Joe Biden’s Interventionist Secretary of State Pick
Anthony
Blinken pushed for intervention in Iraq, Syria, Libya, and YemenDave
DeCamp Posted on November 23, 2020
https://news.antiwar.com/2020/11/23/joe-bidens-interventionist-secretary-of-state-pick/
On Monday, Joe Biden announced he will nominate his long-time advisor Anthony Blinken to be the secretary of state for the incoming administration. Blinken has a long history of advocating for intervention in places like Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Yemen.
Blinken was Biden’s top aide in 2002 when Biden
was leading the charge in the Senate to give
George W. Bush his invasion of Iraq. In 2006, Biden penned an Op-ed for The New York
Times that called for dividing Iraq into three separate
autonomous zones with a central government in Baghdad later referred to as a
“soft partition.” According to the Times, Blinken helped
craft Biden’s proposal.
Blinken served various posts in the Obama
administration. First, as then-Vice President Joe Biden’s national security
advisor from 2009 to 2013, as the deputy national security advisor from 2013 to
2015, and as the deputy secretary of state from 2015 to 2017.
Seen as a loyal Biden aide, Blinken surprised some in the White House when
he broke with Biden and supported military intervention in Libya in 2011, according to The Washington Post.
Blinken also called for US action in Syria after Barack Obama was reelected in
2012. Sources told the Post in 2013 that Blinken “was less
enthusiastic than Biden” about Obama seeking Congressional approval for a
military strike on Syria.
In 2019, Blinken co-authored an Op-ed in Washington
Post with neoconservative Robert Kagan. The piece argued
against President Trump’s “America First” foreign policy and said the US did
“too little” in Syria. “Without bringing appropriate power to bear [in Syria],
no peace could be negotiated, much less imposed,” the article reads.
In 2015, Blinken facilitated an increase in weapons
sales and intelligence sharing for the Saudi-led coalition after it intervened
in Yemen to fight the Houthis. “We have expedited weapons deliveries, we have
increased our intelligence sharing, and we have established a joint
coordination planning cell in the Saudi operation center,” Blinken said in April 2015.
In 2018, Blinken joined over two dozen former Obama administration
officials and signed a letter calling for an end to US support
for the war in Yemen. But in 2019, Blinken’s name was noticeably absent from a similar letter that included
Obama-era officials like Susan Rice, Samantha Power, and Ben Rhodes.
One area where a Biden administration could be less
hawkish than a Trump administration is Iran. Blinken has been critical of President Trump’s decision to
withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan
of Action (JCPOA). Speaking at an event earlier this year, Blinken said Biden
would return to the JCPOA. “[Biden] would seek to build on the nuclear deal to
make it longer and stronger if Iran returns to strict compliance,” he said.
While Blinken is a proponent of the JCPOA, it’s
worth noting that Iran hawks seem happy with Biden’s choice. Mark Dubowitz, the
head of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a think tank that regularly calls for regime change
in Tehran, celebrated Blinken’s nomination. Dubowitz wrote on Twitter that
Blinken and Michele Flournoy, a front runner to be Biden’s secretary of
defense, would make “a superb national security team. The country will be very
fortunate to have them in public service.”
Another force that will clash with Biden and
Blinken’s stated goal to return back to the JCPOA is Israel, a country Blinken
is a staunch supporter of. The Obama administration signed a deal in 2016 that gives Israel
$38 billion in military aid over the course of a decade, until 2027.
Shortly after Biden was announced the winner of the
presidential election, Israeli sources said they were already
planning to reach out to Biden about a new long-term military aid package. With
some progressives in Congress calling for the US to leverage military aid to
Israel over its abuses of Palestinians, Blinken made it clear that a Biden administration’s support for Israel would be
unconditional.
“He [Biden] would not tie military assistance to
Israel to any political decisions that it makes. Period. Full stop. He said it;
he’s committed to it. And that would be the policy of the Biden
administration,” Blinken said in May.
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