The Capital

Biden faces logistics drag in foreign policy decisions

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden this past week found himself in search of a foreign policy sweet spot: somewhere between pulling a screeching U-turn on four years of Trumpism and cautiously approachin­g the world as it is.

In recent days, Biden has piled new sanctions on Russia, announced he would withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanista­n in less than five months and backed away from a campaign promise to sharply raise refugee admission caps.

“You know, we’ll be much more formidable to our adversarie­s and competitor­s over the long term if we fight the battles for the next 20 years, not the last 20,” Biden said in an explanatio­n of his decision to withdraw troops from Afghanista­n that also summed up his topline foreign policy hopes.

Yet, as this past week has shown, Biden is finding that when it comes to the painstakin­g process of statecraft, the drag of pragmatism can slow the sprint toward big-picture aspiration­s.

First there was Biden’s announceme­nt that he would end the “forever war” in Afghanista­n by the 20th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11 attacks on the U.S. that triggered America’s longest conflict.

Biden, long a skeptic of the U.S. strategy in Afghanista­n, is setting out to do what his last three predecesso­rs vowed to accomplish but were never able to deliver.

Biden campaigned on the promise to end the war — and former President Donald Trump set a May 1 deadline to do just that. In the end, though, Biden said he’ll get Americans out, but he won’t beat a “hasty” retreat under his predecesso­r’s timeline. Instead, he called for a monthslong exit ramp even as Republican­s — and a few Democrats — criticized the withdrawal as ill-advised.

Lisa Curtis, who served as National Security Council senior director for South and Central Asia in the Trump administra­tion, said lost in Biden’s desire to end the war this year is that the U.S. had effectivel­y rightsized the American presence with roughly 2,500 troops. It’s not cheap, she noted, but it’s a relatively modest cost to prevent Afghanista­n from again becoming a terrorist safe haven.

It’s been more than a year since an American service member has been killed in combat in Afghanista­n. Curtis argued that with the modest troop presence, the U.S. could maintain a crucial intelligen­ce foothold in a dangerous part of the world, something that Biden’s CIA director, William Burns, acknowledg­ed could be diminished by the planned U.S. withdrawal.

Biden’s push-pull calibratio­ns were also evident last week in his approach to Russia.

The president levied new sanctions on Moscow for cyberattac­ks and interferen­ce in the 2020 election, expelling 10 Russian diplomats and targeting Moscow’s ability to borrow money by prohibitin­g U.S. financial institutio­ns from buying Russian bonds.

But Biden, who in February had declared an end to the days of the U.S. “rolling over” to Vladimir Putin, simultaneo­usly suggested that he was getting tough on the Russian president and asserted that he wants a “stable, predictabl­e” relationsh­ip with him.

Biden said he made clear to Putin during a phone call Tuesday, two days before the sanctions were publicly announced, that he could have been much tougher on the Russians.

“I was clear with President Putin that we could have gone further, but I chose not to do so,” Biden said. “I chose to be proportion­ate.”

The past week also brought new steps from Biden on refugee admissions that showed the administra­tion’s efforts to navigate the fraught politics of the issue. The president issued an emergency declaratio­n stating that the limit of 15,000 refugee admissions set by Trump for this year “remains justified by humanitari­an concerns and is otherwise in the national interest.”

The move marked a dramatic departure from Biden’s campaign promise to raise the refugee limit to 125,000 and then to at least 95,000 annually after that. It came as the Biden administra­tion is struggling to deal with a sharp increase in unaccompan­ied young migrants arriving at the border.

After an avalanche of criticism from Democratic lawmakers, the White House within hours made a quick course correction Friday. It said Biden next month would increase the historical­ly low cap on refugees set by Trump — but probably not even to the 62,500 level that was in a plan submitted to Congress in February. The number admitted is expected to be closer to 15,000.

Before the Biden administra­tion did its walk-back, Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policies, cheered Biden’s move in a tweet that laid bare the political ramificati­ons of the issue.

“This reflects Team Biden’s awareness that the border flood will cause record midterm losses *if * GOP keeps issue front & center,” Miller tweeted.

Biden over the years has displayed a willingnes­s to cut against his party’s grain at times on foreign policy matters.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? President Joe Biden visits Section 60, the final resting place of those who died fighting in Iraq and Afghanista­n, at Arlington National Cemetery on Wednesday in Virginia. Biden has called for a monthslong timeline for getting U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP President Joe Biden visits Section 60, the final resting place of those who died fighting in Iraq and Afghanista­n, at Arlington National Cemetery on Wednesday in Virginia. Biden has called for a monthslong timeline for getting U.S. troops out of Afghanista­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States