Joe Biden isn’t a foreign policy guru. He’s a Stepford wife repeating ‘War Party’ talking points
By: Rachel Marsden
There’s a trope emerging that credits Biden with being a bona fide foreign
policy expert. Alongside this delusion is the expectation that he will eat
Trump’s lunch during the upcoming election debates. I wouldn’t bank on that.
When it comes to foreign policy, Biden is little more than a Stepford wife who
has simply repeated the talking points of the faction that truly runs Washington
and American foreign policy. If this faction had an actual name, it might be
called the War Party, and it would consist of both Republican and Democratic
Party members.
It’s hardly surprising, for example, that the wife of late Senator John McCain,
who rarely if ever encountered a war that he didn’t support (despite being taken
prisoner and tortured himself during the Vietnam War), said that she would back
Biden. The fact that Biden is a Democrat and McCain was a Republican is beside
the point when their worldview is virtually identical.
Like a wind-up doll constantly spewing whatever its makers programmed into it,
Biden tweeted this week: “As Juan Guaidó speaks about the Venezuelan
humanitarian crisis and the crimes against humanity perpetrated by Maduro, I
reaffirm my commitment to stand with the Venezuelan people. A Biden-Harris
administration will always champion democracy and human rights around the
world.”
How about starting with championing democracy in Venezuela by allowing the
Venezuelan people to choose their own opposition to President Nicolas Maduro?
Juan Guaido was simply handpicked by the US to play President of Venezuela in
the hope that they’d fool the rest of the world into believing that it was true.
It doesn’t seem to be getting the traction they had hoped. So now Guaido is
resorting to doing online Zoom chats, in which he delivers a speech pretending
to address the United Nations Assembly in parallel to President Maduro’s actual
UN speech.
It wasn’t the first time that Biden had violated the democratic values that he
purports to uphold by attempting to impose his worldview on the people of a
foreign country. During his Democratic National Convention address last month,
Biden said: “We cannot elect a man who belittles our closest allies while
embracing dictators like Vladimir Putin.”
Well, actually, Joe, America could indeed feasibly re-elect Trump, in the same
way that the Russian people have repeatedly chosen Putin over the main Communist
Party opposition in Russia. A voting result that delegitimizes the worldview of
Biden and fellow neoconservative global master planners isn’t a dictatorship.
What is dictatorial is trying to impose a foreign agenda on the citizens of
nations that happen to be led by officials who refuse to prostrate themselves
before US interests.
And it’s not just America’s foes who bear the brunt of Biden’s policy
self-centeredness. He even appears oblivious to the interests of US allies when
they fall out of step. In an op-ed earlier this month, Biden had the audacity to
dictate how he’d offer Iran a “credible path back to diplomacy” – by
unilaterally adding a series of pre-conditions for Iran to rejoin a multilateral
agreement that was breached not by Tehran but by Washington. It was the US that
let down its allied partners in the deal – Britain, Germany, and France – all of
which have been keen to see US sanctions dropped so they can finally normalize
relations with Iran via increased commercial ties.
To be fair, Trump’s foreign policy has also left a lot to be desired. Many of
his failures can be summed up in five words: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. In
the heat of a presidential campaign, Pompeo spent last week smack-talking Cuban
and Venezuelan leaders in Latin America in an attempt to drum up votes for Trump
among the Venezuelan and Cuban diaspora in Florida. Pompeo’s comedy routine
consists of visiting foreign countries and meddling in their domestic affairs by
telling them who they shouldn’t be doing business with – all the while playing
the victim of alleged foreign meddling in American affairs.
And it was Trump who hired regime change aficionado John Bolton as National
Security Advisor – before calling Bolton a “wacko”, a “dope”, and a “disgruntled
boring fool who only wanted to go to war.”
Trump’s no angel, but unlike Biden, at least he’s denigrated a warmonger. By
contrast, Biden outright supported wars in Syria, Libya, Serbia, and Iraq. If
history is any indication, he risks blindly stumbling into yet another one.
The fact that Trump is peddling the notion that Biden is a Trojan horse for
progressive leftists – who tend to be knee-jerk anti-war about as much as
neoconservatives are for it – is laughable. Perhaps someone could give Biden a
sharp tap. The kind that you’d give to a stubborn old model television set to
get it to work when the picture doesn’t display properly. Because he’s stuck
spewing neoconservative talking points and refuses to change his tune.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN