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In Biden-Trump handoff, a foreign policy shift for a changed world?

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Susan Walsh/AP
President Joe Biden, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken looking on, tells the audience to sit as he gets a standing ovation before delivering a foreign policy speech at the State Department in Washington, Jan. 13, 2025.

For Joe Biden, it鈥檚 been 鈥淎merica is back!鈥

For Donald Trump, 鈥淎merica First!鈥

The catch phrases that the departing and once-and-future presidents have used to describe their foreign policies don鈥檛 on their own suggest such very different approaches to the United States鈥 engagement with the world.

Why We Wrote This

President Joe Biden鈥檚 final foreign policy speech and Donald Trump鈥檚 previews of his priorities underscore a tectonic shift in how America projects global power, from relying on alliances to taking a more imperial approach. Does that fit the times?

But as President Biden emphasized in a farewell foreign policy speech at the State Department Monday, his guiding principle of global engagement 鈥 not only as president but over a long political career 鈥 has been advancement of America鈥檚 power and interests through U.S.-led alliances.

He cited examples of how his administration rallied NATO and other international partners in defense of Ukraine, created new diplomatic and military partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region to confront China, and returned the United States to a leadership role facing the global climate challenge.

鈥淐ompared to four years ago, America is stronger, our alliances are stronger, our adversaries and competitors are weaker,鈥 Mr. Biden said.

That reliance on alliances for power and policy projection sounds nothing like the president-elect. In the run-up to his return to the White House next Monday, Mr. Trump has rattled the world, and America鈥檚 neighborhood in particular, with a list of objectives 鈥 buying Greenland, seizing the Panama Canal, making Canada the 51st state 鈥 that treat friendly nations as weak interlocutors and impediments to be subdued.

And like Canada, as subordinate economies that warrant debilitating tariffs instead of symbiotic trade relations.

U.S. allies and partners might understandably experience whiplash as they observe the split screen of Mr. Biden鈥檚 ode to alliances juxtaposed with Mr. Trump鈥檚 vision of an expansionist America acting unilaterally.

In the eyes of some diplomats and foreign-policy analysts, the president-elect鈥檚 jarring pronouncements are a throwback to a long-gone century when a newly muscled adolescent America could more easily impose its will on the weaklings around it.

It鈥檚 the 鈥淒onroe Doctrine,鈥 as the New York Post cheekily put it last week, a reference to the 1823 Monroe Doctrine that declared the Western Hemisphere America鈥檚 domain and off-limits to European powers.

But for others, Mr. Trump鈥檚 confrontational and unilateral approach to foreign policy may actually be more suited to an era of big-power competition and waning prospects for international cooperation and global integration.

Evan Vucci/AP
President-elect Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, Jan. 7, 2025.

As evidence, some point to the role they say the president-elect鈥檚 threatening demands have played in bringing the Gaza war closer to a ceasefire and hostage release deal than at any point in months of the Biden administration鈥檚 shuttle diplomacy.

In his speech Monday, President Biden hailed his administration鈥檚 tireless diplomatic efforts and noted that the ceasefire deal that appears to be within hours of final approval is very close to what the U.S. has been promoting for almost eight months.

Yet others say that it is more Mr. Trump鈥檚 fiery threats of 鈥渁ll hell to pay鈥 if a deal is not reached by Inauguration Day that have focused everyone鈥檚 attention.

Moreover, they say the Trump threats have not been aimed solely at an adversary like Hamas, but have also placed a level of pressure on ally Israel that President Biden ultimately seemed unwilling to apply. Israeli sources say Mr. Trump鈥檚 Middle East envoy, real estate developer and golf buddy Steve Witkoff, made it very clear to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the 鈥渉ell to pay鈥 if no deal is signed by Jan. 20 applied to him as well.

For critics of Mr. Trump鈥檚 hardball diplomacy, the incoming president鈥檚 promise of an imperial foreign policy not only threatens to stoke conflicts, but it also risks putting the U.S. on a par with other expansionist big powers 鈥 namely China and Russia. What happens to America鈥檚 moral authority to check China鈥檚 ambitions vis-脿-vis Taiwan, for example, or to challenge Russia鈥檚 revanchist playbook for Central and Eastern Europe?

Some of the president-elect鈥檚 allies roll their eyes at such hand-wringing and advise the worry warts to instead consider Mr. Trump鈥檚 history, including as a businessman before entering politics, of taking maximalist and attention-focusing positions at the outset of negotiations.

鈥淭he United States is not going to invade another country,鈥 Republican Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma said Sunday on 鈥淢eet the Press鈥 when pressed on Mr. Trump鈥檚 string of hostile musings. Even when he threatens military force, he said, the president-elect is simply making characteristically 鈥渂old鈥 statements aimed at bringing 鈥渆veryone to the table.鈥

In his State Department speech, President Biden also spoke of the negotiating table, and of his administration鈥檚 enhancement of America鈥檚 unique ability to bring countries together to reach shared objectives 鈥 at NATO, for example, or at international climate talks.

Critics counter that Mr. Biden鈥檚 paean to his administration鈥檚 vision of strength through alliances involves a bit of whitewashing. America鈥檚 partners in Afghanistan, including NATO allies, were bitterly left in the cold when the U.S. abruptly withdrew its troops in August 2021. European partners felt jilted by the Biden administration鈥檚 very America-first infrastructure legislation.

Still, to illustrate his theme, Mr. Biden told a story of how members of the Quad grouping of Asian-Pacific countries requested that their first meeting as an enhanced regional organization be held at his home in Delaware. When he asked why, the response was 鈥渢hat way people will know we are truly friends.鈥

Well, yes and no.

In the weeks before he takes office, the president-elect has also been receiving a steady stream of foreign leaders at his house at Mar-a-Lago. And while some of them have indeed come to the Florida table to express ideological kinship 鈥 like Argentina鈥檚 President Javier Milei 鈥 others have made the trek to gauge warily the implications of the imminent return of a confrontational America-first foreign policy.

Take Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau, who resigned last week. No one suspects he flew down to Mr. Trump鈥檚 Mar-a-Lago table in December to show the world how much the two leaders are true friends.

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