Biden unveils security, foreign policy team

By AFP
November 26, 2020

WILMINGTON: President-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday introduced a slate of veteran diplomats and policy-makers who will make up his national security and foreign policy team, saying: “America is back, ready to lead the world.”

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Biden, 78, presented his picks for secretary of state, national security adviser, homeland security secretary, intelligence chief, UN ambassador and climate change envoy. “These public servants will restore America’s global leadership and moral leadership,” Biden said as the six men and women stood behind him wearing face-masks. Biden said that after he is inaugurated on January 20 and Donald Trump leaves the White House, the United States will “once again sit at the head of the table, ready to confront our adversaries and not reject our allies”.

“It is a team that reflects the fact that America is back, ready to lead the world, not retreat from it,” he said in a jab at President Trump’s go-it-alone “America First” policies.

“We’re already working out meeting with the Covid team in the White House... The outreach has been sincere,” Biden told NBC in his first TV interview since winning the presidency.

Biden said that in his first 100 days in office he would tackle the Covid crisis, scrap Trump policies “damaging” the environment and push legislation offering millions of undocumented residents a route to citizenship. And he said he wanted to get all students back in classrooms, despite the huge cost of adapting schools to be Covid-safe. The slate that Biden unveiled included veterans of the Barack Obama administration and signalled a return to traditional US diplomacy and multilateralism.

Biden said that “America’s going to reassert its role in the world and be a coalition builder,” but he denied it would be like a third term of Obama — whom he served as vice president. “We face a totally different world,” the president-elect said. “President Trump has changed the landscape. It’s become America First, which meant America alone.” Antony Blinken, Biden’s choice for secretary of state, said the United States cannot solve global problems on its own. “We need to be working with other countries,” the former State Department official said.

However, outgoing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo denounced Biden’s call for greater international cooperation, saying that Trump had been focused on “real results” and “the reality on the ground.”

“More multilateralism for the sake of hanging out with their buddies at a cocktail party? That’s not in the best interest of the United States,” Pompeo told Fox News. Pompeo said he had not spoken to Blinken but would “do everything that’s required by law” as part of the transition.

Former secretary of state John Kerry, who Biden chose as his special envoy on climate change, confirmed that the United States will rejoin the Paris climate accord which, under Trump, it formally withdrew from earlier this month.

Cuban-born Alejandro Mayorkas was named to head the Department of Homeland Security, whose policing of tough immigration restrictions under Trump was a frequent source of controversy.

Avril Haines was nominated to be the director of national intelligence, the first woman to hold the post, while Jake Sullivan was named national security adviser.

Former Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen is expected to be named Treasury Secretary, the first woman to hold the job.

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