The Guardian (USA)

Biden names ex-US ambassador to the UN Samantha Power to lead internatio­nal aid agency

- Guardian staff and agency

Joe Biden on Wednesday named Samantha Power, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, as his choice to lead the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAid), citing her deep experience addressing crises around the world.

“There is simply no one better placed to ensure our developmen­t agenda is a core pillar of our foreign policy,” the US president-elect said in a video statement.

Power was US ambassador to the United Nations in the Obama-Biden administra­tion and also served on Barack Obama’s national security council, as well as being a foreign policy and human rights adviser to the former Democratic president.

Her appointmen­t brings her back into the heart of the Democratic leadership fold. She disagreed fundamenta­lly with the Obama-Biden administra­tion decision not to order military interventi­on in the war in Syria.

On Wednesday, Power said: “Our security is connected to the security of people who live elsewhere. Many of the issues we in the US are grappling with, the pandemic, the economic crisis, climate consequenc­es, threats to the rule of law, even to democracy – these are issues that people all around the world are grappling with.”

Biden has announced that he would elevate the USAid administra­tor to have a seat at his White House’s national security council, which will be led by the national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, a significan­t move after Donald Trump was focused on cutting US aid overseas.

“Power will rally the internatio­nal community and work with our partners to confront the biggest challenges of our time, including Covid-19, climate change, global poverty and democratic backslidin­g,” Biden’s transition team said in a statement.

“A crisis-tested public servant and diplomat, Ambassador Power has been a leader in marshaling the world to resolve long-running conflicts, respond to humanitari­an emergencie­s, defend human dignity, and strengthen the rule of law and democracy,” it added.

The longtime human rights advocate served as ambassador to the UN under Barack Obama, the former Democratic president, and Biden from 2013 to 2017.

Power, 50, also served as a White House national security staffer under Obama from 2009 to 2013.

A former journalist, she won a Pulitzer prize for her book A Problem from Hell, a study of US failure to prevent genocide. Power covered the war in Bosnia in the 1990s as a freelance correspond­ent.

Power clashed badly with Obama over whether the US should intervene militarily in the war in Syria, a cloud that hangs over the legacy of the Obama administra­tion.

Power argued for action but ended up on the losing side, drawing accusation­s of betrayal and hypocrisy from many former supporters and colleagues.

The US gave limited support and training to rebel groups, but made no direct military interventi­on, even after Bashar al-Assad crossed Obama’s “red line” on chemical weapons, killing hundreds in rebel-held suburbs of Damascus with a sarin gas attack in 2013.

In A Problem from Hell, Power had written admiringly of the US diplomats who had resigned over US inaction in the face of the Bosnian genocide.

When her turn came to step down, she decided against it. She felt she could still achieve results by continuall­y pushing for human rights to be central in foreign policymaki­ng.

Meanwhile, Biden has picked another Obama-administra­tion veteran, Kurt Campbell, to be his White House coordinato­r for the Indo-Pacific region, which covers the relationsh­ip with China, a spokeswoma­n for Biden’s transition said on Wednesday.

Campbell, who served as the top US diplomat for Asia under Obama, is considered one of the architects of their administra­tion’s “pivot to Asia” strategy, a much-vaunted but still limited US rebalancin­g of resources to the region.

 ?? Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters ?? Samantha Power addresses media at the United Nations in New York City on 19 December 2016.
Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters Samantha Power addresses media at the United Nations in New York City on 19 December 2016.

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