* The leading t#hreat, according to these experts, was of political violence or #domestic #terrorism in the #UnitedStates associated with the #2024 #presidential #election. * Other leading threats were the possibility of a wider war in the #MiddleEast arising out of the conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, * and of continued #migration from Central America and Mexico. The three consider these, as well as others that fell farther down the list, and asked, how can these be prioritized? What is being done to stop them? And what is the broader value in engaging in these ranking exercises in the first place? Grievances for the Biden administration’s short-sighted new regulations on liquified natural gas, U.S. Middle East policy (does it make sense to anyone?), and the way our broken politics manages to infect even an all-American love story like Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce. Can we just give it a rest?
Zack Cooper, Melanie Marlowe, and Christopher Preble reviewed the Council on Foreign Relations’ “Preventive Priorities Survey,” which asked foreign policy experts to rank current and possible future conflicts relative to their likelihood and impact on U.S. national interests.