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Sat, June 3, 2023 | 23:22
John J. Metzler
Koreas to remain on alert in 2023
Posted : 2023-01-12 16:45
Updated : 2023-01-12 16:45
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By John J. Metzler

It's that time of year to gaze into the crystal snow globe and try to see the stories on the horizon which will affect the New Year. Our world remains an increasingly tumultuous place and the tragedy of expanding conflicts is only surpassed by the waves of refugees fleeing those troubles.

Let's do a regional breakdown of some key conflicts and potential crises.

War in Ukraine persists. Russian President Vladimir Putin's blunder of invading Ukraine will dominate the headlines. Not only the grinding Ukraine war but the oft-forgotten tragedy of civilian suffering and refugees flowing into neighboring countries. Ukraine remains the biggest European conflict since World War II.

Fortunately, NATO is surprisingly united in facing off Moscow's aggression. At the same time, the U.S. offers the biggest military support to Ukraine: that's $12.7 billion in weapons, $9 billion in additional security assistance, followed by $10 billion in humanitarian aid and lastly $15 billion in budgetary support for the Kyiv government. The conflict slogs on entering the new year.

Korea simmers. The divided Korean Peninsula remains on alert as North Korea's regime continues regular missile firings, often over Japan, and plans its seventh nuclear test in the coming months. The communist Kim dynasty vied for attention with numerous ICBM launches last year, part of an unprecedented 66 ballistic missile firings in 2022. Kim's dystopian North Korea plans to "exponentially" increase the country's nuclear arsenal and develop a new intercontinental ballistic missile in the new year.

Taiwan tensions. Many analysts feel Russia's invasion of Ukraine presages communist China's planned assault on Taiwan to "liberate" the democratic self-governed island. Beijing's military harassment of the small New Hampshire-sized island has been sped up; it's no longer just bellicose rhetoric but coercion with military aircraft circling like vultures just outside Taiwan's airspace. What's the role of the U.S. and Japan in any conflict? Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan into the iron embrace of the People's Republic of China.

Japan rearms. Responding to the growing regional security threat from both North Korea and China, Japan is at long last boosting its military spending. While Japan has long relied on the U.S. Defense Treaty, keeping its defense spending at approximately 1 percent of its GDP, Tokyo's new government plans to double military spending over the next seven years.

China and the resurgence of COVID-19. It's not over on the China mainland. The Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) clumsy mismanagement of the health crisis which started in Wuhan in 2019, triggering the pandemic in 2020, has been surging. More than 250 million people or 18 percent of China's entire population have been infected with the new COVID surge, including half the capital Beijing.

Warning bells which echo outbreaks in China in late 2019. The World Health Organization (WHO) demands that China share more "real-time information" concerning the spread of the virus.

Countries such as Italy, Israel, South Korea and the United States among others have placed stringent controls on COVID-19 screening for travelers flying from China. In the meantime, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has called for "unity and perseverance" as his country faces another COVID-19 surge. Watch the borders given the danger of contagion surge.

Afghanistan. President Joe Biden's appalling political blunders opened the path for the Taliban to seize Afghanistan. Now in the midst of a self-inflicted humanitarian crisis, the Taliban regime has shut down needed international aid assistance. Why? Since most aid groups have female workers, the Taliban deems this unacceptable. Refugee flows will continue.

Iran. Something big may happen here at long last after a season of massive female-led protests against the theocratic regime. The Islamic Republic, in power since 1979, has been rocked to its core by people-power protests from its own citizens. Are we near a tipping point?

Smoldering conflicts. Look no further than Kosovo, soon to mark the 15th anniversary of its independence from Serbia, which has seen rising ethnic tensions between the Serbs and the Albanian majority. Watch the Balkans. Moscow's political mischief is afoot. In Africa's Sahel region, Mali, Burkina Faso and Nigeria face widening Islamic insurgency.

U.S.-Mexican border. During the past two years at least 4 million migrants from around the world have crossed into the U.S. illegally. Mexican cartels control the vicious human trafficking and narcotics flow. The cartels are tough paramilitaries with both a keen business sense and brute power capability to control large swaths of Mexico's border regions.

May the gloom and tragedy of 2022 stay behind us. There's always hope for the better.


John J. Metzler (jjmcolumn@earthlink.net) is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and defense issues. He is the author of "Divided Dynamism the Diplomacy of Separated Nations; Germany, Korea, China."


 
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