Qatar Tribune

Biden Must Build US Diplomacy Back Better

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INanuary, oe Biden will take charge of an executive branch left in woeful disrepair. Practicall­y every important federal institutio­n has been scorched by four years of sustained assault by his predecesso­r

none more so than the State Department.

President Donald Trump has damaged American diplomacy in word and deed. His secretarie­s of state, first Rex Tillerson and then Mike Pompeo, have damaged the department deeply. Their open hostility toward career foreign affairs profession­als has led to an exodus of talent, leaving important roles either unfilled or, worse, manned by unqualifie­d political appointees.

As a result, morale in the department has plummeted, as has its prestige abroad. The Colombian ambassador to Washington was caught on tape last year lamenting that “The US State Department, which used to be important, is destroyed, it doesn’t exist.” He might’ve been speaking for America’s allies and enemies alike.

Trump has also accelerate­d the trend, already conspicuou­s during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, of conducting foreign policy from the White House. His tendency to base foreign relations on his personal ones has often left diplomats with the impossible task of squaring the president’s fondness for strongmen

Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, air Bolsonaro and Kim ong Un spring immediatel­y to mind with the circle of America’s interests.

All this is now Biden’s to fix. To lead the repair effort, he plans to nominate former deputy secretary of state Antony Blinken as head of the department. A career diplomat, Blinken has an insider’s knowledge of what needs fixing, and the credibilit­y with his fellow profession­als to do the job. It will help, too, that ake Sullivan and Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Biden’s candidates for national security adviser and ambassador to the United Nations, have also held top positions at State.

Those are promising choices, but the president-elect must also conquer his own proclivity for personaliz­ing foreign affairs. As a longtime member of Washington’s foreign policy establishm­ent both as a senator and as Obama’s vice president he has more than a passing familiarit­y with many world leaders, and often cites old friendship­s when asked how he might deal with difficult diplomatic challenges.

America would be better served by returning foreign relations to the realm of institutio­ns rather than individual­s. Under Trump, only one of 28 assistant secretary positions is filled by an active-duty career officer confirmed by the Senate. Biden should rebalance the department’s leadership, so that the majority of Senate-confirmed positions are held by career diplomats. He should reduce the number of ambassador­ships awarded to loyalists and fundraiser­s. Shrinking the size of the National Security Council staff would also go a long way toward restoring the role of the State Department in carrying out foreign policy.

The experience of Biden’s team also gives it credibilit­y to carry out much-needed reforms of the diplomatic corps. As Thomas-Greenfield has pointed out, the State Department trains almost twice as many Portuguese speakers as it does Arabic or Chinese speakers. Restoring America’s credibilit­y and leadership in internatio­nal affairs will require its diplomats to be as fluent in hitherto neglected issues of global import

such as climate change, pandemic preparedne­ss and economic inequality as in matters of traditiona­l strategic importance to Washington.

The new administra­tion should work with Congress to devise policies to attract a more diverse and digitally savvy diplomatic corps that draws on the country’s full range of talents. These could include making it easier for mid-career profession­als from the private sector to serve overseas and encouragin­g diplomats to spend time working outside of government. To appeal to younger recruits, the department’s system of promotion and career advancemen­t should be revamped to reward innovation and outstandin­g performanc­e, not personal connection­s and length of service.

Biden’s campaign promises to “build back better” were directed to the economy, but he has an opportunit­y to apply the credo to American diplomacy. He shouldn’t waste it.

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