Iran’s Water Crisis; Climate Warfare or Climate Change?
WANA (Nov 13) – An American climatologist has admitted that Iran’s droughts are not natural and that NATO’s footprint is evident. As international reports increasingly refer to the situation as the iran water crisis, questions about the origin of these extreme droughts continue to grow.
“NATO has targeted a climate war against Iran.” This statement comes from the American climatologist Dan Wigington. Previously, evidence had emerged of the West using climate as a weapon against countries, as noted by Russia. The ongoing iran water crisis has reinforced discussions about whether these environmental pressures are merely natural or the result of intentional climate manipulation.
Wigington believes that the droughts in Iran are of a magnitude that occurs once in thousands of years, and the mathematics of the situation rejects the notion that this is natural.

Tehran Is Thirsty: A Silent Water Crisis in Iran’s Capital
WANA (Nov 8)- For the first time in six decades, Tehran has gone through the first half of autumn without a single drop of rain. The capital’s taps are beginning to reflect it; water cuts have quietly crept across neighborhoods, often striking late at night, leaving residents uncertain when the next trickle will return. The […]
Climate change is used by some media outlets to explain Iran’s severe droughts, yet other scientists take the idea of climate warfare seriously, including the use of tools like HAARP to manipulate weather. The intensity of the iran water crisis is often cited in these debates as evidence of unusual environmental behavior.
HAARP is an American project that the U.S. website Newstreason has described as a program designed to send high-frequency radio waves hundreds of kilometers above the Earth.
Some experts, such as Abdolreza Qods, Associate Professor at Zanjan University, have dismissed HAARP as a weapon, noting that it was designed to study the ionosphere and auroras and that the project has been scientifically halted.

What’s Behind Iran’s Rainless Autumn of 2025?
WANA (Nov 13) – “If the water situation continues like this, we may have to evacuate Tehran.” This blunt remark by Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian in early November 2025 went far beyond routine warnings—it echoed like an alarm bell across the public sphere. A city once sustained by ambitious water transfer projects and promises of […]
However, 78-year-old Professor Michel Chossudovsky of the University of Ottawa, Canada, argued in an article titled “Beware of U.S. Climate Warfare with Weapons of Mass Destruction” that although the U.S. claims HAARP was suspended in 2014, research has continued in classified form. He warns that the U.S. military has developed advanced capabilities that could selectively alter climate patterns worldwide for military purposes—capabilities that some observers believe could intersect with regional issues such as the iran water crisis.
The Atlantic recently cited a letter from several unnamed U.S. scientists who stated that the lack of transparency in U.S. military climate research, including HAARP, has fueled suspicions of its use as a weapon.
The scientists referenced unsuccessful studies on successive tsunamis in East Asia and the Haiti earthquake, urging U.S. military bodies to release their findings publicly and calling for international monitoring to ensure transparency regarding climate-manipulation technologies. Such transparency, they note, could also help clarify the origins of regional environmental challenges, including what is increasingly described as the iran water crisis.

A general view of the Amirkabir dam following a drought crisis in Tehran, Iran, November 11, 2025. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency)




