Saturday, May 09, 2020

Foreign Correspondent: Biden vs. Trump On Foreign Policy

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-by Reese Erlich

We all know that President Donald Trump’s foreign policy has been a disaster. But is Joe Biden’s any better?

Trump promised to stop America's endless wars but has stationed some 80,000 troops in the Middle East. He pulled out of the Iran nuclear accord, and imposed harsh sanctions and even sent drones to assassinate a top Iranian Revolutionary Guard. But Iran still has more political influence in Iraq than the United States. His administration negotiated an agreement with the Taliban, only to see it rejected by the U.S.-installed Afghan government.

Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic Party presidential nominee, sharply criticizes Trump but, unfortunately, continues to defend many of the failed policies of the Obama Administration.

During Biden’s time as Vice President, the White House went from fighting two active wars (Afghanistan and Iraq) to seven (Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Yemen, drone war in Pakistan, and escalation in Somalia).

Biden now says he disagreed with some of Obama's interventionist policies, most notably in Libya. Today Biden calls for easing Iran sanctions, returning to the Iran nuclear accord, and reestablishing relations with Cuba.

“Biden represents the return of the classical foreign policy establishment,” Alan Minsky, executive director of Progressive Democrats of America, tells me. “Biden is running a campaign as a restoration candidate.”

But given significant changes in the world’s balance of power, it’s not all that clear what Biden could restore.

A changing world

Many corporate, State Department, military, and intelligence officials-- otherwise known as the Deep State-- hate Trump for his nationalist, America First policies.

The President imposed tariffs on allies around the world. He’s questioned the need for NATO. China and Russia have grown stronger economically and politically on the world stage, even after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Even card-carrying members of the Deep State acknowledge Washington has no reason to keep fighting in the Middle East. Martin Indyk, a former US ambassador to Israel, says what’s “been hard for many in the American foreign-policy establishment, including me, to accept: Few vital interests of the US continue to be at stake in the Middle East.”

In a major mea culpa in the Wall Street Journal, Indyk admits, “[A]fter the sacrifice of so many American lives, the waste of so much energy and money in quixotic efforts that ended up doing more harm than good, it is time for the US to find a way to escape the costly, demoralizing cycle of crusades and retreats.”

Whoever wins the election in November will face an economy wracked by recession, an electorate wary of more long-term military interventions, and other countries determined to go their own way.

What kind of foreign policy will that produce?

Biden boasts

Biden boasts of his foreign policy credentials. He chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee from 2001-2003 and 2007-2009. While generally hewing to interventionist Democratic Party policies, he has taken some independent stands, for example, by voting against the 1991 Gulf War.

By far Biden’s most reprehensible stand was his strong support for the 2003 invasion and occupation of Iraq. As documented by Professor Stephen Zunes in The Progressive, Biden forcefully supported the war, but later claimed he opposed it. (Of course, Trump lied about his support for the war as well.)

When the Iraqi occupation failed in the mid-2000s, Biden infamously called for splitting Iraq into three parts along sectarian lines, so the United States could continue imperial control at least in Kurdistan.

Even today, Biden favors maintaining some troops in the region, using the excuse of fighting ISIS. “I think it’s a mistake to pull out the small number of troops that are there now to deal with ISIS,” he’s said.

Biden hasn’t learned the lessons of the Afghan war either. After nineteen years of failed war and occupation, he still wants to maintain some troops in the country.

“I would bring American combat troops in Afghanistan home during my first term,” Biden tells the Council on Foreign Relations. “Any residual U.S. military presence in Afghanistan would be focused only on counterterrorism operations.”

But whoever wins in November will have to face the new reality: People in Afghanistan and the United States are fed up with the war. All foreign troops will have to withdraw.

Venezuela

Besides his bad record in the Middle East, Biden continues to support U.S. domination in Latin America. Both Trump and Biden call for the removal of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro, for example. Last year they supported efforts by Juan Guaido, the former head of the National Assembly, to anoint himself president.

The Venezuelan government accuses Washington and Guaido of trying to overthrow Maduro by armed force. Rightwing, former military officers tried to assassinate Maduro with a drone strike last year. Then on May 4, a group of mercenaries-- including two US Army vets-- landed on the Venezuelan coast intending to overthrow Maduro and install Guaido in power. The coup plot was organized by a Florida private security company. It has the earmarks of a U.S. intelligence operation, although not surprisingly, Trump denies it.

While Biden has not formally called for regime change in Venezuela, neither has he criticized the armed coup attempts. And he favors economic sanctions to cripple the economy, saying: “The U.S. should push for stronger multilateral sanctions so that supporters of the regime cannot live, study, shop, or hide their assets in the United States, Europe, or Latin America.”

In my opinion and that of many others, Bernie Sanders offered a far better foreign policy program than Biden. But Biden will at least restore the Iran nuclear accord, normalize relations with Cuba, and take steps to end the Yemen War. On the whole, Biden is better than Trump.

Biden has the potential of attracting working class and young voters disillusioned with Trump's aggression overseas. Younger voters have seen the country at war their entire lives, says Erik Sperling, executive director of the advocacy group Just Foreign Policy. “They know that, at a minimum, 30,000 people die every year in the U.S. from lack of health insurance. Fighting endless wars is not their priority.”

Biden will respond to anti-war activists far more readily than Trump. If Biden wins on November 3, then starting on November 4 progressives should be pressuring Biden to do more than “restore” U.S. foreign policy.

After the election, says Minsky, “We will be poised and ready to oppose a whole range of issues pursued by a Biden Administration.”


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5 Comments:

At 6:59 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Biden will continue the policy of conquering the world's petroleum reserves just like he'll be told to do.

 
At 10:55 PM, Blogger Ten Bears said...

Biden is a Republican, one of Nixon's Young Republicans. I don't vote for Republicans.

The ball is your court, dems, my conscious is clear.

 
At 2:41 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

ISIS rises to power under Obama as they moved through Syria and Iraq with ease, slaughtering anyone that got in their way- Within the first 2 years of Trumps presidency, he made good on a campaign promise to destroy ISIS with a relentless military campaign assisted by our allies. ISIS lost 95% of the territory it gained because of Obamas disasterous foreign policies in those 2 years
North Korea went unchecked for 8 years under Obama. North Koreas nuclear and ballistics missle technology programs were able to develop and test weapons capable of killing millions of Americans. -Trump was the first president in over a half century to visit NK for peace talks with NK agreeing to shut down its nuclear program for a short time. Trump negotiated the transfer of countless US soldiers bodies that for decades NK refused to turn over from the Korean war. Soldiers that payed the ultimate price in battle were finally laid to rest on US soil.
Unlike every other president before him, Trump stated to level the playing field with China and its trade relations with the US. As a result of the effective trade deal Trump negotiated, Chinas economy slowed to levels not seen in 2 decades. They were beginning to feel the economic fallout of Trump policies and at the same time our economy was booming.
The Paris Climate Accord that Obama signed us up for was an absolute joke. Countries got to set their own goals for reduction in green house gases which was a joke. A there were no penalties for failing to reach the goals, just a pat on the back and a better luck next year. And as modest of goals most countries set for themselves, only one country met their goal. In 2018 only one country met their goal. It was the US under Trump and after he pulled us out of the farce of a deal Obama signed us up for. It also saved the US taxpayer billions of dollars. I could go on but i really dont think the writer is capable of receiving facts contrary to what has been programmed into their tiny little mind

 
At 2:46 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Republicans must be desperate if they send us a war groupie to defend Trump.
Begone.

 
At 6:20 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

neither one's foreign policy is worth a shit. corporations will be defended to the last American life by either one.

but by all means, keep electing democraps... or trying. failure is always an option with them.

dumbest fucking population in the history of earth!

 

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