Paris:
The coming year will put incoming US President Donald Trump’s geopolitical strategies to the test, as wars rage in the Middle East and Ukraine and tensions rise in Asia.
Here are some of the big foreign policy hotspots facing him and other world leaders in 2025.
Middle East
More than a year on from the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023, the Middle East risks tipping into regional conflict. Israel is pursuing its deadly retaliatory offensive in Gaza while also battling another armed group, Iran-backed Hezbollah, in Lebanon.
Trump has nominated a staunch pro-Israel politician, Mike Huckabee, as his ambassador to Israel.
Michael Horowitz, an analyst at consultancy Le Beck International, said Trump has pledged to “end wars” but does not look inclined to set conditions for Israel.
“The conflict in Gaza could really enter a state of limbo, with Israel imposing a new military solution that keeps troops inside the Strip and declaring that the conflict has ended — without even the beginning of a political solution,” he told AFP.
Horowitz judged a ceasefire in Lebanon more likely, as Israel has achieved “a lot of its objectives”, having bombarded Hezbollah and killed several of its leaders.
Ukraine
Ukraine is struggling to fight off the invasion launched by Russia in February 2022. Kyiv is short of soldiers and depends on Western military aid, while Russia is advancing in Ukraine’s east and has been bolstered by troops from its ally North Korea.
The Republicans’ election victory has raised the prospect of a halt to US military aid to Ukraine after party representatives held up a package for nearly a year.
Moscow is pushing for Kyiv to negotiate a settlement.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on November 16 that Kyiv would like to end the war next year through “diplomatic means”.
But Russia has demanded Kyiv surrender four regions as a precondition for talks, which Ukraine has rejected.
Trump said during his election campaign that he could end the war “in 24 hours”.
His nominee for US national security advisor, Mike Waltz, on November 24 called for negotiations.
“We need to restore deterrence, restore peace, and get ahead of this escalation ladder, rather than responding to it,” he said.
North Korea
Pyongyang has carried out numerous ballistic missile tests in 2024. Tensions have risen between it and South Korea. The North also has strengthened its ties with Moscow.
The two countries signed a mutual defence treaty in June and North Korea sent 10,000 soldiers to aid Moscow’s fight against Ukraine.
“In return, North Korea will seek military technology from Moscow — everything from drone defence systems to ballistic missiles,” said Fyodor Tertiskiy, a senior research fellow with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a US-based think tank.
“These moves signal that we should be prepared for actions from North Korea that we haven’t seen before.”
Andrew Yeo, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, another US think tank, meanwhile pointed to growing tensions between North and South Korea.
Pyongyang recently blew up roads and railways between the two states and accused the South of sending drones into the North.
If Russia further boosts North Korea militarily, “the United States and its allies in Europe and Asia will need to prepare for a new phase of greater instability and possible escalation in northeast Asia,” said Yeo.
Taiwan, China
Elsewhere in Asia, Taiwan remains a potential flashpoint for global conflict. China claims the island as part of its territory and has said it would never rule out taking it by force.
The United States is Taiwan’s most important backer and biggest supplier of weapons, but like most other countries it does not have official diplomatic relations with the island.
Trump has named China hawk Marco Rubio to be his secretary of state, heralding tensions with Beijing.
Waltz meanwhile has declared that the United States is in “a Cold War with the Chinese Communist Party”.
He has said the United States must learn from the experience of Ukraine’s war with Russia by backing Taiwan in the face of China.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)