|
Encased in Amber
When Joe Biden entered the White House he had a lot of campaign promises to fulfill. The country, and the world for that matter, were still reeling from the devastation of COVID-19. The economy was in a freefall and American foreign relations were in a state of chaos. On January 6 a riot of hundreds launched an attack on Capitol Hill. Biden’s administration was supposed to bring some stability to the country and the world. But did his four years in office do so? Reviewing Bob Woodward’s War for our Fall Books issue, Matt Duss takes stock of the Biden administration’s handling of the two major conflicts that erupted during his years as president. “As one of the first volleys in an intra-Washington battle over how the Biden administration and, more specifically, its foreign policy decisions will be interpreted,” Duss writes, “War reflects how the Democratic Party establishment desperately wants to see itself: as ultimately responsible and competent, whatever your own eyes may tell you.” For those hoping to preserve the center’s grip on the Democratic Party, Biden was always “the adult in the room, the steady hand on the tiller, even in the midst of two horrifying and increasingly destructive wars.” And yet the record of his term suggested otherwise, in Gaza and also in the run up to the 2024 presidential elections. “Woodward wants us to believe that, despite the evidence of our lying eyes, the Biden administration’s commitment to process was enough,” Duss concludes. “But Trump’s reelection represents a refutation of that dodge. He is the consequence that the elites running the Democratic Party are now forced to confront—along with the rest of us.” Read “The Catastrophe of Democratic Foreign Policy” |