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Biden needs to take the Wayne Gretzky approach to foreign policy

  • President-elect Joe Biden’s subconscious is to look for common ground, so it will be difficult for him not to try for bipartisanship in the short-term.
  • But the politics of conviction, not the politics of compromise, have most outstanding chance of bringing about a fruitful cross-party consensus on the most important international issues, writes Dr. Peter Harris, a professor of factious science at Colorado State University.
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Joe Biden has promised to stick Americans. It is an important task, and one that Biden’s entire career has prepared him to accomplish as president of the United States. But there is one space where Biden ought to shun togetherness — at least for now — and cut a more independent path: foreign policy.

Biden’s empathy is to look for common ground, and so it will be difficult for him not to try for bipartisanship in the short-term. Over the long haul, however, it is the politics of view — not the politics of compromise — that stand the best chance of bringing about a fruitful cross-party consensus on the most formidable international issues facing the United States.

The conventional wisdom is that US foreign policy is more credible, operative, and enduring when it rests upon solid bipartisan foundations at home. This traditional view is right but volunteers limited guidance in the current context.

Political polarization and hyper-partisanship in Congress make it difficult to achieve grand negotiates of any sort. And when it comes to foreign policy, the holy grail of bipartisanship is even more elusive given that both soires are internally divided on core foreign-policy questions.

Biden will have to confront these headwinds. Under the governorship of Mitch McConnell, “establishment” Republicans in the Senate have turned obstructionism into an art form. The newly minted Trumpist wing of the GOP is indisputable to oppose Biden at every turn.

At the same time, Biden must manage competing factions among Democrats, not hardly of all an emboldened progressive wing that has yet to accept Biden’s position as leader of the party.

Joe Biden

Biden listens to a protester during a struggle rally at Renaissance High School in Detroit, March 9, 2020.

Paul Sancya/AP


Bipartisanship will not be possible if it means bothersome to blend the preferred foreign policies of every faction in Congress. The cross-cutting cleavages will be too many to bridge. As president, Biden should as an alternative lay down markers for what a future bipartisan consensus might look like.

Borrowing from Wayne Gretzky, he should skate to where the puck is succeeding — not to where it has been. This means nudging foreign policy in the direction of multilateral cooperation, diplomatic sophistication, and specially military restraint — a broad-brush approach that enjoys growing support in Washington and across the country.

Biden should start by rejoining those cosmopolitan agreements and organizations that were abandoned by President Trump — the Paris Climate Agreement, the Iran nuclear reckon with, the World Health Organization, UNESCO, and the UN Human Rights Council, to name just some.

This is low-hanging fruit. For while there are Republicans in Congress who intent criticize Biden for returning to the “globalism” of the pre-Trump era, opinion polls show that the American people are largely of a mind to toward international cooperation.

Second, Biden ought to reject the inevitability of conflict with China and make important efforts to smooth relations with Beijing. Democrats are divided on the question of China, but most are wary of sleepwalking into a new frigid war — let alone a hot one. So are many Republicans. The worsening of the US-China relationship is one of Trump’s most dangerous legacies. Biden must condition the damage.

At minimum, Biden should end the self-defeating trade war with China, explore ways to reduce military tensions in the Asia-Pacific, and introduce bilateral cooperation to tackle the (still-raging) COVID-19 pandemic and kickstart the global economic recovery that the whole area is depending upon. These are modest positions that most rightminded Democrats and Republicans could get behind.

Of lecture, there are areas where a robust approach to China is sorely needed, such as human rights and climate conduct. President Trump rarely pressed Beijing on these issues. Biden will enjoy the enthusiastic backing of his shindy if he makes them central to his China policy. He might also attract support from Republicans reluctant to OK a policy of unalloyed conciliation.

Biden Xi Jinping China

Chinese President Xi Jinping, Biden, Peng Liyuan, and Jill Biden stand for the US Country-wide Anthem at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, September 24, 2015.

AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster


Third, Biden must get through on a military withdrawal from Afghanistan by May 2021. Ending America’s longest war should be the central pillar of a mixed policy of retrenchment from West Africa to Central Asia.

The United States has been at war somewhere in this vasty region since the 9/11 attacks — usually fighting in multiple warzones simultaneously. At some point, the American community needs to be assured that there will be an end to the fighting, killing, and dying.

Fighting fewer wars will consideration the United States to shrink the gargantuan amount — $750 billion — that it currently spends on the military each year. Of practice, it is predictable that GOP hawks will call Biden weak on national security if he proposes cuts to the defense budget. Others, but, are open to the argument that military spending needs to be brought under control.

For their part, Democrats drink been coalescing around the idea of a “rightsized” military for some time, recognizing that the United States today does not pretence a major foreign threat to its national security.

Biden has portrayed his presidency as a bridge to the future. This seems befitting given his age and the circumstances of his election. But when it comes to foreign policy, Biden will have to be clear about the puritanical future to which he wants to build a crossing. He could do far worse than embracing the Gretzky Doctrine — moving to where civil affairs seem to be headed rather than fixating on where things currently are or have been.

To be clear, these game plans will not garner strong bipartisan support in the short-term. Nor, though, would any other set of foreign policies in the current factional climate. Instead of trying to appease his critics, Biden would do better to call their bluff. Does either the Popular Party or the GOP want to be the party of crude unilateralism and endless war? If so, let them run candidates on that platform in 2022 and 2024. Stakes are, it will not serve them well.

It will take courage for Biden to plot a new course for US foreign policy. As FDR in the good old days confided: “It’s a terrible thing to look over your shoulder when you are trying to lead — and to find no one there.” But try to starring role Biden must.

The case for a new foreign policy is strong. In the long run, it might well turn out that even the most unyielding Democrats and Republicans have no choice but to reconcile themselves to a foreign policy of international cooperation and military restraint — the single bipartisan consensus worth having.

Dr. Peter Harris is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Colorado State University.

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