Biden summons history in sweeping call for
renewed alliance of democracies
President seeks to re-establish US as a leader in
global affairs after years of Trump-led disengagement
Jessica Glenza
@JessicaGlenza
Sat 26 Mar 2022
20.20 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/mar/26/joe-biden-poland-speech-russia-ukraine-nato
In a speech
in Poland on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Joe Biden indicated his intent to
re-position the US as a leader in global affairs after four years of
disengagement during the Trump administration.
It is not a
task many thought Biden would so firmly take on when he took office in 2021.
Initially, Biden focused on healing domestic wounds following four chaotic
years of the Trump administration and the emergence of the Covid-19 pandemic.
But Biden’s
speech in Poland appeared designed to signal a shift in US policy and a
generational call to arms for democratic countries to unite against autocracy
in a years-long foreign policy project, with the US at its head.
“In this
battle, we need to be clear eyed,” said Biden. “This battle will not be won in
days or months, either. We need to steel ourselves for the long fight ahead.”
That unity,
Biden signaled, would need to include democracies that have at times been at
odds with one another.
The
sweeping speech ended with a call for “a different future, a brighter future
rooted in democracy and principle, hope and light”.
The president
used the speech to draw historical parallels between the war in Ukraine, which
began a month ago when Russian forces invaded, to the second world war; moments
symbolic of freedom including the fall of the Berlin Wall; and the words of
Pope John Paul II, who was Polish and who told the world: “Be not afraid.”
In its
sweep and scope, the speech had echoes of other major foreign policy addresses
given by US presidents on European soil, such as Ronald Reagan’s “tear down
this wall” speech in Berlin in 1987 and John F Kennedy’s Ich bin ein Berliner
call in 1963.
“All of us,
including here in Poland, must do the hard work of democracy each and every day
– in my country as well. That’s why I came to Europe again this week,” said
Biden. “For all freedom-loving nations, we must commit now to be in this fight
for the long haul.”
Biden
highlighted the US commitment to Ukraine and Nato, including a pledge to defend
“every inch of Nato territory with the full force of our collective power”. The
US and allies “maintain absolute unity – we must, among the world’s
democracies”, he said.
“This is
the task of our time. The task of this generation,” the president said about
the fight against autocracy.
The speech
was a far cry from one of Biden’s earliest foreign policy decisions – to follow
through with the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan after 20 years of war.
In August 2021, the administration began an urgent evacuation of Americans and
Afghan allies, after the capital, Kabul, fell to the Taliban in a matter of
days.
“I was not
going to extend this forever war, and I was not extending a forever exit,”
Biden said in August 2021.
Biden also
used the speech to highlight commitments he said showed “the people of Ukraine
can count on the United States”, including accepting 100,000 refugees and
providing $300m in humanitarian aid and thousands of tons of food, water and
medicine.
Biden
called Vladimir Putin a “tyrant” and appealed directly to the Russian people.
He invoked the struggles of the second world war, including the siege of
Leningrad, which would be “fresh in the memory of many grandparents”.
“You, the
Russian people, are not our enemy,” said Biden. “I refuse to believe you
welcome the killing of innocent children and grandparents, or that you accept
hospitals, schools, maternity wards – for God’s sake – being pummeled with
Russian missiles and bombs.”
“These are
not memories past,” said Biden. “This is exactly what the Russian army is doing
to Ukraine right now.”

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