The Macomb Daily

Biden avoids a further Mideast spiral as Israel and Iran show restraint

- By Aamer Madhani

>> President Joe Biden can breathe a bit easier, at least for the moment, now that Israel and Iran appear to have stepped back from the brink of tipping the Middle East into all-out war.

Israel’s retaliator­y strikes on Iran and Syria caused limited damage. The restrained action came after Biden urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to temper its response to Iran’s unpreceden­ted direct attack on Israel last week and avoid an escalation of violence in the region. Iran’s barrage of drones and missiles inflicted little damage and followed a suspected Israeli attack on the Iranian consulate in Damascus this month that killed two generals.

Iran’s public response to the Israeli strikes Friday also was muted, raising hopes that Israel-Iran tensions — long carried out in the shadows with cyberattac­ks, assassinat­ions and sabotage — will stay at a simmer.

The situation remains a delicate one for Biden as he gears up his reelection effort i n the face of headwinds in the Middle East, Russia and the Indo-Pacific. All are testing the propositio­n he made to voters during his 2020 campaign that a Biden White House would bring a measure of calm and renewed respect for the United States on the world stage.

Foreign policy matters are not typically the top issue for American voters. This November is expected to be no different, with the economy and border security carrying greater resonance.

But public polling suggests that overseas concerns could have more relevance with voters than in

any U.S. election since 2006, when voter dissatisfa­ction over the Iraq War was a major factor in the Republican Party losing 30 House and six Senate seats.

“We see this issue rising in saliency, and at the same time we’re seeing voter appraisals of President Biden’s handling of foreign affairs being quite negative,” said Christophe­r Borick, director of the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion. “That combinatio­n is not a great one for Biden.”

Biden has staked enormous political capital on his response to the Israel-Hamas war as well as his administra­tion’s backing of Ukraine as it fends off a Russian invasion.

Biden also has made bolstering relations in the Indo-Pacific a central focus of his foreign policy agenda, looking to win allies and build ties as China becomes a more formidable economic and military competitor.

But Republican­s, including former President Donald Trump, have an argument to make that Biden’s policies have contribute­d to the U.S. dealing with myriad global quandaries, said Richard Goldberg, a senior adviser at the Washington think tank Foundation for the Defense of

Democracie­s.

Republican­s have criticized Biden’s unsuccessf­ul efforts earlier in his term to revive a nuclear deal with Iran brokered by the Obama administra­tion and abandoned by Trump, saying that would embolden Tehran. The agreement had provided Iran with billions in sanctions relief in exchange for the country agreeing to roll back its nuclear program.

GOP critics have sought to connect Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to Biden’s decision to withdraw from Afghanista­n and they blame the Obama administra­tion for not offering a strong enough response to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 2014 seizure of Crimea.

“You can make an intellectu­al case, a policy case of how we got from Point A to B to C to D and ended up in a world on fire,” said Goldberg, a national security official in the Trump administra­tion. “People may not care about how we got here, but they do care that we are here.”

Polling suggests Americans’ concerns about foreign policy issues are growing, and there are mixed signs of whether Biden’s pitch as a steady foreign policy hand is resonating with voters.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden speaks at the IBEW Constructi­on and Maintenanc­e Conference, Friday, in Washington.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden speaks at the IBEW Constructi­on and Maintenanc­e Conference, Friday, in Washington.

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