In Ukraine, a grinding counteroffensive against Russia’s
invasion lurched into a bleak stalemate. In the Middle East, a
decades-old conflict exploded into an unprecedented, high-intensity war in the
Gaza Strip. The bulk of the territory’s inhabitants have been driven from their
homes, some 20,000 Palestinians have been killed in a matter of weeks, and a
quarter of Gaza’s population is “starving,” according to the United Nations, which warned Thursday that the risk of
famine in the territory is “increasing each day.”
“It doesn’t get any worse,” Arif Husain, chief economist
for the United Nations World Food Program, told reporters. “I have never seen
something at the scale that is happening in Gaza. And at this speed.”
While
these two wars consumed the attention of major global news outlets (and this
daily newsletter) for much of 2023, other crises smoldered on. In Sudan and
Myanmar, ruinous
civil wars, marked by myriad atrocities and reports of war crimes, are collapsing
already dysfunctional states and provoking spiraling
humanitarian crises. Over a wide swath of sub-Saharan Africa, coups
and power grabs roiled the
region. Social instability and post-pandemic economic pressures fueled
surges in migration across the world.
2023
will probably be
the hottest year on record, with heat waves scourging every continent,
accompanied by other extreme climactic events. Droughts and floods were both
more acute — the most viscerally shocking moment came arguably in September,
when heavy rains led to the failure of dams and flash floods that killed more
than 11,000 in northeastern Libya. “This disaster is of mythic proportions,” a
Libyan health official told my
colleagues at the time.
In the face of such calamity, one would hope that the new year
would bring better news. But, as your humble harbinger of bad tidings, I have to
apologize: There’s a lot that can go wrong in 2024, and many crises that will
get worse.
The
war in Gaza is reaching a dangerous tipping point. While Israeli officials vow
a long campaign, the current fighting is pushing Gaza’s 2.2 million people to
the brink. The territory is the deadliest place in the world to be a civilian.
Before Oct. 7, when the militant group Hamas launched its strike on southern
Israel, 80 percent of Gaza’s population required humanitarian assistance. Now,
everyone does, and barely a trickle of what’s needed is getting into the besieged
territory. Aid organizations and myriad world leaders are calling for a
cease-fire and a surge of relief aid into Gaza. But absent a cessation of
hostilities, the war could convulse the region, bringing in anti-Israel
factions based in Lebanon and Syria, and spawning an unprecedented flow of
Palestinian refugees into Egypt.
In its annual
“emergency watch list” published this month, the International Rescue
Committee ranked the conflict in Israel and the occupied Palestinian
territories as the second most glaring crisis to watch in 2024. The first was
the far-less-discussed civil war in Sudan, where eight months of fighting
between the country’s military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have
left more than half the country in need of humanitarian aid and forced some 6
million people from their homes. Some 19 million children are without education
as the conflict has shuttered thousands of schools.
“Sudan
has become the world’s largest displacement crisis,” the IRC’s Elshafie Mohamed
Ahmed said in the
report. “The ability to deliver aid is hindered by the lack of
humanitarian access and funds. The ethnic, tribal and regional polarization of
the current war is further threatening the limited access currently available.”
Africa
is home to the bulk of the other potential hot spots, as listed by the IRC. Three “coup belt” nations
in West Africa — the junta-led states of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger — are all
in the rankings. The Burkinabe military is floundering in the face of a surge
in Islamist militancy, with renegade factions controlling more than half the
country. In Mali and Niger, where similar dynamics are on show, growing food
insecurity and the drying up of foreign aid are plunging millions toward
greater peril.
The
IRC’s 10 “watch list” nations account for 86 percent of all people in
humanitarian need globally. Lurking behind the political instability consuming
these societies is the specter of a warming planet, as droughts and other
climate shocks affect some of the world’s most vulnerable communities. “What
were once separate circles of crisis are now a Venn diagram with an expanding
intersection,” wrote IRC
President David Miliband. “Three decades ago, 44% of conflicts happened
in climate-vulnerable states. Now that figure is 67%.”
The
Biden administration has most successfully held the line in shoring up Western
support for Ukraine’s resistance to Russian aggression. But its scope for
action will be constrained in a divisive election year, and even Washington’s
capacity to fund Kyiv is in doubt — let alone its ability to get its arms
around myriad crises elsewhere, from Somalia to Afghanistan to gang-dominated
Haiti, teetering on the verge of state collapse.
In
Asia, an election in Taiwan may be marked by new provocations from China at a
time when the Biden administration is trying to bring some stability to its
relationship with Beijing. But the biggest conflagration could take place in
Myanmar, where the ruling junta is reeling from an offensive launched by a
coalition of rebel militias and seeing mounting desertion in its ranks.
The current trajectory, however, “does not point towards a near-term regime collapse on the battlefield, absent unforeseen developments,” noted Morgan Michaels, a research fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “Myanmar is instead headed towards a new phase of the conflict, marked by a weakened but still dangerous regime, more intense violence and greater uncertainty.”
-Ishaan Tharoor and Sammy
Westfall for the Washington Post
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