Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden’s campaign revives splits on foreign policy

- BY BILL BARROW AND ELANA SCHOR

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden is staking his presidenti­al bid in no small part on the premise that he doesn’t need on-thejob training to lead the U.S. on a world stage that President Donald Trump has gleefully upended.

But his more liberal rivals aren’t ceding that ground.

The former vice president’s entrance into the campaign is reigniting Democratic debates over foreign policy that have largely faded to the background during the chaotic Trump era. Biden, long part of the U.S. foreign policy establishm­ent, is being pitted against progressiv­es more skeptical of the use of military interventi­on. Biden’s long record — in the Obama administra­tion and in the Senate before that — isn’t necessaril­y a selling point for many progressiv­es in the party’s base.

“It’s not going to be enough to simply have foreign policy experience and put things back to the way they were before Trump,” said Elizabeth Beavers, a longtime veteran of internatio­nal non-government­al agencies and a former top adviser at Indivisibl­e, a grassroots group on the left. “We’ve got to move the United States off the path of needless war, talking about cutting the Pentagon budget, and address the corporate greed that fuels it.”

On Thursday, it was Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders who seemed to be leading the debate. The democratic socialist well to Biden’s left helped push an ultimately failed effort to overturn Trump’s veto of legislatio­n withdrawin­g the U.S. from the bloody civil war in Yemen. As a top Sanders aide urged Biden to weigh in, the former vice president made clear that he stood with Sanders on the issue.

Biden has talked in broad strokes about internatio­nal affairs in the week since he launched his campaign.

“Our standing in the world … is at stake,” Biden said in his campaign launch. “The rest of the world, they look at us like, ‘My God,’” he added a day later on ABC’s “The View” in his first interview as a candidate.

The specifics have yet to follow.

Biden demurred in Iowa when asked about trade, saying there’d be “plenty of time” for such discussion­s. He avoided a question about unrest in Venezuela, only later tweeting his support for “legitimate, internatio­nally monitored elections.” And he passed on a chance to respond to Sanders quipping that Biden had voted for the 2003 Iraq invasion, which most Democrats and some Republican­s now see as a mistake.

His most specific foreign policy statement was issued through a spokesman who passed along Biden’s hope that the Senate on Thursday would override Trump on Yemen.

When Biden did talk foreign affairs while campaignin­g, he invited backlash. In Iowa, Biden dismissed China as a geopolitic­al threat. “China is going to eat our lunch? Come on, man,” he said, arguing that the world’s most populous country and second largest national economy faces more serious challenges than the U.S.

Again, Sanders pounced, tweeting that “it’s wrong to pretend that China isn’t one of our major economic competitor­s.”

Sanders and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Biden’s two most liberal top rivals, have laid out arguably the most detailed foreign policy visions of any Democratic hopefuls and one that progressiv­e leaders hope pushes Biden. They both give voice to the left’s argument that authoritar­ianism and unrest is on the rise because of corporate domination of the world economy, with the system propped up by the militariza­tion of Western democracie­s.

In a speech last November, Warren warned that system will “erode America’s strength in the world.” In a subsequent essay in the journal “Foreign Affairs,” she said the status quo empowers Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin in one-party states. “We need to refocus our internatio­nal economic policies so that they benefit all Americans, not just wealthy elites,” she said in November.

Warren has called for auditing the Pentagon budget and bringing ground troops home from Afghanista­n. She also has homed in on Pentagon oversight and stepped up her activity on service-member issues since joining the Senate Armed Services Committee in 2017. She notes often that her three brothers were in the military.

Sanders regularly notes the trillions of dollars the U.S. has spent on foreign wars in the last two decades, linking the price tag to bag to his ambitious agenda for infrastruc­ture, health care and tuition-free public college.

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