Iranian general blames water shortages on Israel 'stealing rain from clouds’

Brigadier General Jalali's comments come in the wake of several protests across southwest Iran at the authorities' mishandling of water shortages
Brigadier General Jalali's comments come in the wake of several protests across southwest Iran at the authorities' mishandling of water shortages

An Iranian Revolutionary Guards commander has accused Israel of exacerbating the Islamic republic’s water shortage problems by “stealing the rain” from clouds that pass over the Mediterranean Sea.

The negative impacts of climate change were the “unnatural result of foreign influence”, civil defence organisation head Brigadier General Gholam Ridha Jalali told an audience at an agricultural conference in Tehran, citing unnamed Iranian scientific research centres.

Israel and an unnamed other country were cooperating to extract moisture from weather systems as they moved over the Mediterranean, he said, thus making clouds “barren” by “stealing the rain and snow” which is not reaching Iran’s highlands as it should.

The comments were picked up by semi-official Iranian news agency Isna and Tasnim News, as well as Israeli media.

The commander’s remarks were quickly disputed by the director general of Iran’s official meteorological organisation, however, who told the Iranian Students' News Agency it was impossible for any country to steal rain or clouds.

“The entire region, as well as Iran, is suffering from draught,” Ahad Vazife added.

Tensions are currently high between Israel and Iran following the US decision to withdraw from the 2015 international nuclear deal and Tehran’s expanding influence in Syria.

Iran swore to one day destroy the Jewish state after the Islamic Revolution of 1979.

Brigadier General Jalali’s comments come in the wake of several protests across southwest Iran at the authorities’ mishandling of water shortages and failure to deal with pollution levels in the searing summer heat.

Dozens of people in the cities of Muhammarah and Abadan have been arrested.

Jalali's theory has been voiced in the past by former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who in a 2012 speech also linked Iran’s environmental problems to colonisation and “the enemy destroying the clouds moving towards our country”.