Water Security in the Euphrates-Tigris Basin
Frederick Michael Lorenz
Senior Lecturer
Jackson School of International Studies
7 April 2009
In a time of international tension and insecurity, water will become increasingly important, particularly in the arid lands of the Euphrates-Tigris. One of the security challenges, not often discussed, is the long range prospect for Iraq to have adequate water to reach a basic level of stability and prosperity. Turkey's dams and irrigation systems pose a substantial threat, and more needs to be done to increase cooperation on water resources in the region.
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About the speaker
Frederick (Rick) Lorenz grew up in New York City and obtained his undergraduate and law degrees from Marquette University. He served in the US Marine Corps for twenty-seven years as a judge advocate, including a tour as an infantry company commander. He obtained an LLM (With Highest Honors) from George Washington University in Land Use Management and Control and practiced environmental/land use law between 1982 and 1991.
In 1992 he joined the First Marine Expeditionary Force and was the senior legal advisor for the United Nations authorized military intervention in Somalia, and returned there as senior legal advisor for the UN evacuation in 1995. In 1996 he served in Bosnia as a legal advisor for the NATO implementation force, and later was a Professor of Political Science at the National Defense University in Washington DC. In 2000 he served as a United Nations legal affairs officer in Kosovo, working in the UN Civil Administration.
He currently lectures at the Jackson School of International Studies, UW, teaching International Humanitarian Law and International Law and the Use of Force. He is a Senior Peace Fellow for the Public International Law and Policy Group and has served as in the Republic of Georgia, assisting the Georgian Government in peace negotiations with the Republic of Abkhazia.
In the Summer of 2007 he was an election monitor in another self-proclaimed and disputed territory, the Republic of Nagorny Karabakh. In the summer of 2008 he participated in a State Department program in the Republic of Somaliland and is scheduled to visit again in 2009.