By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Foreign Policy For The World
America is back.” In
the early days of his presidency, Joe Biden repeated those words as a starting point
for his foreign policy. The phrase offered a bumper-sticker slogan to pivot
away from Donald Trump’s chaotic leadership. It also suggested that the United
States could reclaim its self-conception as a virtuous hegemon and that it
could make the rules-based international order great again. Yet even though a
return to competent normalcy was in order, the Biden administration’s mindset
of restoration has occasionally struggled against the currents of our
disordered times. An updated conception of U.S. leadership—one tailored to a
world that has moved on from American primacy and the eccentricities of
American politics—is necessary to minimize enormous risks and pursue new
opportunities.
To be sure, Biden’s
initial pledge was a balm to many after Trump’s presidency ended in the dual
catastrophes of COVID-19 and the January 6 insurrection. Yet two challenges
largely beyond the Biden administration’s control shadowed the message of
superpower restoration. First was the specter of Trump’s return. Allies watched
nervously as the former president maintained his grip on the Republican Party
and Washington remained mired in dysfunction. Autocratic adversaries, most
notably Russian President Vladimir Putin, bet on Washington’s lack of
staying power. New multilateral agreements akin to the Iran nuclear deal, the
Paris Agreement on climate change, or the Trans-Pacific Partnership were
impossible, given the vertiginous swings in U.S. foreign policy.
Second, the old
rules-based international order doesn’t exist anymore. Sure, the laws,
structures, and summits remain in place. But core institutions such as the UN
Security Council and the World Trade Organization are tied in knots by
disagreements among their members. Russia is committed to disrupting
U.S.-fortified norms. China is committed to building its alternative order. On
trade and industrial policy, even Washington is moving away from the core
tenets of post–Cold War globalization. Regional powers such as Brazil, India,
Turkey, and the Gulf states pick and choose which partner to plug into
depending on the issue. Even the high-water mark for multilateral action in the
Biden years—support for Ukraine in its fight against Russia—remains a largely Western
initiative. As the old order unravels, these overlapping blocs are competing
over what will replace it.
A Biden victory
in this fall’s election would offer reassurance that the particular risk of
another Trump presidency has passed, but that will not vanquish the forces of
disorder. To date, Washington has failed to do the necessary audit of the ways
its post–Cold War foreign policy discredited U.S. leadership. The “war on
terror” emboldened autocrats, misallocated resources, fueled a global migration
crisis, and contributed to an arc of instability from South Asia through North
Africa. The free-market prescriptions of the so-called Washington consensus
ended in a financial crisis that opened the door to populists railing against
out-of-touch elites. The overuse of sanctions led to increased workarounds and
global fatigue with Washington’s weaponization of the dollar’s dominance. Over
the last two decades, American lectures on democracy have increasingly been
tuned out.
Indeed, after
Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel and the Israeli military campaign
in Gaza, American rhetoric about the rules-based international order has been
seen around the world on a split screen of hypocrisy, as Washington has
supplied the Israeli government with weapons used to bombard Palestinian
civilians with impunity. The war has created a policy challenge for an
administration that criticizes Russia for the same indiscriminate tactics that
Israel has used in Gaza, a political challenge for a Democratic Party with core
constituencies who don’t understand why the president has supported a far-right
government that ignores the United States’ advice, and a moral crisis for a
country whose foreign policy purports to be driven by universal values. Put
simply: Gaza should shock Washington out of the muscle memory that guides too
many of its actions.
If Biden does win a
second term, he should use it to build on those of his policies that have
accounted for shifting global realities, while pivoting away from the political
considerations, maximalism, and Western-centric view that have caused his
administration to make some of the same mistakes as its predecessors. The
stakes are high. Whoever is president in the coming years will have to avoid
global war, respond to the escalating climate crisis, and grapple with the rise
of new technologies such as artificial intelligence. Meeting the moment
requires abandoning a mindset of American primacy and recognizing that the
world will be a turbulent place for years to come. Above all, it requires
building a bridge to the future—not the past.
The Trump Threat
One of Biden’s
mantras is “Don’t compare me to the Almighty; compare me to the alternative.”
As the presidential campaign heats up, it is worth heeding this advice. But to
properly outline the dangers of a second Trump term, it is necessary
to take Trump’s arguments seriously, despite the unserious form they often
take. Much of what Trump says resonates broadly. Americans are tired of wars;
indeed, his takeover of the Republican Party would have been impossible without
the Iraq war, which discredited the GOP establishment. Americans also no longer
trust their elites. Although Trump’s rhetoric about a “deep state” moves
quickly into baseless conspiracy theory, it strikes a chord with voters who
wonder why so many of the politicians who promised victories in Afghanistan and
Iraq were never held to account. And although Trump’s willingness to cut off
assistance to Ukraine is abhorrent to many, there is a potent populism to it.
How long will the United States spend tens of billions of dollars helping a
country whose stated aim—the recapture of all Ukrainian territory—seems
unachievable?
Trump has also
harnessed a populist backlash to globalization from both the right and the left.
Particularly since the 2008 financial crisis, large swaths of the public in
democracies have simmered with discontent over widening inequality,
deindustrialization, and a perceived loss of control and lack of meaning. It is
no wonder that the exemplars of post–Cold War globalization—free trade
agreements, the U.S.-Chinese relationship, and the instruments of international
economic cooperation itself—have become ripe targets for Trump. When Trump’s
more punitive approaches to rivals, such as his trade war with China, didn’t
precipitate all the calamities that some had predicted, his taboo-breaking
approach appeared to be validated. The United States, it turned out, did have
leverage.
But offering a potent
critique of problems should not be confused with having the right solutions to
them. To begin with, Trump’s presidency seeded much of the chaos that Biden has
faced. Time and again, Trump pursued politically motivated shortcuts that made
things worse. To end the war in Afghanistan, he cut a deal with the Taliban
over the heads of the Afghan people, setting a timeline for withdrawal that was
shorter than the one Biden eventually adopted. Trump pulled out of
the Iran nuclear deal despite Iranian compliance, unshackling the
country’s nuclear program, escalating a proxy war across the Middle East, and
sowing doubt across the world about whether the United States keeps its word.
By moving the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, recognizing
the annexation of the Golan Heights, and pursuing the Abraham Accords, he cut
the Palestinians out of Arab-Israeli normalization and emboldened Israel’s far
right, lighting a fuse that detonated in the current war.
Although Trump’s
tougher line with China demonstrated the United States’ leverage, it was
episodic and uncoordinated with allies. As a result, Beijing was able to cast
itself as a more predictable partner to much of the world, while the supply
chain disruptions caused by trade disputes and decoupling created new
inefficiencies—and drove up costs—in the global economy. Trump’s lurch from
confronting to embracing Kim Jong Un enabled the North Korean leader to advance
his nuclear and missile programs under reduced pressure. Closer to home,
Trump’s recognition of an alternative Venezuelan government under the
opposition leader Juan Guaidó managed to strengthen
the incumbent Nicolás Maduro’s hold on power. The “maximum pressure” policy
toward Venezuela and Cuba, which sought to promote regime change through
crippling sanctions and diplomatic isolation, fueled humanitarian crises that
have sent hundreds of thousands of people to the United States’ southern
border.
Biden in Washington, D.C., May 2024
A second Trump term
would start amid a more volatile global environment than his first, and there
would be fewer guardrails constraining a president who would be in command of
his party, surrounded by loyalists, and freed from ever having to face voters again.
Although there are many risks, three stand out. First, Trump’s blend of
strongman nationalism and isolationism could create a permission structure for
aggression. A withdrawal of U.S. support for Ukraine—and, perhaps, for NATO itself—would embolden Putin to push deeper into the
country. Were Washington to abandon its European allies and promote right-wing
nationalism, it could exacerbate political fissures within Europe, emboldening
Russian-aligned nationalists in such places as Hungary and Serbia who have
echoed Putin in seeking to reunite ethnic populations in neighboring states.
Despite U.S.-Chinese
tensions, East Asia has avoided the outright conflict of Europe and the Middle
East. But consider the opportunity that a Trump victory would present to North
Korea. Fortified by increased Russian technological assistance, Kim could ratchet
up military provocations on the Korean Peninsula, believing that he has a
friend in the White House. Meanwhile, according to U.S. assessments, China’s
military will be ready for an invasion of Taiwan by 2027. If Chinese
leader Xi Jinping truly wishes to forcibly bring Taiwan under
Beijing’s sovereignty, the twilight of a Trump presidency—by which point the
United States would likely be alienated from its traditional allies—could
present an opening.
Second, if given the
chance, Trump has made it clear that he would almost certainly roll back
American democracy, a move that would reverberate globally. If his first
election represented a one-off disruption to the democratic world, his second
would more definitively validate an international trend toward ethnonationalism
and authoritarian populism. Momentum could swing further in the direction of
far-right parties in Europe, performative populists in the Americas, and
nepotistic and transactional corruption in Asia and Africa. Consider for a
moment the aging roster of strongmen who will likely still be leading other
powers—not just Xi and Putin but also Narendra Modi in India, Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel, Ali Khamenei in Iran, and Recep
Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey. To say the least, this cast of characters is unlikely
to promote respect for democratic norms within borders or conciliation beyond
them.
This leads to the
third danger. In the coming years, leaders will increasingly be confronted with
global problems that can be managed or solved only through cooperation. As the
climate crisis worsens, a Trump presidency would make a coordinated international
response much harder and validate the backlash against environmental policies
that has been building within advanced economies. At the same time, artificial
intelligence is poised to take off, creating both valuable opportunities and
enormous risks. At a moment when the United States should be turning to
diplomacy to avoid wars, establish new norms, and promote greater international
cooperation, the country would be led by an “America first” strongman.
A Time To Heal
In any
administration, national security policy is a peculiar mix of long-standing
commitments, old political interests, new presidential initiatives, and
improvised responses to sudden crises. Navigating the rough currents of the
world, the Biden administration has often seemed to embody the contradictions
of this dynamic, with one foot in the past, yearning nostalgically for American
primacy, and one foot in the future, adjusting to the emerging world as it is.
Through its
affirmative agenda, the administration has reacted well to changing realities.
Biden linked domestic and foreign policy through his legislative agenda. The
CHIPS Act made substantial investments in science and innovation, including the
domestic manufacturing of semiconductors. The act worked in parallel with
ramped-up export and investment controls on China’s high-tech sector, which
have buttressed the United States’ lead in the development of new technologies
such as AI and quantum computing. Although this story is more complicated to
tell than one about a tariff-based trade war, Biden’s policy is in fact more
coherent: revitalize U.S. innovation and advanced manufacturing, disentangle
critical supply chains from China, and maintain a lead for U.S. companies in
developing new and potentially transformative technologies.
Biden’s most
significant piece of legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act, made enormous
investments in clean energy technology. These investments will allow the United
States to raise its ambition in meeting climate goals by pushing domestic
industry and global markets to shift away from fossil fuels faster. Although
this breakthrough enhanced U.S. credibility on climate change, it also created
new challenges, as even allies have complained that Washington resorted to
subsidies instead of pursuing coordinated cross-border approaches to reduce
emissions. In this respect, however, the Biden administration was dealing with
the world as it is. Congress cannot pass complex reforms such as putting a
price on carbon; what it can do is pass large spending bills that invest in the
United States.
Despite tensions over
U.S. industrial policy, the Biden administration has effectively reinvested in
alliances that frayed under Trump. That effort has tacitly acknowledged that
the world now features competing blocs, which makes it harder for the United
States to pursue major initiatives by working through large international
institutions or with other members of the great-power club. Instead, Washington
has prioritized groupings of like-minded countries that are, to use a catch
phrase, “fit for purpose.” Collaboration with the United Kingdom and Australia
on nuclear submarine technology. New infrastructure and AI initiatives through
the G-7. Structured efforts to create more consultation among U.S. allies in
the Indo-Pacific. This approach involves a dizzying number of parts; one can
lose track of the number of regional consultative groups that now exist. But in
the context of an unraveled international order, it makes sense to thread
together cooperation where possible, while trying to turn new habits of cooperation
into enduring arrangements.
Most notably, Biden’s
reinvestment in European alliances paid off when Washington was able to swiftly
mobilize support for Ukraine in 2022. This task was made easier by the
administration’s innovative release of intelligence on Russia’s intentions to
invade, an overdue reform of the way that Washington manages information.
Although the war has reached a tenuous stalemate, the effort to fortify
transatlantic institutions continues to advance. NATO has grown in size,
relevance, and resourcing. European Union institutions have taken a more
proactive role in foreign policy, most notably in coordinating support for
Ukraine and accelerating its candidacy for EU membership. For all the
understandable consternation about Washington’s struggle to pass a recent aid bill
for Ukraine, Europe’s focus on its own institutions and capabilities was long
overdue.
Slow To Change
Yet there are three
important ways in which the Biden administration has yet to recalibrate its
approach to the world of post-American primacy. The first has to do with
American politics. On several issues that engender controversy in Congress, the
administration has constrained or distorted its options by preemptively
deferring to outdated hard-liners. Even as Trump has demonstrated how the
left-right axis has been scrambled on foreign policy, Biden at times feels
trapped in the national security politics of the immediate post-9/11 era. Yet
what once allowed a politician to appear tough to appease hawks in Washington
was rarely good policy; now, it is no longer necessarily good politics.
In Latin America, the
Biden administration was slow to pivot away from Trump’s “maximum pressure”
campaigns on Venezuela and Cuba. Biden maintained, for example, the avalanche
of sanctions that Trump imposed on Cuba, including the cynical return of that country
to the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism just before
leaving office, in January 2021. The result has been an acute humanitarian
crisis in which U.S. sanctions exacerbated shortages of basic staples such as
food and fuel, contributing to widespread suffering and migration. In the
Middle East, the administration failed to move swiftly to reenter the
politically contested Iran nuclear deal, opting instead to pursue what Biden
called a “longer and stronger” agreement, even though Trump was the one who
violated the deal’s terms. Instead, the administration embraced
Trump’s Abraham Accords as central to its Middle East policy while reverting to
confrontation with Iran. This effectively embraced Netanyahu’s preferred
course: a shift away from pursuing a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and toward an open-ended proxy war with Tehran.
Anyone who has worked
at the nexus of U.S. politics and national security knows that avoiding
friction with anti-Cuban and pro-Israeli hard-liners in Congress can feel like
the path of least resistance. But that logic has turned into a trap. After
October 7, Biden decided to pursue a strategy of fully embracing
Netanyahu—insisting (for a time) that any criticism would be issued in private
and that U.S. military assistance would not be conditioned on the actions of
the Israeli government. This engendered immediate goodwill in Israel, but it
preemptively eliminated U.S. leverage. It also overlooked the far-right nature
of Netanyahu’s governing coalition, which offered warning signs about the
indiscriminate way in which it planned to prosecute its military campaign, as
Israeli officials cut off food and water flowing into Gaza within days of
Hamas’s attack. In the months that followed, the administration has been trying
to catch up to a deteriorating situation, evolving from a strategy of embracing
Netanyahu, to one of issuing rhetorical demands that were largely ignored, to
one of partial restrictions on offensive military assistance. Ironically, by
being mindful of the political risks of breaking with Netanyahu, Biden invited
greater political risks from within the Democratic coalition and around the
world.
The temptation to
succumb to Washington’s outdated instincts has contributed to a second
liability: the pursuit of maximalist objectives. The administration has shown
some prudence in this area. Even as competition ramped up with China, Biden has
worked over the last year to rebuild lines of communication with Beijing and
has largely avoided provocative pronouncements on Taiwan. And even as he
committed the United States to helping Ukraine defend itself, Biden set the objective of
avoiding a direct war between the United States and Russia (although his
rhetoric did drift into endorsing regime change in Moscow). The bigger
challenge has at times come from outside the administration, as some supporters
of Ukraine indulged in a premature triumphalism that raised impossible
expectations for last year’s Ukrainian counteroffensive. Paradoxically, this
impulse ended up hurting Ukraine: when the campaign inevitably came up short,
it made the broader U.S. policy toward Ukraine look like a failure. Sustaining
support for Ukraine will require greater transparency about what is achievable
in the near term and an openness to negotiations in the medium term.
Biden and U.S. officials meeting with a Chinese
delegation in Woodside, California, November 2023
Gaza also showcases
the danger of maximalist aims. Israel’s stated objective of destroying Hamas
has never been achievable. Since Hamas would never announce its surrender,
pursuing this goal would require a perpetual Israeli occupation of Gaza or the
mass displacement of its people. That outcome may be what some Israeli
officials want, as evidenced by right-wing ministers’ statements. It is
certainly what many people around the world, horrified by the campaign in Gaza,
believe the Israeli government really wants. These critics wonder why
Washington would support such a campaign, even as its own rhetoric opposes it.
Instead of seeking to moderate Israel’s unsustainable course, Washington needs
to use its leverage to press for negotiated agreements, Palestinian state
building, and a conception of Israeli security that is not beholden to
expansionism or permanent occupation.
Indeed, too many
prescriptions sound good in Washington but fail to account for simple
realities. Even with the United States’ military advantage, China will develop
advanced technologies and maintain its claim over Taiwan. Even with sustained
U.S. support, Ukraine will have to live next to a large, nationalist,
nuclear-armed Russia. Even with its military dominance, Israel cannot eliminate
the Palestinian demand for self-determination. If Washington allows foreign
policy to be driven by zero-sum maximalist demands, it risks a choice between
open-ended conflict and embarrassment.
This leads to the
third way in which Washington must change its approach. Too often, the United
States has appeared unable or unwilling to see itself through the eyes of most
of the world’s population, particularly people in the global South who feel that
the international order is not designed for their benefit. The Biden
administration has made laudable efforts to change this perception—for
instance, delivering COVID-19 vaccines across the developing world, mediating
conflicts from Ethiopia to Sudan, and sending food aid to places hit hard by
shortages exacerbated by the war in Ukraine. Yet the overuse of sanctions,
along with the prioritization of Ukraine and other U.S. geopolitical interests,
misreads the room. To build better ties with developing countries, Washington
needs to consistently prioritize the issues they care about: investment,
technology, and clean energy.
Once again, Gaza interacts
with this challenge. To be blunt: for much of the world, it appears that
Washington doesn’t value the lives of Palestinian children as much as it values
the lives of Israelis or Ukrainians. Unconditional military aid to Israel,
questioning the Palestinian death toll, vetoing cease-fire resolutions at the
UN Security Council, and criticizing investigations into alleged Israeli war
crimes may all feel like autopilot in Washington—but that’s precisely the
problem. Much of the world now hears U.S. rhetoric about human rights and the
rule of law as cynical rather than aspirational, particularly when it fails to
wrestle with double standards. Total consistency is unattainable in foreign
policy. But by listening and responding to more diverse voices from around the
world, Washington could begin to build a reservoir of goodwill.
A Farewell To Primacy
In its more
affirmative agenda, the Biden administration is repositioning the United States
for a changing world by focusing on the resilience of its own democracy and
economy while rebooting alliances in Europe and Asia. To extend that
regeneration into something more global and lasting, it should abandon the
pursuit of primacy while embracing an agenda that can resonate with more of the
world’s governments and people.
As was the case in
the Cold War, the most important foreign policy achievement will simply be
avoiding World War III. Washington must recognize that all three fault lines of
global conflict today—Russia-Ukraine, Iran-Israel, and China-Taiwan—run across
territories just beyond the reach of U.S. treaty obligations. In other words,
these are not areas where the American people have been prepared to go to war
directly. With little public support and no legal obligation to do that,
Washington should not count on bluffing or military buildups alone to resolve
these issues; instead, it will have to focus relentlessly on diplomacy,
buttressed by reassurance to frontline partners that there are alternative
pathways to achieving security.
In Ukraine, the
United States and Europe should focus on protecting and investing in the
territory controlled by the Ukrainian government—drawing Ukraine into European
institutions, sustaining its economy, and fortifying it for lengthy
negotiations with Moscow so that time works in Kyiv’s favor. In the Middle
East, Washington should join with Arab and European partners to work directly
with Palestinians on the development of new leadership and toward the
recognition of a Palestinian state, while supporting Israel’s security.
Regional de-escalation with Iran should, as it did during the Obama
administration, begin with negotiated restrictions on its nuclear program. In
Taiwan, the United States should try to preserve the status quo by investing in
Taiwanese military capabilities while avoiding saber rattling, by structuring
engagement with Beijing to avoid miscalculation, and by mobilizing
international support for a negotiated, peaceful resolution to Taiwan’s status.
Hawks will inevitably
attack diplomacy on each of these issues with tired charges of appeasement, but
consider the alternative of seeking the total defeat of Russia, regime change
in Iran, and Taiwanese independence. Can Washington, or the world, risk a drift
into global conflagration? Moreover, the reality is that sanctions and military
aid alone will not stop war from spreading or somehow cause the governments of
Russia, Iran, and China to collapse. Better outcomes, including within those
countries, will be more attainable if Washington takes a longer view.
Ultimately, the health of the United States’ own political model and society is
a more powerful force for change than purely punitive measures. Indeed, one
lesson that is lost on today’s hawks is that the civil rights movement did far
more to win the Cold War than the war in Vietnam did.
None of this will be
easy, and success is not preordained, since unreliable adversaries also have
agency. But given the stakes, it is worth exploring how a world of competing
superpower blocs could be knitted into coexistence and negotiation on issues that
cannot be dealt with in isolation. For instance, AI presents one area in which
nascent dialogue between Washington and Beijing should evolve into the pursuit
of shared international norms. Laudable U.S. efforts to pursue collaborative
research on AI safety with like-minded countries will inevitably have to expand
to further include China in higher-level and more consequential talks. These
efforts should seek agreement on the mitigation of extreme harms, from the use
of AI in developing nuclear and biological weapons to the arrival of artificial
general intelligence, an advanced form of AI that risks surpassing human
capacities and controls. At the same time, as AI moves out into the
world, the United States can use its leadership to work with countries that are
eager to harness the technology for positive ends, particularly in the
developing world. The United States could offer incentives for countries to
cooperate with Washington on both AI safety and affirmative uses of new
technologies.
Biden and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, July 2022
A similar dynamic is
required on clean energy. If there is a second Biden administration, most of
its efforts to combat climate change will likely shift from domestic action to
international cooperation, particularly if there is divided government in Washington.
As the United States works to secure supply chains for critical minerals used
for clean energy, it will need to avoid constantly working at cross-purposes
with Beijing. At the same time, it has an opportunity—through “de-risking”
supply chains, forging public-private partnerships, and starting multilateral
initiatives—to invest more in parts of Africa, Latin America, and Southeast
Asia that have not always been an attractive destination for American capital.
In a sense, the Inflation Reduction Act has to be globalized.
Finally, the United
States should focus its support for democracy on the health of existing open
societies and offering lifelines to besieged civil society groups around the
world. As someone who has made the case for putting support for democracy at
the center of U.S. foreign policy, I must acknowledge that the calcification of
the democratic recession in much of the world requires Washington to
recalibrate. Instead of framing the battle between democracy and autocracy as a
confrontation with a handful of geopolitical adversaries, policymakers in
democracies must recognize that it is first and foremost a clash of values that
must be won within their own societies. From that self-corrective vantage
point, the United States should methodically invest in the building blocks of
democratic ecosystems: anticorruption and accountability initiatives,
independent journalism, civil society, digital literacy campaigns, and
counter-disinformation efforts. The willingness to share sensitive information,
on display in the run-up to war in Ukraine, should be applied to other cases
where human rights can be defended through transparency. Outside government,
democratic movements and political parties across the world should become more
invested in one another’s success, mirroring what the far right has done over
the last decade by sharing best practices, holding regular meetings, and
forming transnational coalitions.
Ultimately, the most
important thing that America can do in the world is detoxify its own democracy,
which is the main reason a Trump victory would be so dangerous. In the United
States, as elsewhere, people are craving a renewed sense of belonging, meaning,
and solidarity. These are not concepts that usually find their way into foreign
policy discussions, but if officials do not take that longing seriously, they
risk fueling the brand of nationalism that leads to autocracy and conflict. The
simple and repeated affirmation that all human life matters equally, and that
people everywhere are entitled to live with dignity, should be America’s basic
proposition to the world—a story it must commit to in word and deed.
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