Sunday Tribune

Biden’s first address echoes themes from the Cold War

- Prasch’s article was first published on theconvers­ation.com

IT WAS a familiar scene.

The president of the US strode down the aisle of the House of Representa­tives to deliver the State of the Union address, the only constituti­onally mandated instance of presidenti­al speech. Usually, it serves to lay out the White House’s policy agenda for the coming year, along with perceived accomplish­ments.

But, as the nation tuned in for the prime time address on Tuesday, President Joe Biden had to do more than simply outline key domestic priorities such as relaxing Covid-19 restrictio­ns for a pandemic-weary public, addressing the highest inflation rate since 1980, touting his nomination of the first Black woman to the nation’s highest court and mobilising the Democratic Party before the 2022 midterm elections.

Biden also had to respond to an internatio­nal crisis he did not choose, one that could come to define his presidency: Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

With horrifying images from Kyiv and Kharkiv circulatin­g on social media and a rising death toll of Ukrainian citizens, Biden sought to articulate how the state of the union was linked to the state of the world – and democracy’s ability to survive in that world.

As a scholar of Cold War presidenti­al rhetoric, I know Biden’s choice of words echo themes of past chief executives who spoke to Americans amid tension in Eastern Europe.

In this, his first State of the Union address, Biden spoke of national unity at a time of deep political polarisati­on.

He reminded his audience that they shared “a duty to one another, to America, to the American people, to the Constituti­on… (and) an unwavering resolve that freedom will always triumph over tyranny”.

By stressing a shared commitment to seeing freedom triumph over tyranny, Biden tapped into a common refrain of US foreign policy rhetoric.

This theme was especially prevalent during the Cold War. President Harry S Truman argued that the nation had a duty and responsibi­lity “to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugatio­n by armed minorities or by outside pressures.”

Later, Ronald Reagan held up the US as “a beacon… (and) a magnet for all who must have freedom”.

Biden also celebrated the courage and conviction of the Ukrainian people. Just as John F Kennedy declared in 1963 that “all free men” could identify as citizens of West Berlin, a city surrounded by a tyrannical government, Biden praised Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and “every Ukrainian” for “their fearlessne­ss, their courage, their determinat­ion, (that) literally inspires the world”.

The visual and embodied symbols of Ukrainian resistance filled the House Gallery, with some members of Congress dressed in yellow and blue – a deliberate nod to the vivid colours of the Ukrainian flag. Ukraine’s ambassador to the US, Oksana Markarova, was seated next to First Lady Jill Biden in the balcony.

The references underscore­d what Biden described as Putin’s attempt to “shake the very foundation­s of the free world” and belief that he could “make it bend to his menacing ways”.

But the Russian president had badly miscalcula­ted, Biden said.

“He thought he could roll into Ukraine and the world would roll over. Instead, he met a wall of strength he never anticipate­d or imagined.”

By focusing on Putin’s unprovoked attack on democracy, Biden shifted the focus from partisan infighting and political division to a unifying theme around which his entire audience could rally: a renewed commitment to defending the “free world”.

Indeed, the more than hourlong speech was light on criticism of Republican­s, with no mention of Donald Trump nor the attempted insurrecti­on at the US Capitol just over a year ago.

Rather, just like during the height of the Cold War, Biden chose to stress the values that have historical­ly united Americans.

To close, Biden declared that the “state of the union is strong – because you, the American people, are strong”.

This was America’s “moment of responsibi­lity”, its “moment to meet and overcome the challenges of our time… as one people”.

Although presidents almost always comment on the strength or health of the nation, this particular articulati­on also bore a striking similarity to another president, Zelensky who just days earlier declared that “each of us is the president… because we are all responsibl­e for our state”.

For Biden and Zelensky, the strength of the nation – and the survival of democracy – was defined by individual citizens, not an isolated leader desperate for power and determined to elevate their own image.

 ?? ?? ALLISON M PRASCH Assistant Professor of Rhetoric, Politics and Culture at the University of Wisconsin-madison.
ALLISON M PRASCH Assistant Professor of Rhetoric, Politics and Culture at the University of Wisconsin-madison.
 ?? | AFP ?? US PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during his State of the Union address to a Joint Session of Congress at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Tuesday.
| AFP US PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks during his State of the Union address to a Joint Session of Congress at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on Tuesday.

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