Springfield News-Sun

The honest media must ask: Now what, Mr. Biden?

- Oliver L. North and David L. Goetsch Oliver L. North is a combatdeco­rated U.S. Marine, author, founder and CEO of Fidelis Publishing and Fidelis Media. David Goetsch is a Marine Corps veteran, member of the Florida Veterans Hall of Fame, professor of busi

On Nov. 9, while flummoxed Republican­s were trying to figure out why their “Red Tsunami” didn’t happen in this year’s midterm elections, a buoyant Joe Biden held a White House news conference. His goal: change the subject. After meandering about looking forward to working constructi­vely with Rep. Kevin Mccarthy, Old Joe blamed a grueling internatio­nal travel itinerary for why he had to leave town on Nov. 10 before all the votes were tallied.

On Nov. 11 (Veterans Day in the U.S.), our geriatric-in-chief was lauded at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Egypt for his oft-repeated pledge: “No more drilling” in the USA. Joe and entourage then boarded his fossil-fueled Air Force One (accompanie­d by no less than seven other U.S. Air Force aircraft) and headed to Phnom Penh, Cambodia, for an Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations meeting and East Asia Summit on Nov. 12 and 13.

On arrival, our gaffeprone president expressed his appreciati­on to Cambodian strongman Prime

Minister Hun Sen, with, “I want to thank the prime minister for Colombia’s leadership as ASEAN chair.” The White House claimed Biden’s visit to the Cambodian capital was a success because he “reaffirmed the enduring U.S. commitment to the Indo-pacific” and a rulesbased internatio­nal order in the South China Sea. Exactly what this means was not questioned by the so-called mainstream media before the boss left for Bali, Indonesia, and the annual G20 gathering of Earth’s 19 industrial­ized nations, plus the European Union.

The two-day (Nov. 15-16) G20 summit has been described by some as

“the first global summit of the second cold war.” But in fact, it is simply the venue for our president’s much-ballyhooed one-onone with Communist China’s Xi Jinping. When the two men and their entourages met for more than three hours on Monday in an elaboratel­y decorated luxury hotel ballroom, both Biden and Xi could claim to be victors in their recent domestic political contests. Xi’s total triumph on Oct. 22 in the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Chinese Party really did make Xi “president for life,” with absolute authority to quash internal dissent.

Though it will take weeks to unwrap all the two leaders discussed, perhaps the most important outcome is a White House statement issued immediatel­y after it wrapped up: “President

Biden and President Xi reiterated their agreement that a nuclear war should never be fought and can never be won.”

If true, and only time will tell, that’s an important signal to Vladimir Putin and his saber-rattling about using nuclear weapons in Ukraine. Notably, Biden raised the issue — and our commitment to Taiwan — during his 15-minute “press availabili­ty” after the meeting with Xi.

Biden appeared to have been better prepared for this series of internatio­nal meetings. He certainly had moments of cognitive disarray and physical frailty, but overall, his performanc­e was predictabl­e. When he returns home, honest reporters and analysts — and there are some — must determine how he will proceed on a host of post-election and post-summit details. A few “now what” examples:

What steps are you going to take to restore America’s economy? What will you do to stem the nationwide crimewave threatenin­g the lives, safety and property of every man, woman and child? More than 3 million human beings from nearly every country on Earth have invaded our country. What will you do about it?

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