WASHINGTON, United States
President Joe Biden heads to South America for a curtain call with global leaders after over 50 years in US politics, but the man he tried and failed to keep from returning to power is likely to be the focus of many meetings: incoming President Donald Trump.
Biden will hold private meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping and the heads of Japan, South Korea and Brazil during the summits of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, or APEC, in Peru and the Group of 20 leading economies, or G20, in Brazil.
The
meetings over six days are not expected to yield any major new agreements,
senior Biden administration officials said, even as they are likely to touch on
trade, security and global alliances.
"The APEC and G20 will be
about one thing ... and that is Donald Trump รข€“ and what to expect from the
next Trump administration on trade, alliances, and other issues," said
Victor Cha, president of the Geopolitics and Foreign Policy Department at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate, in the Nov. 5 presidential election after promising Americans he would impose steep tariffs on all imports, with higher ones aimed at Chinese goods, and signaled much softer support for Ukraine in its war against Russia.
Harris' loss came after Biden was forced to
step aside in the race because of concerns that at 81 he was too old for
another term.
Trump's Republican party also
won control of both houses of the US Congress, giving him additional power to
push through measures on trade and other issues.
Biden came into office in 2020
seeking to rebuild alliances strained during Trump's first term and tried to
show that the US remained engaged beyond its borders. He strengthened and
expanded Nato and worked to counter China in the Indo-Pacific by building up
multilateral alliances in Asia.
Trump has a fundamentally
different world view than Biden, preferring bilateral meetings where he can
practice transactional diplomacy over multilateral partnerships like Nato.
National security adviser Jake
Sullivan said on Wednesday that Biden will use the trip to send the message
that America cherishes and invests in its alliances and thank those who have
helped deal with an array of global problems.
"It's a message of
principle. It's a message of practicality, and it's been one of the causes of
President Biden's life," he said.
Speaking to reporters aboard
Air Force One en route to Peru on Thursday, Sullivan said the leaders of the
US, Japan and South Korea were working to institutionalize trilateral ties as
an "enduring feature of US policy," and said the three countries
would set up a secretariat for the grouping.
Sullivan also said Biden would
raise concerns with other leaders over the introduction of North Korean
soldiers into Russia, calling it a significant development. He said he expected
a "coordinated set of policy decisions" in response to the issue.
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