Biden tries to show US as democracy beacon post-Capitol riot

Less than two weeks in office, President Joe Biden is facing two critical tests of whether the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol has damaged America’s standing as a beacon for democracy.
Protests in Russia and a military
coup in Myanmar come as American credibility on the world stage has plummeted
after last month’s storming of the Capitol by a pro-Donald Trump mob looking to
stop the certification of Biden’s election victory.
That adds to the weight on Biden
as he seeks to fulfill a campaign pledge to dramatically reposition the U.S. as
a global leader following four years of a Trump foreign policy driven by an
“America First” mantra. That policy was marked by the frequent disparagement of
democratic allies and the occasional embrace of authoritarian leaders.
“I think there’s no doubt that the attack on our
own democracy on Jan. 6 creates an even greater challenge for us to be carrying
the banner of democracy and freedom and human rights around the world because,
for sure, people in other countries are saying to us, ‘Well, why don’t you look
at yourselves first?’” the secretary of state said in an interview with NBC
News.
Blinken added, “The difference,
though, between us and so many other countries is that when we are challenged,
including when we challenge ourselves — we’re doing it in full daylight with
full transparency.”
Biden, in the early days of his
presidency, has sought to send the message in a series of calls with foreign
leaders that America is back.
He’s reassured Japanese Prime
Minister Yoshihide Suga that the U.S. has its support in an ongoing territorial
dispute with China over islets in the East China Sea. He’s sought to reset the
relationship with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was belittled by
Trump as “dishonest & weak.” And he’s told Mexican President Andrés Manuel
López Obrador that the U.S. would send $4 billion to help development in
Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala — nations whose hardships have spawned
tides of migration through Mexico toward the United States.
“The United States remains a country in the
world that is looked to for leadership,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki
told reporters. “It’s going to take some time, but he’s certainly committed to
doing that.”
But the crises in Myanmar and
Russia present Biden with difficult tests of his promise to reestablish global
leadership that are likely to be far more complicated than mending fences with
traditional allies.
Biden on Monday threatened to slap
new sanctions on Myanmar after a coup that saw the military arrest the civilian
leaders of its government, calling the episode “a direct assault on the
country’s transition to democracy and the rule of law.”
In his first call with Russian
President Vladimir Putin as counterparts last week, Biden raised concerns about
the detention of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and the crackdown on
supporters backing his arrest. The mass arrests have only accelerated in the
days since the two leaders spoke as protests have continued across the country.
“For Putin, he looks at the Capitol riot and
sees it as more evidence of his worldview, a continuation of the degradation of
liberalism in the world,” said Michael McFaul, who served as U.S. ambassador to
Russia in the Obama administration. “The Biden election doesn’t mean much to
him about his theory about liberal democracy. Whereas Putin’s opponents are
very encouraged by the election of President Biden because it shows that
American democratic institutions were resilient.”
To that end, Navalny’s supporters
wrote to Biden over the weekend urging him to take meaningful action with
sanctions against members of Putin’s inner circle to demonstrate that he’s
serious about reclaiming the U.S. role as a champion of democracy.
“Their argument is, If you just sanction a bunch of no-name, low-level colonels ... that’s exactly who Putin is expecting,” McFaul said. “They want the Biden administration to sanction the economic actors in the Putin regime, and they’ve made it easy for the Biden administration in they’ve named them all in their seven-page letter.”
Rep. Adam Schiff, a California
Democrat and chair of the House Intelligence Committee, drew a line from Trump
to the coup in Myanmar. Trump had made baseless accusations of widespread voter
fraud that were rejected by multiple courts as well as Trump’s own Justice
Department.
An announcement read on Myanmar’s
military-owned Myawaddy TV explained that the seizure was necessary because the
government had not acted on the military’s unsubstantiated claims of fraud in
the Southeast Asian nation’s recent elections and because it allowed the
election to go ahead despite the coronavirus pandemic.
“When America speaks and acts, the world
watches, and when our leaders propagate conspiracy theories and subvert
democracy here at home, it sets a dangerous example for the rest of the world,”
Schiff said.
Adversaries such as China, Iran
and Venezuela pointed to the Capitol riot as evidence of the fragility of U.S.
democracy. Even some allies said the scene was unsettling and has caused them
to reconsider the United States’ position as the self-proclaimed beacon of
democracy.
“After something like this, I believe it would be very difficult for the world to see the United States as a symbol of democracy,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelinskiy said in an interview with “Axios on HBO.”