Biden declares 'America is back' as he announces major foreign policy shifts
Washington (CNN)President Joe Biden announced "America is back" on Thursday and declared that "diplomacy is back at the center" of US foreign policy as he said the US will end all support for Saudi Arabia's offensive operations in Yemen, one of several changes he announced in his first major foreign-policy speech since taking office.
Biden's
announcement at the State Department was just one of the significant
changes he said he will make to US foreign policy, including freezing
troop redeployments from Germany, raising the cap for refugees allowed
into the US and reaffirming US support for LGBTQ rights worldwide.
In
a call for values-led engagement with the world, Biden stressed that
the global challenges of the moment, including the need to counter
"advancing authoritarianism," will "only be solved by nations working
together."
"We
can't do it alone. ... We must start with diplomacy rooted in America's
most cherished democratic values," Biden said. "Defending freedom.
Championing opportunity. Upholding universal rights. Respecting the rule
of law. And treating every person with dignity."
Biden
acknowledged the threat to those values and to US global standing from
the attempted insurrection encouraged by former President Donald Trump.
"Though
many of these values have come under intense pressure in recent years,
even pushed to the brink in the last few weeks, the American people are
going to emerge from this moment more determined and better equipped to
unite the world to defend democracy because we have fought for it
ourselves," the President said.
He
delivered his speech after making less formal remarks to State
Department employees, telling them that "we're going to rebuild our
alliances. We're going to reengage the world and take on the enormous
challenges we face dealing with the pandemic, dealing with global
warming and again, standing up for democracy and human rights around the
world."
The
President, who visited the State Department on Thursday with Vice
President Kamala Harris, used the speech not only to unveil policy
changes, fulfill campaign promises and reverse Trump administration
policies, but also to reassert US global leadership and realign foreign
policy to better service the middle class.
"Everything"
the Biden administration does when it comes to foreign policy will be
examined as to whether it makes life "better, safer and easier for
working families," national security adviser Jake Sullivan told
reporters in a briefing to preview the President's remarks.
Biden
announced that "we are ending all American support for offensive
operations in the war in Yemen, including relevant arm sales," and said
he will appoint an envoy to focus on the long-standing conflict. He said
the conflict is "a war that has created humanitarian and strategic
catastrophe," but he also made clear the US will "continue to help and
support Saudi Arabia."
Biden
said Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin will lead a "global force
posture review" and, while that review is ongoing, will "freeze any
troop redeployments from Germany ... so our military footprint is
appropriately aligned with our foreign policy and national security
priorities."
The
President also announced his intention to increase the number of
refugees admitted into the United States after years of historical lows
under the Trump administration, and fulfill a campaign promise in doing
so.
The
Trump administration set a refugee cap of 15,000 for this fiscal year,
the lowest since 1980. On Thursday, Biden said he will raise the
admissions cap back up to 125,000 persons for the first full fiscal year
of his administration and will direct the State Department to work with
Congress on the issue.
Moral leadership
"The
United States' moral leadership on refugee issues was a point of
bipartisan consensus for so many decades when I first got here. We
shined the light of the lamp of liberty on oppressed people," Biden
said. "It's going to take time to rebuild what has been so badly
damaged. But that's precisely what we're going to do."
The
President also announced he would issue a presidential memorandum to
agencies "to reinvigorate our leadership on the LGBTQI issues, and do it
internationally" as part of an effort "to further repair our moral
leadership."
"We'll
ensure diplomacy and foreign assistance are working to promote the
rights of those individuals included by combating criminalization and
protecting LGBTQ refugees and asylum seekers," Biden said.
His
comments build on the commitments Secretary of State Antony Blinken
made during his confirmation hearing to swiftly appoint an LGBTI envoy,
allow embassies to fly the pride flag and formally repudiate the
findings of former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's controversial
"Commission on Unalienable Rights."
Biden
put particular emphasis on the need to rebuild America's moral standing
after four years of a president who rebuffed traditional alliances and
increasingly scorned democratic norms; a tenure that saw peaceful
protesters violently dispersed before a photo op; an embrace of
conspiracy theorists and White nationalist groups; and ultimately a
deadly insurrection aimed at overturning the results of a free and fair
election.
"We
will compete from a position of strength by building back better at
home, working with our allies and partners, renewing our international
institutions and reclaiming our credibility and moral authority, much of
which has been lost," Biden said.
The
President touted his administration's moves to elevate cyber by
appointing the first national deputy security adviser for cyber and
emerging technology, to weave climate objectives into all diplomacy and
to rejoin the World Health Organization and the Paris climate agreement.
And
he touched on a few specific cases. He called on the Burmese military
to "relinquish power they have seized. Release the advocates and
activists and officials they have detained, lift the restrictions in
telecommunications and refrain from violence."
Biden
hailed Wednesday's agreement to extend the New START Treaty with
Russia, to preserve the only remaining nuclear arms agreement between
them, but also criticized Russia for jailing opposition activist Alexey
Navalny. "He should be released immediately and without condition," he
said.
The
President spoke only generally about China, saying the US will confront
Beijing's "economic abuses, counter its aggressive, coercive action to
push back on China's attack on human rights, intellectual property, and
global governance." But some thorny issues -- including nuclear
negotiations with Iran and the continuing conflict between Israelis and
Palestinians -- he didn't mention at all.
'Trusted and empowered'
Biden
and Harris' visit to America's oldest Cabinet agency was meant "to make
sure we know that we have their support, and that means a great deal,"
Blinken said.
The
top US diplomat emphasized the President's organizing principle for his
foreign policy: that it benefit middle-class Americans. "Foreign policy
is domestic policy, and because our strength at home determines our
strength in the world, domestic policy is foreign policy too," he said.
Biden
and Harris "have made it clear that the first question we must ask
ourselves here at State is: How will this benefit our fellow Americans?
How will this policy answer their needs? How will this outreach reflect
their values? How will this initiative make their lives just a little
bit better?"
Biden
and Harris repeatedly told the diplomats gathered in the auditorium and
those watching online how much value the administration places in their
work.
Harris
told the department that "this is the foundation on which we stand" and
"everything you do ... makes a difference in the lives of everyday
Americans."
Biden
in particular hammered the point home. "In our administration, you're
going to be trusted and empowered to do your job," the President first
said in his remarks to staff and then reprised the theme in his second,
more formal speech. "This administration is going to empower you to do
your jobs," Biden said, "not target or politicize you."
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