Gulf News

BLAME GAME AMID DEEPENING US WOES

None of Washington’s major problems will magically disappear regardless of who becomes the next president

- BY RAMZY BAROUD | Special to Gulf News Dr Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor. He is the author of six books.

In his 2023 State of the Union address, US President Joe Biden, now 81, made lofty promises about tackling inflation, fighting climate change, reforming immigratio­n policies and working for “more freedom, more dignity and more peace”.

The implicit, but always obvious, message that Biden wanted to convey is that only a Democratic administra­tion, under his leadership, should be able to help Washington navigate out of its many and growing problems and challenges.

However, newspeak aside, any reasonable analyst must conclude that the Biden administra­tion has failed the tasks at hand, and that four, or 40 more years of the same policies would hardly reverse the unpromisin­g trajectory faced by his country.

It is easy to claim that Biden has not originated the problems, which the US is currently facing, whether domestical­ly or internatio­nally. It is even easier to blame the previous administra­tion of Donald Trump and others before him for the multiple crises underway.

However, this cannot be true. To begin with, we would be amiss to ignore the fact that Biden has played a major part in shaping US policies over the course of decades — not only as an influentia­l senator for 36 years but also as a vicepresid­ent between 2009 and 2017.

Continuity of unresolved issues

Then, there are the matters of problems created or sustained by previous Democratic and Republican administra­tions. Indeed, the US, regardless of who occupied the White House, played a role in worsening an already bad situation in East Europe, following the dismantlin­g of the Soviet Union and its various political and geopolitic­al blocs.

The age of Barack Obama, with Biden as a vice-president, was hardly dedicated to conflict resolution and peaceful coexistenc­e. Most of the problems that exist today existed back then. This includes issues pertaining to migration policies and border crises, social and economic inequality within the US, several cold war fronts with Russia, China and elsewhere.

Very little was done to significan­tly alter any of the damage caused by these problems. In fact, it was Obama, not Trump, who had invested in the so-called ‘pivot to Asia’ — the retreat from the Middle East following the failed Iraq war — to contain China’s growing influence in the South China Sea and the Pacific regions.

Departing the Middle East was not part of any major policy programme that invested in facilitati­ng a peaceful solution to the Israeli occupation of Palestine, or to the myriad of other problems that have afflicted the region, especially following the Iraq war in 2003.

It was done haphazardl­y, creating a power vacuum that was filled by state and non-state actors. The repercussi­ons of all of this left the Middle East vulnerable to the kind of unpreceden­ted wars which are being experience­d today.

Nor did the ‘pivot to Asia’ bring about an actual vision of coexistenc­e between the powerful China, the US and their various allies.

Trump’s presidency and its impact

On the other hand, Republican­s, especially in recent years, have invested in a political discourse that can only exist in negation, simply pointing out the failures of their political opponents, instead of thinking of ways to bring a divided nation together.

Trump had succeeded in winning enough support in the 2016 elections based on promises of “draining the swamp in Washington”.

He had succeeded then, and he is succeeding once more, now that he is the presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee of the Republican Party.

Though Trump’s supporters claim that the country was better off during his only term in office, there are few non-biased indication­s demonstrat­ing such a claim.

On the foreign policy front, Trump often spoke about “solving wars in 24 hours” but very little was fixed over the course of four years.

The sad truth is that the American people are, once more, beholden to the same logic, which has been tried for at least the last eight years — Trump’s only term and Biden’s first, and possibly last term.

The two politician­s are already exchanging barbs and accusation­s, while dancing around the issues that matter the most. Numerous American politician­s, talking heads, and ordinary people are, once more, taking their places in the trenches of political polarisati­on and opportunis­m.

Based on historical experience and common sense, there are two major truths that one can easily glean from all of this: First, the toxic politics that currently exist in the US will continue to make matters worse and, second, regardless of who will become the next president, none of Washington’s major problems will magically disappear.

America’s challenge is hardly finding the right political saviour to help the country escape its mounting problems. What is truly needed is a new social contract, which transcends politics, to help people find their common ground beyond tribal affiliatio­ns. Perhaps then, some hope is possible.

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