Aside from the pandemic raging around us, the world feels pretty quiet.
It's not just the lack of planes flying overhead, or people on the streets. Suddenly, the noise around Iran, the South China Sea, and Libya seems smaller, somehow. Even North Korea appears relatively well-behaved, constraining itself to firing the kind of short-range missiles that won't provoke a response from U.S. President Donald Trump.
The adage that "only the dead have seen the end of war" holds some truth. Because even as we collectively grapple with a virus that has infected more than a million people, the divides, and egos and insecurities that have pulled us apart for centuries are still there.
Some leaders may even take advantage of the relative distraction to advance their cause in a fight or to grab more power at home.
How that all plays out is difficult to predict. But one thing is clear. The world will change because of the virus. Some hot spots may be worsened by it – Yemen and Syria among them, given the parlous state of their economies and health systems, and with many people already homeless.
The global jostling between China and the U.S. will also evolve, and perhaps the virus will see Beijing come out even stronger. That could affect us long after Covid-19 itself has passed.
— Rosalind Mathieson
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