The Freeman

World leaders have big stake in US poll

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JERUSALEM – While the world will be closely watching the U.S. election, some countries will be watching more closely than others.

A number of world leaders have a personal stake in the outcome, with their fortunes depending heavily on the success – or failure – of President Donald Trump.

Perhaps none has so much riding on a Trump victory as Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. The Israeli leader, who had a rocky relationsh­ip with President Barack Obama, has praised Trump as “the greatest friend” Israel ever had in the White House.

Trump has delivered a series of diplomatic gifts to Netanyahu, recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, withdrawin­g from Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran and offering a Mideast plan that heavily favors Israel over the Palestinia­ns. The White House brokered the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

But Netanyahu’s close relationsh­ip with Trump — and more broadly the Republican party and its evangelica­l Christian base — has come with a price. It has undercut Israel’s traditiona­l bipartisan support in Washington and alienated many Democrats, especially the rising progressiv­e wing, and the largely liberal Jewish American community.

“For Netanyahu, a Biden victory would be a disaster,” said Eytan Gilboa, an expert on U.S.-Israel relations at Israel’s Bar Ilan University. He noted that Biden has already promised a different approach to Iran and the Palestinia­ns.

Sidelined and humiliated by Trump, the Palestinia­ns have made no secret about their hopes for a Biden victory.

“If we are going to live another four years with President Trump, God help us,” the Palestinia­n prime minister, Mohammad Shtayyeh, said last week.

Here is a look at some of the other world leaders who have a big stake in the U.S. election:

BRITAIN’S BORIS JOHNSON

The Conservati­ve prime minister’s bombastic style and populist instincts have often been compared to Trump’s and the two have struck a friendly relationsh­ip. Trump has called the British leader a “great guy.”

Trump’s enthusiasm for Brexit helped Johnson talk up the prospect of securing a quick U.S. trade deal now that Britain has left the European Union.

Kim Darroch, who was the British ambassador to Washington until 2019, said recently that Johnson would likely be Trump’s “best friend in Europe” if the president is reelected.

Still, London and Washington differ on many internatio­nal issues, and a Biden victory could restore relative normality in trans-Atlantic relations. CHINA’S XI JINPING

For the Chinese leader, a second Trump term would bring a continuati­on of the bruising trade disputes, diplomatic jousting, and near-daily accusation­s against China on issues from human rights to the environmen­t and the South China Sea.

Trump’s onslaught has offered Xi an opportunit­y to portray the U.S. as a declining democracy coping with racial unrest and a bungled response to the coronaviru­s. (AP)

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