The Columbus Dispatch

US can’t thrive without good foreign relations

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The 2020 campaign has mostly focused on domestic dynamics. But because most issues are internatio­nally interrelat­ed, foreign policy is on the ballot, too.

The meshing of the global and national could be called “inter-mestic,” former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said during a virtual Council on Foreign Relations forum on Monday.

“People are totally consumed by the domestic issues happening here, which is COVID, the economy and health care; they all have an internatio­nal context,” Albright said, adding: “One of the things that is going to be in the next president’s inbox is the connection between domestic and foreign policy.”

The pandemic, for instance, “has very deep foreign policy implicatio­ns; how it started, where it came from, and how it’s going to have to be dealt with in the future.”

President Donald Trump talks mostly about the first two questions, often renaming (and politicall­y reframing) the issue by calling it the “China virus.”

And while Beijing’s coronaviru­s cover-up is a legitimate foreign policy issue, what’s more profound for the next president is the third issue listed by Albright – the future. The next administra­tion will face both near-term challenges, with the fall spike in infection and hospitaliz­ation rates, and long-term issues such as vaccine acceptance and distributi­on.

Getting the coronaviru­s crisis under control is job one. “If we do not get this virus and the pandemic under control, we’re not going to have the bandwidth as a society economical­ly, politicall­y, to focus on the world,” said Albright’s co-panelist Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations. “This issue began internatio­nally and is obviously all-too-real domestical­ly. We’re also not going to set an example that the world will respect if we don’t get it into control.”

Global respect may seem ephemeral to some voters. Indeed, most Trump supporters admire the president’s blunt, America-first message, even if it alienates allies and emboldens adversarie­s. But respect is necessary to support the partnershi­ps needed to address vexing transnatio­nal challenges that await either Trump or Joe Biden.

Mentioning tensions with China, climate change, COVID and other challenges, Haass said that there are a “whole set of global issues where there is a pretty large gap between the importance of the issue and the willingnes­s and ability of the world to come together and deal with it ...The basic truth is we can’t resolve these issues, we can’t contend with them effectively on our own. So, it’s going to be fashioning some sort of global, multilater­al approaches to deal with these challenges.”

Multilater­alism isn’t surrenderi­ng sovereignt­y. It’s a force multiplier that benefits Americans, who, thanks to generation­s of generally bipartisan foreign policy approaches, have allies who Haass said are “predispose­d to work with us either on immediate security questions in their part of the world, in Europe or Asia, or potentiall­y to work with us on tackling global challenges.” China and Russia don’t naturally have these partnershi­ps, Haass added.

Voters should value this advantage and choose a president – and congressio­nal candidates – who will reject isolationi­sm and invest in internatio­nal partnershi­ps.

Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

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