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The Biden administration has reached its halfway point, and a review of its foreign policy decisions suggests an administration touting the return of diplomacy while failing to meaningfully deliver in many ways.
The opposite of big-stick diplomacy, Biden and his administration are happy to speak harshly against our adversaries while failing to follow through with the necessary hard actions.
Big "schtick" diplomacy.
Ironically, the administration's mostly risk-averse approach serves only to heighten risks for Americans and other freedom-loving people worldwide. Because of this less-than-satisfactory strategy and performance, Biden gets a "D" on his foreign policy.
His administration prioritizes avoiding potential negative consequences over aggressively pursuing positive outcomes for America and its interests. As a result, the country enters the next two years ill-prepared to face the myriad threats of a militarized, ambitious and malicious China; the likelihood of a protracted proxy war in Ukraine; and Iran and North Korea's increasing nuclear threat — to name a few.
Such unstable footing is unsurprising, as the administration took 629 days to release its national security strategy and now has little time to waste attempting to execute its well-written but diffuse focus. It is a strategy that accurately paints a world torn betwixt autocracy and democracy. But it fails to realistically assess the current stagnation of U.S. power abroad — and it attempts to prioritize everything, which means a focus on nothing.