not know before, that their own wealth and economies can be imperiled by this new Washington, unbound by the international guardrails established last century, and will spend the years ahead repositioning themselves. The world will seek new ground to stand on, as friends and foes adjust.

Some disagree that Iran’s successful defiance of the United States will diminish America’s influence. American military defeat is, after all, nothing new: Most of America’s military interventions since World War II — Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan, and Iraq — have ended as meandering, low-level conflicts that few would call victory. The policy expert Gideon Rose views “loose talk” about the war signaling a broader loss of U.S. power as overblown; after losing in Vietnam, he recently wrote, America rebounded and could very likely do so again.

Perhaps it is Iran’s fate to find itself again, for the second time in a century, the subject of American aggression and the rebel protagonist of the non-Western world. Its millenniums of history as a nation have made the preservation of sovereignty Iran’s all-consuming drive, regardless of who runs it.

Where, for the long meanwhile, does this disordered story leave Iranians themselves? For them, matters are far more complicated. This wave of solidarity and sympathy comes not long after the regime had lost much of its legitimacy in the eyes of its own population, only a few short weeks after it killed thousands of protesters.

The war cut short that period of mourning, despair and global condemnation. Instead, Mr. Trump and Israel appear to have shored up and consolidated the Iranian state, raising its profile as a symbol of clever defiance and softening the views of many inside the country who hated and opposed it, because they recognize that it defended them through weeks of terrifying bombardment.

The Islamic republic is not accustomed to perceiving itself as part of a larger whole, and it is far from certain how long this surge in good will last. But Iran now has a story to tell, and it has the ability to tell it.

More on Iran

Opinion | Azadeh Moaveni
We Are Finally Free From Khamenei’s Suffocating Gaze https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/04/opin ... -dead.html
March 4, 2026

Opinion | Ali Vaez
Trump Has Lost Control of Events in Iran https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/03/opin ... ormuz.html
April 3, 2026

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/16/opin ... roid-share
kmaherali
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Re: THE MIDDLE EAST

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Saudi Arabia’s new soil technologies offer breakthrough in desert restoration

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With Saudi Arabia aiming to restore 40m hectares and plant 10bn trees, sustainable solutions for soil health and ecosystem recovery are becoming vital. (Supplied)

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CarboSoil, an engineered biochar developed by Prof. Himanshu Mishra and his team, is designed to improve nutrient retention, reduce water loss and increase carbon sequestration in arid soils. (Supplied)

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With Saudi Arabia aiming to restore 40m hectares and plant 10bn trees, sustainable solutions for soil health and ecosystem recovery are becoming vital. (Supplied)

https://arab.news/vyyq4
Updated 16 June 2026 21:50
NADA HAMEED

KAUST researcher says soil innovation can restore degraded lands, cut carbon emissions

JEDDAH: As the world marks Desertification and Drought Day on June 17, global attention is focused on the future of rangelands, which cover more than half of the Earth’s land surface and support the livelihoods of around 2 billion people.

This year’s theme, “Rangelands: Recognize. Respect. Restore,” highlights the urgent need to protect and restore these ecosystems, which play a critical role in food security, biodiversity conservation, and climate resilience.

The message carries particular significance for Saudi Arabia, where ambitious plans under the Saudi Green Initiative aim to restore degraded landscapes amid some of the world’s most fragile soils.

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With Saudi Arabia aiming to restore 40m hectares and plant 10bn trees, sustainable solutions for soil health and ecosystem recovery are becoming vital. (Supplied)

With the Kingdom aiming to rehabilitate 40 million hectares of land and plant 10 billion trees, sustainable solutions to improve soil health and restore ecosystem function are becoming increasingly important.

In an interview with Arab News, Prof. Himanshu Mishra of KAUST, co-founder of Terraxy, said recent scientific breakthroughs are offering new reasons for optimism.

“What gives me hope is that we now understand the chemistry of why desert soils fail, and that understanding points directly to solutions,” he said.


The center highlighted Saudi Arabia’s regional leadership through the Middle East Green Initiative, which aims to plant 50 billion trees across the region. (Supplied)
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At KAUST, Mishra and his team identified a key obstacle to plant growth in irrigated desert environments.

“The bottleneck for plant growth in irrigated desert soils is not water alone, but nutrient retention under alkaline conditions,” he said. “That insight led us to develop CarboSoil, an engineered biochar that works with desert soil chemistry rather than against it.”

In a two-year field trial involving 580 native acacia trees, CarboSoil-treated plots achieved net carbon sequestration, while untreated plots were net carbon emitters, as emissions from irrigation and fertilizer use exceeded the carbon captured by the plants.

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KAUST researcher says soil innovation can restore degraded lands and cut carbon emissions. (Supplied)

“The result changed my perspective entirely,” Mishra said. “With the right soil amendment, desert greening can be carbon-negative from day one. The science is ready.”

Mishra developed the award-winning CarboSoil and SandX technologies, which convert organic waste into soil amendments that improve nutrient retention, reduce water loss, and store carbon in degraded soils. Supported by organizations including KAUST, Saudi Aramco, Neom, and King Salman Park, the technologies are now being deployed across Saudi Arabia.

CarboSoil is produced from organic waste that would otherwise decompose in landfills and release greenhouse gases, including animal manure, date palm fronds, and agricultural residues.

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Prof. Himanshu Mishra, KAUST & Co-Founder, Terraxy.

The biomass is converted into biochar — a highly porous and stable form of carbon — before undergoing a proprietary treatment process that adjusts its pH and nutrient composition for alkaline sandy soils.

While biochar is widely recognized as an effective soil amendment and accounts for more than 90 percent of durable carbon removal credits globally, raw biochar is often unsuitable for desert environments because it is highly alkaline and can further reduce nutrient availability in already alkaline soils.

“Our treatment process lowers the pH to near neutral and enriches the material with slow-release phosphorus and essential micronutrients,” Mishra said.

“When incorporated into sandy soils at 5 to 10 percent by volume, CarboSoil acts as a reservoir for nutrients and water, improving plant growth and yields.”

According to Mishra, the technology enables farmers to reduce fertilizer use, minimize nutrient losses through leaching, and improve crop health. Unlike peat moss or compost, whose benefits decline rapidly under Saudi Arabia’s harsh climate, CarboSoil can remain effective for centuries.

SandX complements CarboSoil by reducing evaporative water loss. The biomimetic mulch consists of sand grains coated with a nanoscale biodegradable wax layer.

“Applied as a thin one-centimeter layer on irrigated soil, it reduces evaporation by up to 80 percent, allowing more irrigation water to reach plant roots,” he said.

Mishra also challenged several common assumptions about farming in arid regions.

A widespread misconception, he said, is that water is the primary limiting factor in desert agriculture. However, two-year field trials showed that water-focused amendments such as hydrogels, superabsorbent polymers, and SandX did not significantly increase plant growth when irrigation and fertilization levels were kept constant.

In contrast, CarboSoil increased biomass by up to 68 percent, highlighting the importance of nutrient retention in alkaline soils once water is available.

Another misconception is that desert soils cannot be permanently improved. While conventional amendments such as peat moss and compost provide only temporary benefits before degrading, advanced soil technologies can enhance nutrient-holding capacity and microbial activity for generations.

The findings point to a broader shift in thinking about arid agriculture — away from simply increasing water inputs and toward improving soil function — with potentially far-reaching implications for agriculture and land restoration across the Middle East and North Africa.

Saudi Arabia generates more than 20 million tonnes of organic waste annually, including poultry manure, date palm residues, crop waste, and food waste. Much of it ends up in landfills, where it emits carbon dioxide and methane as it decomposes.

According to Mishra, every tonne of CarboSoil diverts roughly three tonnes of organic waste from landfills while locking carbon into a stable form for centuries and creating a valuable product for agriculture and landscaping.

He added that CarboSoil is commercially viable without subsidies and competitively priced compared with imported peat moss.

Unlike peat moss and compost, which require repeated applications and generate additional long-term costs, CarboSoil delivers benefits that persist for centuries, making it particularly attractive for large-scale and long-term restoration projects.

Each tonne of CarboSoil also removes approximately two tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, creating carbon credits that can be sold to emissions-intensive sectors such as aviation and heavy industry.

Marking World Desertification and Drought Day, the Saudi National Center for Vegetation Cover Development and Combating Desertification highlighted the Kingdom’s efforts to expand vegetation cover, increase afforestation, and protect water resources to address the impacts of desertification and drought.

The center said Saudi Arabia is implementing environmental regulations, protecting forests, promoting sustainable rangeland management, and rehabilitating degraded land in line with Vision 2030 goals.

It also emphasized the importance of restoring degraded ecosystems to strengthen food and water security and support global climate action.

The center highlighted the Kingdom’s regional leadership through the Middle East Green Initiative, which aims to plant 50 billion trees across the region — equivalent to about 5 percent of the global afforestation target — and is expected to contribute to a 2.5 percent reduction in global carbon emissions.

Saudi Arabia’s efforts also include a cloud-seeding program launched in 2022 to enhance rainfall and support renewable water resources.

https://www.arabnews.com/node/2647454/saudi-arabia
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