Top 10 U.S. Conflict Prevention Priorities Going Into 2015: Survey

CFR narrowed down a list of nearly 1,000 potential conflicts and invited thousands of U.S. foreign policy experts to rank them by their potential effects on U.S. interests and likelihood of occurring in 2015.
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The intensification of the crisis in Iraq due to advances by the militant group the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is the top

conflict prevention priority for U.S. policymakers in 2015, according to leading experts who took part in the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) seventh annual Preventive Priorities Survey.

This fall, CFR's Center for Preventive Action (CPA) solicited suggestions from the general public on potential conflicts that could erupt or escalate next year. CPA narrowed down the nearly one thousand suggestions to the top thirty and invited more than 2,200 government officials, academics and foreign policy experts to rank them by their potential effects on U.S. interests and likelihood of occurring in 2015. CPA then categorized the scenarios into three tiers, in order of priority for U.S. leaders.

Of 10 high-priority contingencies, respondents rated only one -- the Iraq crisis -- as both highly probable and highly consequential. Participants considered this scenario more important to U.S. interests than they did last year, when it was ranked as a having a moderate impact on U.S. interests.

One high-priority contingency -- an armed confrontation in the South China Sea -- was upgraded in likelihood from low to moderate this year.

Two new scenarios on this year's survey were also ranked high-priority: the intensification of the Ukraine-Russia crisis and escalation of Israeli-Palestinian tensions. Both were deemed highly likely to occur, but with moderate effects for the United States.

Two conflicts were downgraded from high- to mid-level priority this year -- violence and instability in Pakistan and in Jordan. Respondents considered each less likely, though still moderately important for U.S. interests.

The Top 10 U.S. Conflict Prevention Priorities in 2015:1. the intensification of the conflict in Iraq due to ISIS2. a large-scale attack on the U.S. homeland or ally3. a cyberattack on U.S. critical infrastructure4. a severe North Korean crisis5. the renewed threat of Israeli military strikes against Iran6. an armed confrontation in the South China Sea7. the escalation of the Syrian civil war8. rising violence and instability in Afghanistan9. increased fighting in eastern Ukraine10. heightened Israeli-Palestinian tensionsCPA's Global Conflict Tracker plots the results of the survey, as well as other ongoing conflicts, on an interactive map paired with background information, CFR analysis, and news updates.


This article first appeared at CFR.

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