New York Post

How Prez Can Restore US Credibilit­y

- MICHAEL MAKOVSKY Michael Makovsky, a former Pentagon official, is president and CEO of the Jewish Institute for National Security of America and author of “Churchill’s Promised Land.”

CAN President Joe Biden’s global standing recover from his spectacula­r debacle in Afghanista­n? This will be one of the most pressing questions ahead even if the United States manages to successful­ly evacuate its citizens and Afghan partners. To salvage some of his and America’s internatio­nal position, Biden needs to initiate dramatic changes in both staff and policy.

Biden’s Afghan fiasco goes beyond failed policy and execution. Instead, it raises fundamenta­l questions about the president’s leadership, judgment, command of the facts, competence, veracity, reliabilit­y as an ally and strength of will.

The situation recalls Winston Churchill’s critique of British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin’s failed anti-Israel policy that severely undermined Britain’s global position: He was “wrong, wrong in his facts, wrong in his mood, wrong in the method and wrong in the result . . . . No one has been proved by events to be more consistent­ly wrong on every turning-point and at every moment than he.” He pursued a “policy of folly, fatuity and futility the like of which it is not easy to find in modern experience.”

Biden’s failures are arguably greater. He acquiesced to a Taliban takeover of Afghanista­n

and follows their dictates while energizing Islamic terrorist groups endangerin­g our very homeland; risked destabiliz­ing nuclear-armed Pakistan; emboldened adversarie­s such as China, Russia, North Korea and Iran; and alienated and undermined our allies from London to Tokyo.

Indeed, Biden’s failure has been so widely condemned or mocked and his credibilit­y — the currency of internatio­nal relations — so thoroughly damaged that even if he succeeds in evacuating stranded Americans and Afghan partners from Afghanista­n (big if), it’s likely he’ll become a hobbled, damaged figure on the world stage, incapable of leading on any issue of consequenc­e, for the remaining three-plus years of his presidency. That would be dreadful for US national security.

Democratic Party leaders should intervene to salvage some modicum of the president’s and America’s internatio­nal position. They need to convince Biden, who remains in defiant denial, of the dire position he has put his presidency and the United States in and the urgent need to correct it.

First, Biden should shore up his nationalse­curity team, bringing in senior officials who instill confidence among our allies and fear among our foes. None who would echo

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s assertion that the United States lacks the “capability” to collect American citizens outside Kabul airport.

Second, Biden must pursue new assertive policies beyond Afghanista­n that demonstrat­e resolve. He could follow then-President Donald Trump’s example of surprising­ly assassinat­ing Iranian leader Major Gen. Qassem Soleimani after months of inaction against escalating Iranian aggression, which restored some sense of deterrence. Except Biden’s Afghan fiasco requires greater dramatic steps.

Biden could seek to make a new mark in a pressing foreign-policy issue. With China describing America as “weak and unreliable” and suggesting Taiwan could meet Afghanista­n’s fate, he could end historic strategic ambiguity and (as leading Asia expert Ken Weinstein has argued for) declare publicly and unequivoca­lly that the United States will defend Taiwan from a Chinese attempt at reunificat­ion and sell Taipei next-generation defense equipment it needs for its national security.

Third, the president should reverse his disastrous failing policy of seeking to rejoin the 2015 nuclear deal, cite Iran’s nuclear escalation to justify enforcing existing sanctions and pursue snapback sanctions at the United Nations. He should also warn Tehran, as his predecesso­rs had, that he’ll prevent it from becoming nuclear-capable by all means necessary.

Further, Biden should bolster Israel’s ability to prepare for a major war with Iran, which his policies accommodat­ive to Tehran make more likely. In his meeting this week with Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, the president should offer an immediate offensive and defensive package to improve Israel’s readiness and to accelerate an Israeli attack capacity (should it be needed) on Iran, with all its consequenc­es.

This should involve expediting delivery of weapons already promised to Israel, such as F-35 aircraft, KC-46 aerial refueling tankers and multilayer missile-defense capabiliti­es, as well as a commitment to position in Israel for mutual use tens of thousands of precision-guided missiles.

Biden can’t eliminate all the awful consequenc­es of the Afghan debacle, but by taking these actions he can deliver a strong message that he has learned some lessons and that America is coming back.

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