Biden's foreign policy chops were supposed to be a strength, but experts believe he's made major mistakes in front of the world
- Biden's foreign policy chops were supposed to help him succeed in global affairs.
- But his experience has not prevented him from making major mistakes.
- Biden has struggled to deliver on his pledge to restore a sense of competency to the presidency.
There are few people in Washington with more foreign policy experience than President Joe Biden. He was chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for over a decade, and as vice president played a key role in shaping the Obama administration's policies on global issues.
After four years of dysfunction under President Donald Trump, Biden pledged to restore a sense of competence to the presidency. "America is back," Biden declared in one of his earliest speeches as president on foreign policy. But almost a year into his presidency, Biden's foreign policy chops have not prevented him from making a series of major missteps before the world.
His administration's handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal stands at the top of the list. The Taliban rapidly regained control of Afghanistan as the US finalized the withdrawal, prompting chaotic scenes at the Kabul airport as thousands desperately sought to flee the country.
David Axelrod, a former strategist and advisor for President Barack Obama, last month told the New York Times that the mayhem surrounding the Afghanistan withdrawal cut against "some of [Biden's] core perceived strengths: competence, mastery of foreign policy, supreme empathy."
"It's as if his eagerness to end the war overran the planning and execution," Axelrod added.
Facing widespread criticism over how the pullout transpired, Biden and his advisors have repeatedly asserted that there was no indication that the US-backed government in Kabul would fall so quickly to the Taliban. But virtually every close observer of the conflict has been left baffled by this talking point.
"I'm left with some grave questions in my mind about his ability to lead our nation as commander in chief," Ryan Crocker, who served as the US ambassador to Afghanistan under the Obama administration, told the Washington state-based Spokesman-Review in August. "To have read this so wrong - or, even worse, to have understood what was likely to happen and not care."
"This is all so sad," Crocker said of the situation in Afghanistan. "It is a self-inflicted wound."
The Taliban already controlled huge portions of the country - at least half of the country's districts - by the time Biden in April announced all remaining troops would be pulled out. And it was no secret that the Afghan military, which has been plagued by corruption and a lack of discipline for years, would have a hard time holding off the militants without the US behind it.
"The Taliban is likely to make gains on the battlefield, and the Afghan Government will struggle to hold the Taliban at bay if the coalition withdraws support," the US intelligence community said in its annual threat assessment, which was released just days before Biden announced the withdrawal.
There's plenty of blame to go around when it comes to how the war in Afghanistan was handled overall. Republican and Democratic administrations repeatedly misled the US public about how the conflict was going. But any way you shake it, the Afghanistan withdrawal was an utter catastrophe for Biden. It led to the deadliest day for US service members in a decade - an ISIS-K attack outside the Kabul airport during evacuations killed 13 US service members and 169 Afghans.
The Biden administration responded to the ISIS-K suicide bombing with separate drone strikes. One of those strikes killed 10 Afghan civilians in Kabul, including seven children.
Initially, the US military said the drone attack was a "righteous strike" that took out an imminent ISIS-K attack. But it wasn't long before reporting undermined that narrative, and the Biden administration last week publicly admitted that the strike killed civilians. Top officials were forced to apologize and acknowledge that they'd gotten it completely wrong. The strike marked a tragic and embarrassing final act for the US in the longest conflict in its history.
Biden vowed to restore US alliances post-Trump, but the Afghanistan withdrawal has shaken the confidence of key NATO allies. The UK's defense secretary in the wake of the pullout suggested the US is no longer a superpower.
Beyond Afghanistan, Biden in the past month also alienated France - one of America's closest and most historic allies - in a massive way.
The US entered a nuclear submarine partnership with the UK and Australia that replaced a prior agreement between France and Australia. As a consequence, France recalled its ambassador to the US for the first time in history. The French were caught completely off guard by the new deal, and felt betrayed.
"This brutal, unilateral and unpredictable decision reminds me a lot of what Mr. Trump used to do," French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told France Info radio of the move last Thursday, per Reuters. The French foreign minister decried the agreement as a "stab in the back."
On Tuesday, Biden gave a speech to the United Nations General Assembly that was divorced from reality. The president sought to convince the audience that the Trump era is long gone, and the US has returned to the head of the table when it comes to global leadership.
"We're back at the table in international forums, especially the United Nations, to focus attention and to spur global action on shared challenges," Biden said. "And as the United States seeks to rally the world to action, we will lead not just with the example of our power but, God willing, with the power of our example."
But the example the US has set lately is hardly one that any nation seems eager to follow.