Vice 😂President Kamala Harris is following through on her plans to
visit Singapore and Vietnam in the coming days despite fallout from the
administration’s haphazard withdrawal from Afghanistan.
“Given our
global leadership role, we can and we must manage developments in one
region while simultaneously advancing our strategic interests in other
regions on other issues,” a White House official told The Washington Post. “The United States has many interests around the world, and we are well-equipped to pursue them all at the same time.”
😂Her office said earlier this month that the trip “will build on the Biden-Harris Administration’s message to the world: America is back.”
The
statement continued: "The Vice President's visit will emphasize the
importance of comprehensive engagement and strategic partnerships -- key
components of our Administration's approach to foreign policy."
This
is quite an awkward message to be promoting amid the humiliating
situation in Afghanistan, including in the eyes of foreign allies.
U.S.
allies complain that they were not fully consulted on a policy decision
that potentially puts their own national security interests at risk —
in contravention of President Biden's promises to recommit to global
engagement.
And many around the world are wondering
whether they could rely on the United States to fulfill long-standing
security commitments stretching from Europe to East Asia.
"Whatever
happened to 'America is back'?" said Tobias Ellwood, who chairs the
Defense Committee in the British Parliament, citing Biden's foreign
policy promise to rebuild alliances and restore U.S. prestige damaged
during the Trump administration.
"People are bewildered that after
two decades of this big, high-tech power intervening, they are
withdrawing and effectively handing the country back to the people we
went in to defeat," Ellwood said. "[…]
[S]ome German officials and
lawmakers are seething at Washington's failure to consult coalition
partners such as Berlin, Clüver Ashbrook said. […]
"The
Biden administration came to office promising an open exchange, a
transparent exchange with its allies. They said the transatlantic
relationship would be pivotal," she said. "As it is, they're playing lip
service to the transatlantic relationship and still believe European
allies should fall into line with U.S. priorities." […]"What's happening
in Afghanistan is raising alarm bells everywhere," said Riad Kahwaji,
who heads the Inegma security consultancy in the United Arab Emirates,
which hosts one of the biggest American military contingents in the
Middle East.
"The U.S.'s credibility as an ally has
been in question for a while," he said. "We see Russia fighting all the
way to protect the Assad regime [in Syria], and now the Americans are
pulling out and leaving a big chaos in Afghanistan." (WaPo)
To
make matters worse, the stop in Vietnam comes as many have likened the
situation in Afghanistan to the fall of Saigon in 1975, raising "the
possibility of the worst photo op for an American in that country since
Jane Fonda donned a helmet there in 1972," Fox News reported.
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