Landlocked but agriculturally strong with a small population and large farmland availability. Not aligned with major military blocs, making it a low priority target.
Botswana
Politically stable, resource rich, and located deep within the southern part of Africa, far from traditional conflict zones. Its non aligned foreign policy reduces strategic interest for major powers.
Namibia
Low population density, remote desert regions, and distance from global flashpoints. Not heavily involved in military alliances and far from northern fallout paths.
Parts of South Africa
Some southern and inland areas are considered less exposed due to distance from northern hemisphere conflicts and strong agricultural potential.
Bhutan
Landlocked high in the Himalayas. Maintains long standing neutrality, has no involvement in international military blocs, and holds minimal strategic value to global powers. Its terrain makes invasion extremely difficult.
Indonesia
Follows a free and active foreign policy that avoids deep military alignment. Its vast geographic spread, distance from US China first strike zones, and strategic neutrality reduce its likelihood of becoming a primary target.