Thursday, January 9, 2025

Council on Foreign Relations Report from Center for Preventive Action Conflicts to Watch in 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey Results U.S. foreign policy experts rank the thirty global conflicts that could most significantly affect the United States in 2025. by Paul B. Stares January 2025

 Council on Foreign Relations 

Report from Center for Preventive Action

Conflicts to Watch in 2025

Preventive Priorities Survey Results

U.S. foreign policy experts rank the thirty global conflicts that could most significantly affect the United States in 2025.

by Paul B. Stares

January 2025


Jump to section

Executive Summary

The 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey

Findings

Tier I Contingencies

Tier II Contingencies

Tier III Contingencies

Methodology



Executive Summary

CFR’s Preventive Priorities Survey (PPS) polls hundreds of foreign policy experts every year to assess thirty ongoing or potential violent conflicts and their likely impact on U.S. interests.


This year could be the most dangerous in the PPS’s seventeen-year history: experts predict that more contingencies have both a high likelihood of occurring and high impact on U.S. interests than ever before. Wars in Gaza and Ukraine, confrontations in the West Bank and at the U.S.-Mexico Border, and hostilities between Iran and Israel were of the greatest concern.


Deteriorating security conditions in the Middle East top this year’s list, followed by threats to the American homeland (domestic political violence, cyberattacks, and a security crisis at the southern border), Russian aggression in Ukraine and eastern Europe, and Chinese provocation in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea.


Severe humanitarian crises in Haiti, Sudan, Somalia, and elsewhere rose in the rankings of this year’s survey relative to previous years.


The 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey


The second Donald Trump administration assumes office at a moment of great peril for the United States. The level of armed conflict around the world has steadily grown in recent years, which in turn has increased the risk of costly U.S. military intervention. This is particularly the case in the Middle East, which continues to be wracked by deadly violence across multiple countries. This violence has clear potential to intensify and spread. The horrific war in Ukraine that by some estimates has already claimed a million casualties also shows no sign of abating. This conflict could likewise escalate in ways that threaten vital U.S. interests and necessitate much deeper and more costly involvement. While the situation in the Indo-Pacific region is comparatively peaceful, numerous flashpoints exist, not least across the Taiwan Strait and in the South China Sea, that could suddenly ignite and rapidly draw in the United States. The possibility that the United States could find itself in wars with not one but two major, nuclear-armed powers simultaneously is, thus, very real. The stakes today, in other words, cannot be overstated.


The Trump administration should not only be clear sighted about the risks of an increasingly turbulent world but also craft policies designed to deliberately lessen the dangers ahead. Otherwise, it could become overwhelmed by multiple concurrent crises with calamitous consequences for the United States. But where to focus finite U.S. resources, not to mention the limited attention spans of busy policymakers? Besides the conflict risks listed above, there are other ongoing or potential conflicts, especially in Africa, that may not have the same strategic importance but nonetheless represent major humanitarian imperatives. In addition, emerging risks closer to home in the Western Hemisphere cannot be ignored, nor can domestic threats to political stability.


A Ukrainian soldier of the forty-first brigade walks in a trench near the frontline outside Kupiansk, Ukraine, in the Kharkiv Oblast on January 23, 2024. Roman Pilipey/AFP via Getty Images

 

It was with this challenge in mind that CFR’s Center for Preventive Action (CPA) launched the Preventive Priorities Survey (PPS) seventeen years ago. Each year, the PPS polls hundreds of American foreign policy experts for their assessment of the likelihood and the potential harm to U.S. interests of thirty conflict-related contingencies that have been judged to be plausible in the coming twelve months. The results are then collated, and the contingencies are sorted into three tiers of relative priority for U.S. preventive action.


The PPS is primarily focused on assessing relatively discrete political and military contingencies. It is not designed to evaluate the risk posed by broad trends such as global warming, demographic change, or technological developments. Those trends, which could easily trigger violent conflict in a specific place over the next twelve months, are simply too difficult to gauge. Nor does the PPS attempt to evaluate the risk associated with events such as earthquakes, severe weather events, public health crises, or the death of a specific leader. Those events can trigger instability, but their likelihood over a short time frame is inherently unpredictable.


A cloud of smoke erupts following an Israeli airstrike on the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, on October 19, 2024.

A cloud of smoke erupts following an Israeli airstrike on the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, on October 19, 2024. AFP via Getty Images

 

Additionally, the PPS does not evaluate more than thirty contingencies each year even though many more could be added. Respondents are given the opportunity, however, to name additional conflict-related concerns they believe warrant attention. Those suggestions appear in the list of “Other Noted Concerns.”  


Finally, the results reflect expert opinion at the time the survey was conducted in November 2024. The world is dynamic, so geopolitical risk assessments need to be regularly updated, which CPA does with its award-winning “Global Conflict Tracker” interactive, which can be found here.

Findings

There are several notable takeaways from this year’s survey:


There have never been so many contingencies rated as high likelihood/high impact events (five) since the PPS began in 2008. Put differently, the level of anxiety that survey respondents feel about the risk of violent conflict over the coming twelve months has never been greater. Of the thirty contingencies surveyed, twenty-eight are judged to be either highly or moderately likely to occur in the next twelve months. Eighteen of those, moreover, would have a high or moderate impact on U.S. interests.

A further deterioration of ongoing conflicts in the Middle East in 2025 represents the leading concern of survey respondents. This includes a continuation of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, an increase in clashes between Israeli security forces and Palestinians in the West Bank, an escalation of hostilities between Iran and Israel, and, finally, persistent fighting between Israel and Hezbollah militants and state collapse in Lebanon. Since the survey concluded in November, there have been signs that the level of violence could lessen in parts of the Middle East. Past experience, however, cautions against being overly optimistic.

Second only to the Middle East as a source of Tier I concerns are those conflicts that stem from the aggressive behavior of Russia (toward Ukraine and in other parts of eastern Europe) and China (toward Taiwan and in the South China Sea). However, whereas Russia-related contingencies are considered highly likely to occur in 2025, those that are China-related are judged as moderately likely.

The ranking of several contingencies included in last year’s PPS has risen significantly. These include aggressive Chinese actions in the South China Sea (from Tier II to Tier I), crisis in Haiti (from Tier III to Tier I), and ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, and Sudan, as well as between India and Pakistan over Kashmir (all from Tier III to Tier II).

Meanwhile, the risk associated with various kinds of North Korean provocations fell in the rankings (from Tier I to Tier II). Finally, whereas the likelihood of domestic terrorism and other acts of political violence in the United States remains a top-tier concern in 2025, it no longer occupies the predominant position it had in the 2024 survey.

Additional observations warrant mention:


Six new contingencies were included in the 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey. Three of those—increased conflict over Israeli settlements and Palestinian political rights in the West Bank, intensification of the Israel-Hezbollah conflict and accelerating state collapse in Lebanon, and Russian provocations in east European countries—were judged to be highly likely and moderately or highly impactful. Other new contingencies included resurgent terrorist violence in Nigeria, the governance crisis in Bangladesh, and tension over Ethiopia’s Red Sea access ambitions in the Horn of Africa. 

Six contingencies assessed in 2024 were not included in the 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey. Potential political instability in Egypt, Iran, and Russia was not included, reflecting a general consolidation of power by authoritarian governments in 2024. The border dispute between China and India was also removed following a bilateral agreement to reduce tensions. Similarly, the conflict over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh was dropped to reflect the continuing cease-fire between Armenia and Azerbaijan since September 2023. South Sudan’s internal conflict was moved to the list of “Other Noted Concerns” because crises in Bangladesh, Nigeria, and the Horn of Africa were deemed more likely to deepen in 2025. 


Five contingengies changed significantly from last year’s Preventive Priorities Survey. The Israel-Hamas war contingency focuses solely on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza rather than the risk of wider regional conflict. The risk posed by uncontrolled migration to the U.S. southern border was reoriented to include emerging U.S.-Mexico tensions. The Ukraine contingency now reflects the potential emergence of a cease-fire favorable to Moscow in 2025. The contingency regarding Yemen has been changed to reflect the threat of Houthi strikes on shipping in the Red Sea, and a previous contingency regarding Kosovo-Serbia tensions now includes the threat of conflict across the western Balkans region.

National Guard soldiers stand guard on the banks of the Rio Grande River at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, on January 12, 2024.

National Guard soldiers stand guard on the banks of the Rio Grande River at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, on January 12, 2024. Brandon Bell/Getty Images


Other Concerns to Note

Although the survey was limited to thirty contingencies, government officials and foreign policy experts had the opportunity to suggest additional potential crises that they believe warrant attention. The following additional contingencies were proposed by several survey respondents:


Violent competition among criminal organizations in Ecuador, deepening the public security crisis

A leadership crisis in Iran, leading to political instability

Renewed fighting between armed groups and intercommunal conflict in South Sudan, triggered by the postponement of national elections, deepen the humanitarian crisis and further destabilize the central government

A power struggle between armed groups in Syria, compounded by foreign intervention and terrorist activity, undermines governance and exacerbates the refugee crisis

Increased political repression and economic hardship in Venezuela lead to regime instability and a renewed refugee crisis

A mass casualty terrorist attack on the United States or a treaty ally directed or inspired by a foreign terrorist organization


Tier I Contingencies


High Likelihood; High Impact

A continuation of the Israel-Hamas war, including further destruction of civilian infrastructure, deepens the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip 

Increased conflict between Israeli security forces and Palestinians in the West Bank over Israeli settlement construction, Palestinian political rights, and the war in Gaza 

Major Russian military gains in Ukraine, including the widespread destruction of critical infrastructure, and decreasing foreign assistance to Kyiv lead to a cease-fire favorable to Moscow 

An escalation of the conflict between Iran and Israel, including attacks on energy and nuclear facilities, leads to wider instability across the Middle East and deeper U.S. involvement 

Deployment of U.S. security forces to the southern border triggers a humanitarian crisis among migrants in the border region and heightens tensions with Mexico 

High Likelihood; Moderate Impact 

International stabilization efforts in Haiti fail to contain criminal violence, deepening the humanitarian crisis and accelerating state collapse 

Accelerated state collapse in Lebanon and continued fighting between Hezbollah and Israel worsen sectarian conflict and civilian displacement 

Increased Russian military provocations and influence operations in eastern Europe (especially Georgia and Moldova) foment popular unrest and regional political instability 

Moderate Likelihood; High Impact 

Intensified military and economic pressure by China toward Taiwan precipitate a severe cross-strait crisis involving the United States and other countries in the region 

A highly disruptive cyberattack on U.S. critical infrastructure by a state or nonstate entity 

Aggressive Chinese actions in the South China Sea, especially toward the Philippines, lead to an armed confrontation involving China, the United States, and U.S. allies 

Heightened political antagonism in the United States resulting from the reelection of Donald Trump leads to acts of domestic terrorism and political violence 

A Chinese Coast Guard ship is seen from a Filipino Coast Guard ship during a supply mission to Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea on August 26, 2024

A Chinese Coast Guard ship is seen from a Filipino Coast Guard ship during a supply mission to Sabina Shoal in the South China Sea on August 26, 2024 Jam Sta Rosa/AFP via Getty Images

 

Tier II Contingencies


High Likelihood; Low Impact 

Ongoing civil war and spreading ethnic violence in Sudan intensify the humanitarian crisis and regional political instability 

Ongoing conflict between government forces and al-Shabaab militants in Somalia leads to worsening humanitarian conditions 

Continued repressive actions by the Taliban, economic hardship, and clashes involving armed groups in Afghanistan lead to worsening humanitarian conditions and additional refugee outflows 

Moderate Likelihood; Moderate Impact 

Increasing Houthi strikes against shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden trigger intensified military engagement by the United States, United Kingdom, and other foreign powers 

An increase in militant activity and popular unrest in Pakistan, leading to growing political instability and escalating clashes with the Taliban in Afghanistan 

Escalating violence between Turkish security forces and various armed Kurdish groups within Turkey, Iraq, and Syria 

Militant activity and repression in Indian-administered Kashmir provoke renewed tensions between India and Pakistan and a breakdown of cease-fire commitments 

Low Likelihood; High Impact 

North Korean weapons tests and border provocations trigger an armed confrontation on the Korean Peninsula involving the United States and other regional powers 

Fighters of the Sudan Liberation Movement insurgent group attend a graduation ceremony in Sudan’s southeastern Gedaref state on March 28, 2024.

Fighters of the Sudan Liberation Movement insurgent group attend a graduation ceremony in Sudan’s southeastern Gedaref state on March 28, 2024. AFP via Getty Images

 

Tier III Contingencies


Moderate Likelihood; Low Impact 

Heightened violent conflict and weak governance in the Sahel (especially in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger) exacerbate regional instability and human insecurity 

Resurgent terrorist violence and state weakness in northeastern Nigeria increase nationwide political instability 

Protracted ethnic and political conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo over territory and natural resources leads to worsening humanitarian conditions and regional tensions 

A deepening governance crisis in Bangladesh leads to growing civil disorder and political violence 

Ongoing conflict involving nonstate armed groups and the ruling junta in Myanmar, leading to further displacement and heightened regional tensions 

Resurgent conflict in Cabo Delgado province and increasing political violence across Mozambique lead to increased civilian casualties 

Widespread civil conflict in Ethiopia destabilizes the central government and leads to a worsening humanitarian crisis 

Worsening armed conflict within and between warring coalitions in Libya increases civilian casualties and displacement 

Political tension over Ethiopian efforts to obtain Red Sea access, compounded by regional resource competition, triggers an armed confrontation between Ethiopia and neighboring states 

Low Likelihood; Moderate Impact 

An increase in ethnic and political violence in the western Balkans (especially between Kosovo and Serbia) triggers an armed confrontation, necessitating foreign intervention 

Anti-government protesters march toward former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s palace as army personnel stand guard in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on August 5, 2024.

Anti-government protesters march toward former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s palace as army personnel stand guard in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on August 5, 2024. Munir Uz Zaman/AFP via Getty Images


Methodology

The Center for Preventive Action carried out the 2025 PPS in three stages:


1. Soliciting PPS Contingencies


In October 2024, CPA harnessed various social media platforms to solicit suggestions about possible conflicts to include in the survey. With the help of the Council on Foreign Relations’ in-house regional experts, CPA narrowed down the list of possible conflicts to thirty contingencies deemed both plausible in 2025 and potentially harmful to U.S. interests.


2. Polling Foreign Policy Experts


In November 2024, the survey was sent to more than 15,000 U.S. government officials, foreign policy experts, and academics, of whom approximately 680 responded. Each was asked to estimate the impact on U.S. interests and likelihood of each contingency according to general guidelines (see risk assessment matrix definitions).


3. Ranking the Conflicts


The survey results were then scored according to their ranking, and the contingencies were subsequently sorted into one of three preventive priority tiers (I, II, and III) according to their placement on the accompanying risk assessment matrix.


A graphic showing the PPS rates conflicts based on their impact on U.S. interests and likelihood.

 

The Preventive Priorities Survey was made possible by a generous grant from Carnegie Corporation of New York. The statements made and views expressed are solely the responsibility of the Center for Preventive Action.


Jump to section

Executive Summary

The 2025 Preventive Priorities Survey

Findings

Tier I Contingencies

Tier II Contingencies

Tier III Contingencies

Methodology


Author

Paul Stares

Paul B. Stares

General John W. Vessey Senior Fellow for Conflict Prevention and Director of the Center for Preventive Action


Conflict Prevention


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