Posted: 2024-04-24 05:45:00

This meant that Biden has won this war with the Trumpists over his wars in his presidency. But the glaring irony staring Biden in the face is that these wars might yet take him down in November.

After Hamas’ horrific attack on Israel on October 7, Biden invoked a larger strategic framing of these issues. Addressing the nation from the Oval Office, Biden said, “Hamas and Putin represent different threats, but they share this in common: They both want to completely annihilate a neighbouring democracy, completely annihilate it. We can’t let petty partisan, angry politics get in the way of our responsibilities as a great nation. We cannot and will not let terrorists like Hamas and tyrants like Putin win. I refuse to let that happen.”

This is still Biden’s key message to voters as they contemplate the choice between him and Trump.

Then-president Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan in 2019.

Then-president Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan in 2019.Credit: AP

For Ukraine, the US can get weapons just approved by Congress to that country “within days”. Ukraine is also expected to make the F-16 warplanes, cleared for Ukraine last year, operational from July.

Biden needs Ukraine to start gaining ground. If tens of billions of dollars in weapons and fighter jets cannot reverse Ukraine’s weakened position on the battlefield and stop Russia’s wanton destruction of Ukraine’s cities and energy infrastructure, there will be no lift in prospects for Ukraine’s future.

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For Gaza, the war has exacted a catastrophic toll of more than 34,000 dead, including more than 13,000 children, and wholesale destruction throughout the territory. Hamas has been decimated but not vanquished. Hostages are still captive. Israel lost the public opinion war months ago. The war is hurting Biden. Most Americans – 55 per cent – disapprove of Israel’s actions, and only 36 per cent approve. Biden’s approval for his handling of the Middle East is just 27 per cent.

Biden urgently needs an end to the war in Gaza. Without it, anger and resentment will haunt his campaign. This is especially true with younger voters across the country and on college campuses, and with Muslim American voters in several key swing states – Michigan, Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania – which Biden must win to be re-elected. Supporters of Palestine are expected to flood the streets of the Democratic convention in Chicago in August, evoking memories of the Vietnam anti-war protesters in that city in 1968.

Democrats lost that election to Richard Nixon. The overhang of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq brought Republican control of the White House to an end in 2008.

This week Biden won a huge battle in the fight against authoritarianism, Russia and Iran. But with an uncertain future for Ukraine, and prospects for a forever war in the Middle East, the world is in turmoil.

Biden’s approval has been under 50 per cent since the withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021. Can he see America through these wars? His re-election may well hinge on it.

Bruce Wolpe is a senior fellow at the United States Studies Centre. He has served on the Democratic staff in the US Congress and as chief of staff to former prime minister Julia Gillard.

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