International organisations await Biden
After years of US disengagement and confrontation,
international organisations in Geneva appeared to breathe a collective sigh of
relief at Joe Biden's presidential election win -- but the anticipated
honeymoon could be short.
"I
think everyone is basically waiting with open arms for the US government to
come back," said Manfred Elsig, an international relations professor at
the World Trade Institute of Bern University.
Republican President Donald
Trump's administration has been a traumatic experience for international
organisations that in many cases were created by the United States and
accustomed to strong US support and leadership.
In Geneva alone, the United
States has, under Trump, cut its ties to the UN's top rights body, hamstrung
the World Trade Organization and begun withdrawing from the World Health
Organization even as the body strives to coordinate the global response to Covid-19.
After the election was
called for Democratic Party candidate Biden last weekend, "there was a
huge sigh of relief" within the international organisations, a Geneva
trade official told AFP, asking not to be named.
Observers expect Washington
under Biden to re-engage with the international community and its institutions,
and to resume discussions on a number of issues blocked by his predecessor.
"I think there will be
a bit of a honeymoon," Elsig said, warning though that the blissful period
could be "short".
The narrative pushed hard
for four years that international organisations are taking advantage of the US
remains deeply engrained, especially among Republicans, he said.
"Every step that the
Biden administration will take towards engaging with the world and
international organisations will be critically monitored in the United
States."
While plenty of stumbling
blocks remain, there is optimism in Geneva that discussions within
international forums will become more constructive.
The WHO has particular
reason to celebrate, after suffering relentless US attacks in recent months.
Accusing the United Nations
health agency of mishandling the Covid-19 response and of kowtowing to China,
Trump has begun withdrawing the United States -- traditionally the WHO's top
donor -- from the organisation.
But Biden said in a tweet:
"On my first day as president, I will rejoin the WHO and restore our
leadership on the world stage."
The WHO did not wish to
comment on its expectations for a Biden presidency, but the agency's chief
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus struck an upbeat tone in his congratulatory tweet to
the president-elect.
"I look forward to
working with you and your teams. Crises like the Covid-19 pandemic show the
importance of global solidarity in protecting lives and livelihoods," he
said.
The World Trade Organization
will certainly also welcome a changing of the guard in Washington.
The global trade body is
facing multiple crises, with the United States stubbornly blocking its budget,
crippling its dispute settlement system and now impeding the selection of its
new leader, having been without a captain since August.
A second Geneva trade
official said Biden could conceivably reverse course and give approval to
Nigeria's Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala becoming the first woman and first African to
lead the WTO.
But a number of other issues
-- including Washington's dislike for its appeals body, which it accuses of
overreach -- pre-date Trump.
Nevertheless, even if some
fundamental positions may remain unchanged, there will not be the same
"gratuitous aggressiveness", the official said.
While international
organisations can now perhaps look forward to more constructive engagement with
Washington, Elsig stressed that not all of Trump's attacks had been bluster.
"Maybe 10 percent of
the criticism is to be taken seriously," he said, pointing to growing
agreement that reforms at the WHO and other organisations were needed.
In the short term, he said,
Biden should enjoy goodwill among international partners and will be "in a
strong position" to push legitimate demands for change.
But Elsig said he remained
"really worried about the discourse in the US".
"If the Trump approach
continues in the Republican Party... then we don't have long-term support in
the United States for international organisations.
"That is a huge
problem."