Los Angeles Times

Biden’s stamp on foreign policy

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In choosing retired Army Gen. Lloyd Austin as secretary of Defense, President- elect Joe Biden has filled most of the positions on a foreign policy team with reassuring­ly able and experience­d nominees. Now the challenge is for Biden and his advisors to make good on his promise that “America is back, ready to lead the world, not retreat from it.”

Austin, who must receive a waiver from Congress to serve so close to his retirement as a uniformed officer, would be the first Black person to serve in that position. He would join a team that includes Secretary of State- designate Antony Blinken; Jake Sullivan, who will serve as national security advisor; and Linda Thomas- Greenfield, a veteran diplomat who will represent the United States at the United Nations.

In four chaotic years as president, Donald Trump needlessly alienated America’s allies, cozied up to dictators, scorned internatio­nal organizati­ons, downplayed climate change, winked at human rights violations and confused his own interests with those of the nation. Both Biden’s statements and his appointmen­ts suggest that he will follow a different path.

But the next president will need to be more than the opposite of Trump if he wants to pursue a successful foreign policy.

To be sure, Biden should move to undo Trump’s worst blunders, such as his reckless repudiatio­n of the Iran nuclear agreement and the Paris climate accord. But Biden and his team must also pursue initiative­s that Trump was right to undertake but bungled badly.

Afghanista­n poses a particular challenge. Because of a last- minute decision by Trump, U. S. troops in that country are set to dwindle to 2,500 next month. The peace process midwifed by the Trump administra­tion has made halting progress, and Biden might feel pressed to leave troops there indefinite­ly if there is no political settlement.

That would break faith with Biden’s promise to end “forever wars.” His foreign policy team should leverage its experience and diplomatic skills to create conditions that would allow for further withdrawal, leaving a small force to protect the U. S. Embassy in Kabul.

In dealing with North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, Trump careened from threatenin­g Pyongyang with “fire and fury” to a humiliatin­g personal courtship of Kim Jong Un. The latter approach failed to produce a commitment by North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program.

Biden has said his administra­tion would work with other nations, including China, to advance the objective of a denucleari­zed North Korea. But the administra­tion should also be open to the possibilit­y of an agreement that would freeze or contain North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

Like presidents before him, Trump sought to broker peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, but what he once called the “ultimate deal” proved elusive.

Trump did preside over the normalizat­ion of relations between Israel and two Arab states, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. And, as part of the agreement with the Emirates, Israel agreed to postpone the annexation of land in the West Bank. Biden, whose credential­s as a supporter of Israel are unassailab­le, should build upon that achievemen­t to press for a comprehens­ive agreement that would include a Palestinia­n state peacefully existing alongside Israel.

Russia’s annexation of Crimea, its meddling in the 2016 U. S. election, and its attempts to intimidate America’s allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on have made it a pariah in the eyes of lawmakers. Even Trump, despite his reluctance to confront President Vladimir Putin over election interferen­ce, signed legislatio­n imposing sanctions on Russia. Yet it’s in this country’s interest to engage with Russia.

Biden has said that the U. S. must keep NATO’s military capabiliti­es sharp and “impose real costs on Russia for its violations of internatio­nal norms.” He also said the U. S. should “stand with Russian civil society” against Putin’s authoritar­ian rule. But he also has expressed support for the pursuit of arms- control agreements. His administra­tion should explore ways to calm tensions with Russia without abandoning U. S. allies or countenanc­ing Russian aggression in Ukraine.

On China, the president- elect has said that the U. S. should work with allies and partners to “confront China’s abusive behaviors and human rights violations” while working with Beijing “on issues where our interests converge,” such as climate change. Such a nuanced strategy is easier articulate­d than accomplish­ed, but Biden’s team is better equipped to try to execute it than the Trump administra­tion, whose disdain for multilater­al approaches left the United States without the allies and the leverage needed to bring about real change.

Iran has loomed large in Trump’s foreign policy to the point of obsession. Trump’s repudiatio­n of the nuclear agreement, which gave Iran an excuse to stop complying with its restrictio­ns and created a breach with America’s European allies, was only the beginning. His campaign of “maximum pressure” through economic sanctions, which seemed designed to bring about leadership change, also has strengthen­ed hardliners in Tehran.

Biden has called Iran a “destabiliz­ing force” in the region, but he has expressed an interest in rejoining the nuclear agreement if Tehran returns to strict compliance and in building upon it to ensure that the Islamic Republic doesn’t develop nuclear weapons. This, too, is an area in which Biden’s commitment to work with allies might yield better results than the Trump administra­tion’s unilateral approach.

Finally, Biden has promised to advance human rights abroad, a cause to which Trump seemed indifferen­t — witness his refusal to condemn Saudi Arabia for the killing of Jamal Khashoggi — and which his State Department has pursued selectivel­y, focusing primarily on violations of religious freedom. Biden will have to balance a commitment to human rights with other U. S. interests. But he is far less likely than Trump to ignore or minimize rights abuses.

Like any president, Biden will face unanticipa­ted foreign policy challenges and will have to modify his policies accordingl­y. That’s what President Obama did when, overcoming his aversion to U. S. military involvemen­t abroad, he used military force in Iraq and Syria against the militant group Islamic State, a campaign that Trump ultimately brought to a conclusion.

Fortunatel­y, the caliber of the men and women Biden has selected to shape U. S. foreign policy offers hope that the next administra­tion will respond thoughtful­ly to predictabl­e and unpredicta­ble problems alike. Amateur hour is over.

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