Flashpoint (politics)
In international relations, a flashpoint is an area or dispute that has a strong possibility of developing into a war.
The original definition of flash point refers to the igniting of a volatile material at the lowest temperature at which it can vaporize to form an ignitable mixture in air.
Current political flashpoints
- The Taiwan straits between People's Republic of China and Republic of China
- The Senkaku Islands between People's Republic of China and Japan
- Korean Peninsula between North Korea and South Korea
- The Golan heights between Syria and Israel
- Israeli-Lebanon border between Lebanon and Israel
- Kashmir between India and Pakistan
- The Spratly Islands see Spratly Islands dispute
- Imia/Kardak - Aegean dispute
- The Shatt al-Arab between Iraq and Iran
- Possible second Falklands War (see Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute)
- Gaza Strip
- Somalia
- Abyei between North and South Sudan
- Escalation of the Syrian Civil War and Iraqi insurgency (2011–present) into a larger conflict. (See 2014 military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant)
- Post-Soviet frozen conflicts (i.e. South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh)
- Possible re-escalation of the War in Donbass (see pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine)
Historical political flashpoints
- The Balkans
- Bosnia
- Berlin (see Cold War)
- Sudetenland
- The Rio Grande valley
- Alsace-Lorraine (France Germany border)
- Soviet Union – United States relations (see Cold War)
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