ADVERTISEMENT

Biden’s Relentless UN Diplomacy Has a Downside

Biden’s Relentless UN Diplomacy Has a Downside

In his first speech as U.S. president to the United Nations General Assembly, Joe Biden promised the world that this period of “relentless war” was giving way to “a new era of relentless diplomacy.” In this new era, he explained, the U.S. would be working with other nations to lift people out of poverty, defend and renew democracy, address climate change and shore up traditional alliances such as NATO.

It all sounds marvelous. But it is difficult if not impossible to advance U.S. interests and values without a credible threat of military action — which is to say, one that is not belied by events on the ground. And his withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan shows that the premise of Biden’s global vision is a mirage.

To start, the distinction between diplomacy and war is true only in the narrowest sense. Yes, heads of state routinely face choices about how to deter and respond to aggression. Those options range from diplomatic protests to declarations of war. A modern superpower such as the U.S., with the dollar as the global currency, also has the choice of economic sanctions.

In the last 20 years of “relentless war,” U.S. presidents have used both diplomacy and military action to disrupt terror networks, enforce international norms (such as the ban on chemical weapons) and prevent rogue states from attaining weapons of mass destruction. And to be fair, Biden pledged that the U.S. “will continue to defend ourselves, our allies and our interests against attack, including terrorist threats, as we prepare to use force if any is necessary.” 

Effective diplomacy requires the threat of force lurking in the background. As Otto Von Bismarck famously observed more than 150 years ago: “A conquering army on the border will not be stopped by eloquence.” Since at least World War II, the words of American diplomats have mattered in part because they have been backed up by a nation willing to use its military to accomplish strategic goals.

This is why the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan is not only a military blunder but also a diplomatic one. Biden’s unwillingness to keep a few thousand U.S. forces in Afghanistan, which had prevented the Taliban from taking over the country, undermines American diplomacy there.

This is a lesson that Biden and his administration appear not to have learned. Until the Taliban surrounded Kabul, the State Department had planned a robust diplomatic mission for Afghanistan after most U.S. forces had left. Now Biden is reduced to touting his administration’s efforts to secure a U.N. Security Council resolution demanding that the Taliban respect human rights. As the last Afghan ambassador to the U.N. told the body’s Human Rights Council in Geneva last week, the Taliban continue to be serial human-rights abusers.

America’s surrender in Afghanistan has also undermined U.S. diplomacy elsewhere. Consider the condemnation last month from the parliament of America’s closest ally, the U.K. Or look at the taunting message from Chinese state media to Taiwan in the aftermath of Kabul’s collapse.

None of this is to say that diplomacy is not a valuable means of advancing the national interest. As former Defense Secretary James Mattis observed in 2013, if the U.S. doesn’t have enough diplomats, “then I need to buy more ammunition.” But the reverse is also true: If the U.S. is unwilling to use its ammunition, then its diplomacy will have less power. Its words and warnings may still be heard, but they will go unheeded, no matter how relentlessly they are conveyed.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Eli Lake is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering national security and foreign policy. He was the senior national security correspondent for the Daily Beast and covered national security and intelligence for the Washington Times, the New York Sun and UPI.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.