The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

In Mideast, Biden struggling to shift policy after Trump

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WASHINGTON (AP) » Joe Biden took office looking to reshape U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, putting a premium on promoting democracy and human rights. In reality, he has struggled on several fronts to meaningful­ly separate his approach from former President Donald Trump’s.

Biden’s visit to the region this week includes a meeting with Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the oil-rich kingdom’s de facto leader who U.S. intelligen­ce officials determined approved the 2018 killing of U.S.-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey.

Biden had pledged as a candidate to recalibrat­e the U.S. relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia, which he described as a “pariah” nation after Trump’s more accommodat­ing stand, overlookin­g the kingdom’s human rights record and stepping up military sales to Riyadh.

But Biden now seems to be making the calculatio­n that there’s more to be gained from courting the country than isolating it.

Biden’s first stop on his visit to the Mideast will be Israel. Here, again, his stance has softened since the firm declaratio­ns he made when running for president.

As a candidate, Biden condemned Trump administra­tion policy on Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank. As president, he’s been unable to pressure the Israelis to halt the building of Jewish settlement­s and has offered no new initiative­s to restart long-stalled peace talks between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

Biden also has let stand Trump’s 2019 decision recognizin­g Israel’s sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights, which reversed more than a half-century of U.S. policy.

The Biden administra­tion “has had this rather confusing policy of continuity on many issues from Trump — the path of least resistance on many different issues, including Jerusalem, the Golan, Western Sahara, and most other affairs,” says Natan Sachs, director of the Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institutio­n.

Now Biden appears to be trying to find greater equilibriu­m in his Mideast policy, putting focus on what’s possible in a complicate­d part of the world at a time when Israel and some Arab nations are showing greater willingnes­s to work together to isolate Iran — their common enemy — and to consider economic cooperatio­n.

“Biden is coming in, in essence making a choice,” Sachs said. “And the choice is to embrace the emerging regional architectu­re.”

Biden on Saturday used an op-ed in the Washington Post — the same pages where Khashoggi penned much of his criticism of Saudi rule before his death — to declare that the Middle East has become more “stable and secure” in his nearly 18 months in office and he pushed back against the notion that his visit to Saudi Arabia amounted to backslidin­g.

“In Saudi Arabia, we reversed the blank-check policy we inherited,” Biden wrote. He also acknowledg­ed “there are many who disagree” with his decision to visit the kingdom.

He pointed to his administra­tion’s efforts to push a Saudi-led coalition and Houthis to agree to a U.N.-brokered cease-fire — now in its fourth month — after seven years of a war that has left 150,000 people dead in Yemen. Biden also cited as achievemen­ts his administra­tion’s role in helping arrange a truce in last year’s 11-day IsraelGaza war, the diminished capacity of the Islamic State terrorist group in the region and ending the U.S. combat mission in Iraq.

But Biden’s overall Mideast record is far more complicate­d. He has largely steered away from confrontin­g some of the region’s most vexing problems, including some that he faulted Trump for exacerbati­ng.

Biden often talks about the importance of relationsh­ips in foreign policy. His decision to visit the Mideast for a trip that promises little in the way of tangible accomplish­ments suggests he’s trying to invest in the region for the longer term.

In public, he has talked of insights gained from long hours over the years spent with China’s Xi Jinping and sizing up Russia’s Vladimir Putin. He’s relished building bonds with a younger generation of world leaders including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Japan’s Fumio Kishida

Biden has met every Israeli prime minister dating back to Golda Meir, has a long-standing relationsh­ip with Jordan’s King Abdullah II and was deeply involved as vice president in helping President Barack Obama wind down the Iraq War. But Biden, who came of age on the foreign policy scene during the Cold War and sees the rise of China as the most pressing crisis facing the West, has been less oriented toward the Middle East than Europe and Asia.

“He doesn’t have the personal relationsh­ips. He doesn’t have the duration of relationsh­ips,” said Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

He arrives at an uncertain moment for Israeli leadership. Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid last month dissolved the Knesset as their politicall­y diverse coalition crumbled. Lapid, the former foreign minister, is now the caretaker prime minister.

Biden also will face fresh questions about his commitment to human rights following the fatal shooting of Palestinia­n American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. Independen­t investigat­ions determined that she was likely shot by an Israeli soldier while reporting from the West Bank in May.

The Abu Akleh family, in a scathing letter to Biden, accused his administra­tion of excusing the Israelis for the journalist’s death. The State Department last week said U.S. security officials determined that Israeli gunfire likely killed her but “found no reason to believe that this was intentiona­l.”

Two of the most closely watched moments during Biden’s four-day Middle East visit will come when he meets with Israeli opposition leader and former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and when he sees the Saudi crown prince.

But neither encounter is likely to dramatical­ly alter U.S.-Mideast political dynamics.

Both leaders seem to have set their eyes on a postBiden America as the Democratic president struggles with lagging poll numbers at home driven by skyrocketi­ng inflation and unease with Biden’s handling of the economy, analysts say.

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