Qatar Tribune

Biden team to face immediate decisions on global hotspots

The team has made clear that its top priority will be fighting the pandemic

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US President-elect Joe Biden’s foreign policy team has entered the stage with calls to return to internatio­nal cooperatio­n and democratic values after Donald Trump’s chaotic four years.

The incoming administra­tion has made clear that its top priority will be fighting the Covid-19 pandemic, but it will also face immediate decisions on several global hotspots:

CHINA AND RUSSIA

The Trump administra­tion by its final year had taken a hawkish turn on China, declaring that years of US engagement had failed and speaking of a vast global confrontat­ion with the world’s most populous nation, which it blamed for the Covid-19 pandemic.

Biden, who has extensive diplomatic experience with China, has broadly agreed that times have changed and that the Asian power should be treated as a competitor.

But Biden’s team is also likely to temper the rhetoric. Secretary of State-designate Antony Blinken has said that the United States will be vocal on human rights and other concerns but also find areas in which it can work with Beijing, such as fighting pandemics and climate change.

By contrast, Biden has vowed a tougher line on Russia -- whose president, Vladimir Putin, was admired by Trump -- that includes imposing costs for Moscow’s alleged election meddling and supporting the democratic movement in Russian ally Belarus.

SHIFT IN MIDDLE EAST

Biden favours a return to diplomacy with Iran, which has been hit by sweeping sanctions under Trump, but any negotiatio­ns are expected to be grueling.

Biden, Iran and European allies all still support a denucleari­sation deal negotiated by Obama with which Tehran had been in compliance until Trump pulled out.

Blinken has called for the accord to be both toughened and extended but Iran is already playing hardball, saying it will not revisit conditions and seeking not only sanctions relief but compensati­on.

Putting deadline pressure on both sides, Iran in June holds presidenti­al elections in which hardliners, who say that the clerical state was wrong ever to trust the United States, are favored. Biden has also made clear he will take a firmer line on ally Saudi Arabia, which Trump courted despite human rights concerns including the brutal killing of writer Jamal Khashoggi.

AFGHANISTA­N TROOPS

Biden inherits Trump’s deal with the Taliban under which US troops plan to leave Afghanista­n by May, ending America’s longest war. Trump is speeding up the withdrawal, with plans to pull out 2,000 more troops by mid-January.

Afghanista­n is a rare issue on which Biden has largely agreed with Trump as vice president, Biden questioned the wisdom of an indefinite military commitment.

But Biden, mindful of the turmoil in Iraq after Obama removed all troops, said in September that he still wanted to keep a small counterter­rorism force in Afghanista­n that can strike Islamic State extremists.

Experts believe that such an approach could bring about the collapse of the deal or even revive all-out war, as the Taliban have held fire on US-led forces on the understand­ing that they are leaving.

NORTH KOREA

One of Trump’s most unusual diplomatic approaches was to hold three meetings with North Korean strongman Kim Jong Un, with whom he said he had “fallen in love.”

North Korea has been quiet on Trump’s loss and has hardly started on friendly footing with Biden, with state media calling him a “rabid dog” that must be “beaten to death.”

Biden has said he will not meet Kim without preconditi­ons, accusing Trump of giving the young authoritar­ian the legitimacy he craves, but is open to more traditiona­l, low-level negotiatio­ns with Pyongyang.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? US President-elect Joe Biden in Wilmington, Delaware, on Tuesday.
(AFP) US President-elect Joe Biden in Wilmington, Delaware, on Tuesday.

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