The topic this Wednesday January 09, 2019 is based on this article
A look into the crystal ball for Jan. 1, 2020
By David Ignatius
Bill Safire, the late, great New York Times columnist, made a tradition over 35 years of publishing a year-end “office pool,” a multiple-choice quiz in which, as he liked to say, “every reader becomes a pundit” because nobody knows the right answers.
The office pool died with Safire in 2009, but perhaps readers will enjoy speculating about what might animate the President’s Daily Brief a year hence, on Jan. 1, 2020. Remember, your guesses are as good as mine (and those of any sources who may have wandered my way).
- As North Korean leader Kim Jong Un prepares his 2020 New Year’s address, his big challenge will be: (a) finding a thesaurus with more adjectives to praise President Trump for canceling U.S. military exercises; (b) planning a high-speed railway line between Seoul and Pyongyang, despite protests from the United States; (c) finding a graceful way to remove spy chief Kim Yong Chol as the channel to the United States and have someone else talk with envoy Steve Biegun; (d) avoiding military incidents at sea and in the air with U.S. and Japanese forces.
- By the end of 2019, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will: (a) take the additional title of prime minister and declare elections for a Saudi parliament; (b) hand over day-to-day power to Minister of State Musaed al-Aiban, who promises to rescue collapsing investment in Saudi Arabia; (c) go into exile ata Seychelles Islandsresort owned by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed of Abu Dhabi; (d) hold a secret meeting with Iranian leaders in Oman — with Russian sponsorship — to discuss terms for regional stability.
- Chinese President Xi Jinping’s biggest problem in 2019 will be: (a) fallout from the life imprisonment of his corrupt former spy chief, Ma Jian; (b) publication abroad of Xi phone calls tapped by Liang Ke, who headed Beijing’s state security bureauuntil 2014; (c) a liquidity squeeze caused by slowing trade and rising debt; (d) a military showdown in the Taiwan Strait as Beijing tries to pressure Taiwan to abandon its quasi-independent “status quo.”
- The biggest headache for Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in 2019 will be: (a) sustaining a deteriorating economy made worse by harsh U.S. sanctions; (b) waging covert wars in Syria and Yemen without direct conflict with Israel or Saudi Arabia; (c) spurning Trump’s eagerness for a new nuclear deal without boosting national security adviser (and Iran hawk) John Bolton’s arguments for regime change; (d) staying healthy enough at 79, despite his prostate cancer, to celebrate his 80th birthday in July 2019 and his 30 years as autocratic supreme leader.
- 5. By 2020, the United States will be locked in a global arms race featuring: (a) hypersonic missiles that can travel more than five times the speed of soundand turn aircraft carriers into sitting ducks; (b) maneuverable “killer satellites” that can destroy communications, surveillance and command-and-control systems in space; (c) autonomous submarines, surface ships, drones, land vehicles and missiles that can be hidden in peacetime and activated for surprise attacks as combat begins; (d) lasers that can disable or destroy satellites, planes, surface ships and other weapons; (e) all of the above.
- As a result of the continuing Brexit mess, in 2019: (a) Britain crashes out of the European Union without a deal, triggering chaotic border conditions and a recession in Britain and Europe; (b) Parliament calls a second referendum, which brings victory for “Remain” but also continued policy paralysis and growing domestic unrest; (c) Russia exploits European chaos by attacking Ukraine and creating a breakaway ministate in the east; (d) France and Germany lead a new European military alliance under a French “nuclear umbrella.”
- The Democratic candidate leading in public opinion polls on Dec. 31, 2019, will be: (a) Joe Biden, who promises to nominate former Homeland Security secretary Jeh Johnsonas vice president; (b) Beto O’Rourke, whose campaign is boosted by a barnstorming country-music band headed by cable TV host Joe Scarborough; (c) Kamala D. Harris, who gains the endorsements of Michelle Obama, Elizabeth Warren and Hillary Clinton; (d) Amy Klobuchar, who runs on a platform of “Make America Smart Again.”
- On New Year’s Day 2020, the status of President Trump will be: (a) impeached by the House for “high crimes and misdemeanors” but acquitted by the Senate; (b) resigned to return to his first love of real estate; (c) rejected by a unanimous Supreme Court in his effort to block grand-jury access to evidence gathered by deposed special counsel Robert S. Mueller III; (d) holding steady at 35 percent public approval.
David Ignatius’ answers: (1) b; (2) d; (3) c; (4) d; (5) e; (6) b and d; (7) b; (8) d.
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