Water deprivation as military strategy in the Middle East, 3.700 years ago

Q4 Social Sciences
K. Lerberghe, D. Kaniewski, K. Abraham, J. Guiot, E. Campo
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Oil, which sparked the first Gulf War, is not the only liquid resource that may trigger global crises from within a Middle Eastern theater. Water - or the lack of it - could be a cause of future conflicts because it is the most precious natural resource that can be manipulated and controlled by humans. Here, we report the written evidence for the diversion of the Tigris for repression purposes in Iraq, 3700 years ago, during a period marked by precipitation decline. Our study shows the perverted role of human control over water in the Middle East, using freshwater supplies as a weapon of war, especially at times when drought may have affected the inhabitants, leaving them weak and vulnerable. The translation of 75 cuneiform tablets from the Cornell Archive has revealed the development of military forts for the protection of the Babylonian heartland, and has highlighted one of the oldest known attempts to dry up the Mesopotamian marshes to starve the southern lowlands. Independent palaeoenvironmental data and climate modelling show that relatively drier conditions may have increased the efficiency of this military strategy.
3700年前,在中东地区,缺水是军事战略
引发第一次海湾战争的石油并不是唯一可能从中东地区引发全球危机的流动资源。水——或缺乏水——可能成为未来冲突的一个原因,因为它是人类可以操纵和控制的最宝贵的自然资源。在这里,我们报告了3700年前,在以降水减少为标志的时期,底格里斯河在伊拉克转移用于镇压目的的书面证据。我们的研究表明,在中东地区,人类对水的控制发挥了扭曲的作用,将淡水供应作为一种战争武器,尤其是在干旱可能影响到居民、使他们变得虚弱和脆弱的时候。来自康奈尔档案馆的75块楔形文字碑的翻译揭示了保护巴比伦中心地带的军事堡垒的发展,并突出了已知最古老的一次尝试,即使美索不达米亚沼泽干涸,使南部低地饥饿。独立的古环境数据和气候模型表明,相对干燥的环境可能提高了这种军事策略的效率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Mediterranee
Mediterranee Social Sciences-Urban Studies
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
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