President Joe Biden yesterday declared the “transatlantic alliance is back” in a powerful speech seeking to re-establish the US as leader of the West against what he called a global assault on democracy.
The address to the annual Munich Security Conference — held by video link because of the Covid-19 pandemic — dovetailed with German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s welcoming of a return to “multilateralism” after the confrontational years of Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump.
Making his first major international address on foreign policy since becoming president in January, Biden said traditional US allies should once again have confidence in Washington’s leadership.
“I’m sending a clear message to the world: America is back. The transatlantic alliance is back,” he said from the White House.
“The US is determined, determined to re-engage with Europe, to consult with you, earn back our position of trusted leadership,” he said.
Biden, who earlier spoke to leaders from the G7 club of wealthy democracies, said his administration was again stressing alliance building, in contrast to Trump’s isolationist policies and abrasive treatment of US partners.
“Our partnerships have endured and grown through the years because they are rooted in the richness of our shared democratic values. They’re not transactional. They’re not extractive,” Biden said in clear reference to Trump’s emphasis on redefining allies as economic rivals.
Collective strength, Biden said, is the only way to succeed when a worldwide contest between democracy and autocracy is at an “inflection point.”
“In too many places, including in Europe and the US, democratic progress is under assault,” Biden said. “Historians will examine and write about this moment. It’s an inflection point. And I believe with every ounce of my being that democracy must prevail.”
Biden said he was not seeking a return to “the rigid blocs of the Cold War,” insisting that the international community must work together on issues like the coronavirus pandemic and climate change, even where deep disagreements exist on other issues.
The return of the US – effective yesterday – to the Paris climate agreement was proof of Washington’s intentions, he said.
“We can no longer delay or do the bare minimum to address climate change,” Biden said, calling this a “global existential crisis.”
But Biden delivered harsh warnings about the threats he said are posed by Russia and China. “The Kremlin attacks our democracies and weaponises corruption to try and undermine our system of governance,” he said.
President Vladimir Putin “seeks to weaken the European project and our Nato alliance.”
Again urging Western unity, Biden said, “it’s so much easier for the Kremlin to bully and threaten individual states than to negotiate with a strong, closely united transatlantic community.”
Similarly, US partners should stand together against “the Chinese government’s economic abuses and coercion that undercut the foundations of the international economic system,” he said.
“Chinese companies should be held to the same standard” as US and European companies facing onerous restrictions on their presence in China, he said.
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