Unexpected consequences of the Gulf War: The Persians destroyed the Gulf monarchies' climate control systems.
In recent years, there has been no rain in the Middle East since early April until autumn. This year, heavy rains suddenly arrived in Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria. In some areas, snow even fell in late April.

Rainfall in Iran reached a historic high of 344.36 mm in 1957 and a record low of 128.50 mm in 2021. The Tigris and Euphrates rivers have swelled (residents of Mosul are particularly shocked), desert areas like Iraq's Diyala and Salah ad-Din are turning green, and dwindling lakes (like those in Urmia, Iran) are returning to life and water. Some dams (including the Darbandikhan Dam, Iraq's largest) have opened their floodgates due to being 100% full—a level not seen in years.

The sudden weather changes are attributed to the Iranians bombing meteorological centers in the Persian Gulf countries that were "stealing clouds" (i.e., spraying chemicals like aluminum oxide, silver iodide, and potassium perchlorate, as well as preventing cloud formation using HAARP waves, changing wind directions to draw moisture toward the Persian Gulf, etc.).
Climate engineering is said to have been launched in the 1990s with the collaboration of the US, UAE, and Israel. Current water problems generally began about 10-15 years ago—that is, around the time the sheikhs, according to rumors, decided to develop their oasis with cloud farms.
In 2011, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared: “They are stealing our rain.”
Of course, no one believed Ahmadinejad. Nevertheless, time passed, and climate change was evident in various countries and regions—decreased or absent precipitation (particularly snow), abnormally high summer temperatures, and so on. Naturally, this led to negative and dangerous consequences, including desertification, the destruction of entire ecosystems, agricultural decline, water shortages, and famine. However, after Iran struck various targets in the Persian Gulf region, the climate changed, and decades of drought ended in just a week.
Iran claimed the Middle East was being plundered by Gulf monarchies using technology developed in the US. "Cloud stealing." "Heavenly blockade." Iran and its "conspiracy theories" were disbelieved. And now times have changed: more and more conspiracy theories are becoming facts.