Making A Difference

Here’s How Many Thorny Global Issues Hinge On The US Presidential Election Outcome

American involvement and influence on the international stage has evolved sharply since Donald Trump took office in 2017. The upcoming presidential elections will once again redirect the US’s foreign policy, which will in turn have global ramifications.

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Here’s How Many Thorny Global Issues Hinge On The US Presidential Election Outcome
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Four years after Donald Trump's election reshaped how many nations interacted with the US, the way that the world's foremost superpower moves forward after its presidential election this year, stands to impact many geopolitical pressure points— regardless of whether the victor turns out to be Trump or his Democratic challenger, former Vice President Joe Biden.

From Iran to Cuba, from China to Israel, American involvement and influence on the international stage has evolved sharply since Trump took office in 2017. He swept away agreements with some nations, alienated longstanding allies and pulled out of multilateral obligations that he said didn't serve the interests of the United States.

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Though the international community has sometimes criticized Trump's ''America First'' tenure, underscored by the president's approach to the coronavirus pandemic, there were already places, issues and conflicts where the United States' involvement wasn't always appreciated— be it under his predecessor, Barack Obama or other recent American leaders.

Before the pandemic struck, in the beginning of 2020, the most serious global concern was whether Washington and Tehran were on the cusp of a ruinous war that would inflame the Middle East. While that has ebbed, many around the world are watching closely to see what happens next — and who will be living in the White House three months from today.

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Here's a look at some key issues whose direction will be, in part, steered by who wins the US presidency.

The Nobel Peace Prize, won by Obama while in office, was something Trump had hankered for himself. But the honour went this month to the UN World Food Programme. It was a resounding endorsement of a multilateral effort— the United Nations' main message— during a pandemic that has caused serious food insecurity as it engulfs the world.

In the pandemic era, Trump has lambasted the World Health Organization and largely rejected multilateralism, as have likeminded leaders such as Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro and Britain's Boris Johnson, who, like Trump, both downplayed the coronavirus and were infected by it themselves.

With the US still in the virus' vice and more than 220,000 dead, a rebound hitting Europe and sustained infections in India, Iran and beyond, we are living precarious times. Containing the virus, making a vaccine available and the international coordination around it — with the US as a major player, will be central to whether the world can see a light at the end of a dark tunnel.

The resurgence of Russia and the rise of China has ended a post-Cold War period in which Washington was the sole superpower.

Trump has made efforts to maintain relations with Vladimir Putin's Russia despite his own intelligence agencies' confirmation of Moscow's interference in the 2016 US presidential election, which sought to aid him, and allegations that Russia secretly offered bounties for American deaths in Afghanistan.

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Biden has said that he is putting Russia and other foreign governments “on notice” that he would act aggressively as president to counter any interference in US elections.

China has become a focus of Trump's criticism in recent months. He has imposed punitive tariffs, made racist comments about the origins of the virus in Wuhan and taken action over cybersecurity issues. But whether Trump or Biden is in office for the next four years, Washington's relations with Beijing seem set to continue their thorniness as China increasingly flexes internationally.

Trump has made a point of moving away from the Obama administration's and world powers' Iran nuclear pact. He called it the "worst deal ever" and withdrew, which delighted Israel and Saudi Arabia but dismayed others. Then the US killed Iran's most senior military figure, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, in Baghdad. Iran responded with a ballistic missile strike on Iraqi bases housing American troops.

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The administration's decision to blacklist Iran's financial sector, part of wide-ranging sanctions, signals the American direction during a second Trump term.

Biden, who was vice president to the more multilateral Obama, could re-engage with allies who have actively opposed Trump's policy, and potentially with Iran itself.

When it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Trump's self-proclaimed "deal of the century" did not sit well for the Palestinians. It effectively green-lighted Israeli annexation in the occupied West Bank, ending notions of the two-state solution and upending decades of official US policy with regards to settlements. Because of this, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is one leader who will be watching these elections closely.

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Under Trump, US relations with the European Union and NATO have also hit significant bumps. Many Europeans and their governments remain deeply wedded to such multilateral blocs. Biden, heir to a foreign policy tradition more in line with other US leaders since World War II, has said he would take a more conciliatory approach to deal with long-time allies.

Trump had hoped his jaw-dropping outreach to North Korea's Kim Jong Un would be his signature foreign policy legacy. But the summits were huge on spectacle and produced no tangible results.

Trump has also bemoaned America's "endless wars" and vowed to end them. Trump's comments unsettled the US military and diplomats, some of whom say that putting a definitive date on troop withdrawal could impede a peace deal between the Taliban and the Afghan government. Biden says troops must be withdrawn responsibly and that a residual force should remain to combat extremism.

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