Arab News

Biden looking beyond Ukraine

- ANDREW HAMMOND Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics. For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

When Joe Biden began his presidency about 15 months ago, Asia-Pacific was the North Star of his foreign policy. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has recast his internatio­nal priorities.

The US president is now making the final preparatio­ns for an important trip to Japan and South Korea, which will take place from May 20-24. It is his first to the region since he entered the Oval Office last year.

The trip will see a determined effort to refocus US attention, including the expected launch of a new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework strategy. While Russia remains the major immediate threat to Washington’s security interests, recent developmen­ts have done little to alter the administra­tion’s view that China remains the paramount, longer-term challenge.

While Biden will promote important bilateral agendas in Japan and South Korea, the main focus of attention will be the leadership meeting of the Quad powers of India, the US, Japan and Australia, which will be hosted by Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. Although the Quad, or Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue, was initiated in 2007, it has come into much greater focus in the past few years.

The importance that the Biden team places on this loose alliance was illustrate­d last year when the White House organized and hosted the first-ever in-person leadership meeting of the four powers, which was attended by Scott Morrison, Narendra Modi and Yoshihide Suga, the prime ministers of Australia, India and Japan respective­ly.

While some have played down the importance of the group, its relevance as an emerging anti-China alliance was buttressed by the announceme­nt last year by London, Washington and Canberra of a trilateral security partnershi­p to defend “shared interests in the Indo-Pacific,” with Beijing again the unstated key focal point.

The main goal of the upcoming Quad meeting is to advance a shared vision for a free and open Asia-Pacific, with all the leaders in agreement about the threat from China. This is despite the lack of unanimity within the group on Russia, with India an outlier given its refusal to condemn the invasion of Ukraine.

So, top of the agenda will be Beijing and its growing assertiven­ess, which all four leaders perceive is underminin­g their vision of a free and open regional landscape.

China will not be the only focus of the Quad meeting, however. North Korea is also causing fresh concerns following the missile tests it has carried out this year, the most recent of which was on Thursday.

On the economic front, Kishida will discuss with Biden whether he might reverse Trump’s decision to withhold US participat­ion in the Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. There are significan­t concerns in Tokyo that the new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework strategy could undermine the CPTPP.

All of this, taken together, is why Biden’s trip is so important. While his immediate foreign focus is Ukraine, he knows that relations with Japan, India and Australia are among the most pivotal in current internatio­nal relations.

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