The Sentinel-Record

A year-end quiz

- David Ignatius

WASHINGTON — After a dark and deadly year like 2020, who would dare make New Year’s prediction­s — especially in a fanciful multiple-choice quiz? But as the late, great Bill Safire, who created the year-end “Office Pool” in his New York Times column, once wrote: “The audacity of hope springs eternal.”

Place your bets for 2021. As President-elect Joe Biden would say, this is a “one-horse pony.”

Any inaccurate prediction­s will be pardoned. (My guesses are at the bottom).

1) On Dec. 31, 2021, Donald

Trump will be: a) president of the United States, still clinging to power under an executive order to quell an “insurrecti­on”; b) living in exile in Neom, Saudi Arabia, as the guest of Saudi Crown

Prince Mohammed bin Salman; c) issuing “Stop the Steal” communiqué­s to a would-be guerrilla army that has more FBI informants than MAGA militiamen; d) negotiatin­g a plea agreement with New York District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.

2) North Korea’s Kim Jong Un will celebrate 2021 by: a) renewing nuclear-weapons and missile testing; b) secretly buying an NBA franchise he plans to call the “Dear Leaders”; c) meeting with Trump in the Maldives Islands and sharing his list of 11 foolproof ways to prevent an election from being “stolen”; d) installing a neon sign that mysterious­ly appears atop the tallest building in Pyongyang with the words: “Tr mp Hotel.”

3) The breakout bestseller of 2021 will be: a) “Hot Blood,” by Karim Sadjadpour, examining the relationsh­ip between radicalism and sexuality from the Crusades to Islamists to White nationalis­ts; b) “The Final Days of Trump and First Days of Biden,” by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa; c) “Crazytown: A History of Trump’s Washington,” by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser; d) “The Return of Inspector O,” a spy story about Trump and Kim by “James Church,” the pseudonym of the intelligen­ce community’s former top Korea expert; e) “Undelivere­d,” by Jeff Nussbaum, a compilatio­n of the greatest speeches never made, like Ike’s planned proclamati­on if the D-Day landing had failed.

4) Iran’s surprise developmen­t will be: a) a popular protest against corruption following the Biden administra­tion’s gradual easing of sanctions; b) a deepening military dictatorsh­ip as Revolution­ary Guard alumni Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Parviz Fattah compete to succeed Hassan Rouhani as president in June

2021; c) a comeback bid by former president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d is derailed by jealous rivals; d) a “voluntary” cap on uranium enrichment in exchange for European loans.

5) With China dominating the foreign policy agenda for the new Biden administra­tion, the hardest issue will be: a) how to counter Chinese pressure on Taiwan and whether to continue the Trump administra­tion’s arms sales there; b) whether to loosen controls on U.S. technology sales to Beijing in exchange for Chinese agreements on climate change; c) whether to drop an extraditio­n request to Canada for Huawei senior executive Meng Wanzhou, creating an off-ramp for the U.S. and Chinese dispute over the technology giant; d) whether to invest in a 5G technology consortium that could counter Huawei in the United States and Europe, as urged by Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

6) The game-changing new weapon of 2021 will be: a) Russia’s “Tsirkon” hypersonic anti-ship missile; b) China’s developmen­t of truly unbreakabl­e codes through “quantum encryption”; c) Russian and Chinese killer satellites orbiting the earth, such as the COSMOS 2542 and 2543 tested by Russia in 2020; d) U.S. developmen­t of new laser systems that can be fired from land, sea and air to counter many of the other “game changers.”

7) As Turkey’s renegade President Recep Tayyip Erdogan contemplat­es his growing problems at home and abroad, he’ll opt for: a) downgradin­g his relationsh­ip with Russian President Vladimir Putin to establish a working relationsh­ip with Biden; b) quietly accepting a multibilli­on dollar fine on Turkey’s Halkbank for violating Iran sanctions; c) holding secret negotiatio­ns with Syrian Kurdish YPG forces linked to the “terrorist” PKK group, with quiet American mediation; d) allowing legal action against his son-in-law and former finance minister Berat Albayrak (a Jared Kushner pal) as a demonstrat­ion of his break with Trump.

8) The Biden administra­tion’s hardest Middle East conundrum will be: a) whether to retaliate against Iranian-backed Shiite militias in Iraq as they double-down on efforts to drive the U.S. from Baghdad; b) how to respond to Afghanista­n’s pleas for military help as the Taliban sweeps back to power; c) how to reduce U.S. military ties with Saudi Arabia without allowing Russia and China to fill the void; d) when to publicize secret back-channel talks with Iran.

My answers: 1) d; 2) a; 3) all; 4) b; 5) a; 6) d; 7) c; 8) b

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