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How Are Rising Powers Sizing Up Biden Foreign Policy Picks?

Policy Alert #219 | December 18, 2020

Although President Donald Trump has yet to concede the 2020 election, the Electoral College voted on December 14 and confirmed the Biden-Harris victory. Meanwhile, President-Elect Joe Biden has been announcing his picks for key cabinet positions in the upcoming administration, including Secretary of State candidate Anthony Blinken, Secretary of Defense candidate Lloyd Austin, National Security Advisor candidate Jake Sullivan, and U.S. Trade Representative candidate Katherine Tai.

In this Policy Alert, we review how the Rising Powers are reacting to the Biden’s cabinet candidates for the upcoming administration.

China

An editorial from state-owned nationalist tabloid Global Times believes that the key to Biden’s China policy lies in how determined his administration will be in committing to multilateralism and demonstrating the U.S.’s desire to return to international rules broken by the Trump administration:

In an op-ed for South China Morning Post, an independent newspaper based in Hong Kong, Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at RAND Corporation and an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California, argues that Taiwan’s concern about the Biden administration rethinking U.S.-Taiwan policy in favor of better relations with China is misguided:

A commentary in South China Morning Post foresees that Biden’s USTR candidate Katherine Tai, the chief enforcement lawyer on China trade issues during the Obama administration, is an excellent candidate who is expected to share incumbent USTR Robert Lighthizer’s hawkishness on trade issues against China:

In an op-ed for Global Times, Sun Chenghao, a research fellow with the Institute of America Studies at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, expects that as Biden inherited the key foreign policy advisors from the Obama administration, U.S. foreign policy will maintain the alliance-focused strategy of the Obama years, but the attention will be directed toward the U.S.-China rivalry:

India

A commentary in the liberal Indian Express predicts that with Blinken as Secretary of State, U.S.-India relations will become a high priority and continue to strengthen under the Biden administration:

In an op-ed for The Tribune, Sandeep Dikshit, a former Member of Parliament, suggests that although the bilateral relations are expected to deepen between two countries in the upcoming administration, human rights in India is likely to remain under pressure from the U.S.:

A commentary in The Print sees Anthony Blinken as a strong interlocutor for New Delhi as the Biden administration aims to build on strategic gains made under the Trump administration:

Japan

A commentary in the center-right The Japan Times expects that under the advice of Anthony Blinken and Jake Sullivan, the Biden administration is expected to prioritize U.S. allies in East Asia and help mend bilateral relations between Japan and South Korea:

A commentary in the business-focused Nikkei Asia Report argues that despite having a similar team of diplomats from the Obama years, the Biden administration will be facing a greater challenge in Asia-Pacific because geopolitical landscape in the region has changed drastically:

A commentary in The Japan Times worries that Secretary of Defense candidate Lloyd Austin could be a signal of the U.S. paying less attention in security cooperation with partners in the Indo-Pacific region:

Russia

In an op-ed for government funded RT, George Szamuely, a senior research fellow at Global Policy Institute in London, predicts that by picking Anthony Blinken and Jake Sullivan, the Biden administration will have more global interventions and regime-change operations, resembling the Clinton and Obama years:

A commentary in state-owned Sputnik News criticizes Lloyd Austin’s role as a board member of Raytheon Technology and suggests that Austin’s apparent close ties with the defense contractors means that the U.S. is unlikely to reduce arms sales to its security partners around the world:

A commentary in RT suggests that Russian officials are relieved by Biden’s pick for Secretary of State because Anthony Blinken is seen as the more favorable candidate compared to other possible alternatives, including Susan Rice:

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