While Washington fixates on Iran’s accelerating enrichment and increasingly confrontational regional posture, a second—and potentially more destabilizing—threat is gaining momentum with far less scrutiny. North Korea’s rapid nuclear and missile advances are not just continuing; they are redefining the global threat environment in real time.

For U.S. policymakers, the danger is no longer two separate problems on opposite ends of the map, but a fast-converging two-front nuclear challenge—one that could strain America’s deterrence architecture, crisis-management bandwidth, and allied coordination to the edge. Experts warn that understanding how these flashpoints could interact begins with recognizing a decades-long, often underestimated strategic alignment between Tehran and Pyongyang.

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