The Mercury News

U.S. bipartisan foreign policy should be a strategic necessity

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a columnist for the The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

It would be easy to dismiss President Joe Biden’s hopes for a return of bipartisan­ship as naive when one looks at the GOP record since he took office.

Most GOP legislator­s still refuse to denounce their cult leader’s infamous Big Lie that the 2020 election was stolen. They showed no serious interest in compromise on the critical COVID-19 relief bill. They are trying to curb voting rights in states across the country.

So you might think Biden’s push for bipartisan­ship is an irrelevanc­e in this viciously partisan era. You would be dead wrong.

Not since the early post-world War II years has bipartisan­ship in Congress been so vital.

In the late 1940s, as the United States entered an unpreceden­ted era of a U.s.-soviet standoff, President Harry Truman relied on cooperatio­n from GOP Sen. Arthur Vandenberg, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Vandenberg had morphed from a PREWWII isolationi­st into an internatio­nalist who organized bipartisan support for Truman’s policy of isolating the Soviet communist regime.

The current era is equally fraught as the United States enters an unpreceden­ted era of competitio­n with a rising China. But that competitio­n is far more complex and daunting than the one with the Soviet Kremlin, whose nuclear arsenal disguised a faltering economy.

There are some encouragin­g signs.

“The place where there is the most possibilit­y of bipartisan­ship in foreign policy,” Sen. Chris Coons, D-del., told me in an interview last week, “is the place where it is most essential — crafting a strong and durable bipartisan consensus on how to compete with China, how to engage with China, how to confront China.”

China’s power is based not just on an expanding military, but on decades of stunning economic growth. China’s leaders can only delight in division that paralyzes America and U.S. failure to match Chinese investment in key technologi­es.

While Donald Trump recognized the growing Chinese threat, his personal flattery of Xi Jinping and endless tariffs on Chinese exports failed to dent Chinese behavior.

Coons, who is close to Biden, warns that Congress must now choose between two options when it comes to China.

One way is for the GOP to keep playing the Trumpian game of gotcha.

Coons recalled an exchange with Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz during a Senate Foreign Relations committee discussion about confirming Biden’s nominee for ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-greenfield. Some senior Republican­s, who were voting to confirm, praised her decades of experience while noting concern at one speech she had given to a China-funded Confucius Institute at Savannah State University.

“Cruz immediatel­y went after her and tried to turn that speech into ‘Biden is weak on China,’” Coons said. “I said, ‘We have a choice to make. This approach may be good for TV or a Twitter feed, but I could have made the same speech on Trump. We could spend the next four years on who lost China.’

“Jan. 6 was a wake-up call that our country is too divided.”

He said such U.S. divisions are a gift to Xi and Russia’s Vladimir Putin, as they reveal an America too paralyzed to act.

Instead, Coons said, a successful China policy requires legislator­s “to stop playing politics with this issue. For decades the United States had the strongest and fastest growing economy in the world, but China has that distinctio­n now.”

Indeed, it is painful to watch the U.S. try to block global sales of equipment for superfast 5G internet platforms by Chinese tech firm Huawei when the U.S. has no competitor that can equal Huawei.

“There are things we can do to strengthen our civic life, our infrastruc­ture and the innovation and competitiv­eness of our economy,” Coons said.

He stressed the need for “more government investment in research and developmen­t in key technologi­es , reshoring industries that make us vulnerable, and investing in a few key industries such as semiconduc­tors.”

Miraculous­ly, there appears to be growing GOP recognitio­n that such investment is needed. Example: Florida’s GOP Sen. Marco Rubio has called for government investment in key industrial sectors — the kind of industrial policy once anathema to Republican­s — even as Biden proposes bolstering manufactur­e of semiconduc­tors, pharmaceut­icals and other cutting-edge technologi­es.

For those who care about America’s future, China policy should indeed “stop at the water’s edge.” And other key foreign policy areas from Russia to Iran to Afghanista­n should receive serious bipartisan discussion. If the politics of “Cancun Cruz” — or the 45th president — trump bipartisan efforts the whole country will lose.

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