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Opinion: What Biden and Trump have in common might surprise you

Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN

(CNN) — You might think President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are worlds apart on most international issues. But look a little closer, and you will see that the two candidates actually share some surprising commonalities on foreign policy, tradeĀ and even immigration.

While you are unlikely to hear much about those commonalities duringĀ Thursdayā€™sĀ presidentialĀ debateĀ on CNNĀ ā€” it is, after all, a debate ā€” itā€™s worth bearing these in mind when Biden and Trump take the stage for what could be one of the most consequential debates of any presidential campaign in recent memory.

Voters should also consider issues like temperament, consistency and predictability when comparing the two candidates as the future commander in chief. After all, both American allies and rivals want a certain amount of predictability when dealing with the worldā€™s leading superpower.

American allies want and deserve to be treated with respect, not contempt. An excellent example of this is the effort to get all the members of NATO to spendĀ 2%Ā of their GDPĀ on their own defense by the end of this year.

This was a policy goal agreed to during theĀ Obama administrationĀ when Biden was vice president, but you wouldnā€™t know that from how, when he was in office, President Trump constantly publicly berated NATO members to spend more on their defense andĀ claimed falsely,Ā the US was ā€œowedā€ many billions of dollars by NATO allies who werenā€™t meeting the 2%Ā target.

Trumpā€™s inaccurate berating didnā€™t do much of anything to move the needle on defense spending among key AmericanĀ allies like Germany,Ā but it certainly engenderedĀ resentmentĀ amongst GermansĀ against Trump.Ā In 2018, only 11%Ā of Germans had a favorable view of Trump, and favorable views of the US in general also dropped by 20%Ā during his administration, according to aĀ Pew/Kƶrber FoundationĀ poll.

Also, rapid changes in American policy, such as Trump publiclyĀ proclaiming his ā€œloveā€Ā for the North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un ā€” whose rogue nuclear-armed regime has been a headache for American presidentsĀ going back decadesĀ ā€” are unsettling to US allies and even rivals like China. China may be a nominal ally of the North Korean dictator, but Kimā€™s expanding nuclear and ballistic missile programs combined with his mercurial temperamentĀ are unnervingĀ to the Chinese, who prize stability in East Asia.

China

On what is arguably the key foreign policy issue of the 21st century ā€” US relations with China ā€” there is little daylight between Biden and Trump.Ā Trump inaugurated a far moreĀ combative approachĀ to China than his presidential predecessors.

The longtime belief that China would liberalize politically as it grew economically was officially abandoned inĀ Trumpā€™s 2017Ā national security strategy. Instead, the Trump administration started treating China as a peer competitor that had to be reckoned with and started shoring up its Indo-Pacific partnerships likeĀ ā€œThe Quadā€Ā made up of Australia, India, Japan and the US. Trump also slapped aĀ wide range of tariffsĀ on Chinese goods, long anathema for free marketers in both parties.

Then, guess what? When Biden got to the White House, he doubled down,Ā keeping those tariffsĀ in place and even slapping aĀ 100%Ā taxĀ on Chinese electric vehicles.Ā Biden alsoĀ banned investmentsĀ in China by US companiesĀ that might benefit the ChineseĀ military in areas such as artificial intelligence, quantum computingĀ and advanced computer chips. And Biden, onĀ 60 MinutesĀ in 2022,Ā saidĀ that the US would defend TaiwanĀ if China invaded, appearing to abandon the longstanding US policy ofĀ ā€œstrategic ambiguityā€Ā on Taiwan, which is supposed to keep the Chinese guessing about what an American response would be if they were to attack the island.

What I will be looking for in Thursdayā€™s debate would be how the candidates see US military commitments to Taiwan, given that US intelligence has assessed that Chinaā€™s President Xi Jinping, the most powerfulĀ Chinese leader since Mao, has told his military to be ready to invade the islandĀ by 2027,Ā a year that would fall inside theĀ next presidential term.

Iā€™ll also be lookingĀ for ā€” given that inflation continues to be a persistent worry for many Americans ā€” how the candidates might address theĀ continued imposition ofĀ US tariffsĀ on everyday goods that are made in China, like shoes and luggage, which function as an additional tax on ordinary Americans,

The Gaza War

Then, go to the Middle East, where the war in Gaza rages on.Ā Previously,Ā the Trump administration failed to seriously address the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and arguably inflamed the issue with actions such asĀ moving the US embassyĀ from its longtime location in Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. ThatĀ provoked protestsĀ in which dozens of Palestinians were killed. Like Israelis, Palestinians believe that Jerusalem is their rightful capital.

When he was in office, Trump not only turned a blind eye to Israelā€™s much-expanded settlement building in theĀ West Bank,Ā but he also appointedĀ as US Ambassador to Israel,Ā David Friedman, who said publicly, contrary to longstanding US policy, that he did not believe that Israeli settlementĀ activity was illegal,Ā and the Trump administration could support Israel if itĀ annexed partsĀ of the West Bank.

Meanwhile, Trumpā€™s son-in-law Jared Kushner ā€” aĀ family friendĀ of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ā€”Ā negotiated the Abraham Accords, which established diplomatic relations between Israel and some Arab states butĀ gave nothingĀ to the Palestinians.

It was the seemingly impending extension of the Abraham Accords to include the normalization of relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel ā€” a dealĀ encouraged by the Biden administrationĀ ā€” that seems to have, in part, precipitated Hamasā€™s attack on Israel on October 7th. In a rare interview two weeks before the Hamas attack, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince bin Salman,Ā told Fox News,Ā ā€œEvery day we get closerā€Ā to normalizing ties with Israel.

Hamas wanted to disrupt thisĀ Israel-Saudi normalization,Ā according to President Biden,Ā speaking at a campaign event in October.

The Biden administration has largely continued the Trump administrationā€™s uncritical embrace of the Netanyahu government despite mounting frustration with Israelā€™s leader. Bidenā€™s support of Netanyahu even has its own name ā€” ā€œtheĀ bear hugā€ā€” andĀ while BidenĀ and US Secretary ofĀ State Antony BlinkenĀ have occasionally protested publicly about the level of casualties in Gaza and, of late, they havenā€™t been doing too many bear hugs with Netanyahu, their de facto policy remainsĀ strong support for Israel.Ā To underline this point, the Biden administration is going forward with the sale of $18 billion ofĀ F-15 fighter jetsĀ to Israel.

The US government has provided many ofĀ the bombsĀ Israel has used in its all-out war on Hamas, while the much-ballyhooedĀ American-built pierĀ in the Mediterranean to help get aid to starving Gazans has been a fiasco. Itā€™s hard to recall a war in which the US supplies one of the belligerents with many of its weapons and the other side with aid supplies.

What I will be looking for during the debate is how the candidates will address how best to end the war in Gaza given the stalling of the peace plan that Biden laid out publicly at the end of May that wouldĀ start with a six-week ceasefireĀ and theĀ release of some of the hostagesĀ held by Hamas.

Iran and Saudi Arabia

Trumpā€™sĀ first overseas tripĀ as president was to Saudi Arabia, where he was given a princely welcome since his anti-Iran stance closely aligned with Saudi interests. TrumpĀ pulled outĀ of the Obama administrationā€™s nuclear agreement with Iran in 2018 and, two years later, authorized the killingĀ of a key Iranian military leader, Major General Qasem Soleimani, in a drone strike in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad,Ā because,Ā according to Trump, he had ā€œtargeted,Ā injured, and murdered hundreds of American civilians and servicemen.ā€

When he was campaigning to be president, Biden vowed toĀ reevaluateĀ Americaā€™s long alliance with the Saudis following the 2018 murder ofĀ journalist Jamal KhashoggiĀ by officials working for the de facto ruler of the kingdom, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS. But Biden officials are now all in on MBS because they believe the road to long-term peace between Israel and the Palestinians liesĀ through RiyadhĀ if the Israelis and the Saudis can agree to normalization of relations tied to some two-state solution.

Despite someĀ early efforts to resuscitateĀ the Iran nuclear deal, the Biden administration has not renewed the agreement. Early this year, BidenĀ alsoĀ authorized a drone strikeĀ that killed the leader of an Iranian-backed militia in Baghdad,Ā in response toĀ the killing of three American soldiers in Jordan.

After theĀ Israelis killed a top Iranian generalĀ in Syria,Ā the Biden administration led an international coalition to protect Israel when Iran, in retaliation,Ā fired hundreds of drones and missilesĀ against IsraelĀ in mid-April.Ā None ofĀ the strikesĀ ended up causing significant damage in Israel.

Following the nuclear agreement with the Obama administration, the Iranians kept theirĀ enrichment of uraniumĀ far below the threshold needed for nuclear weapons. In the wake of Trumpā€™s withdrawal from that agreement, the Iranians now haveĀ enough fissile materialĀ for several nuclear weapons, according to a report by the US Congressional Research Service earlier this year.

The Biden administration is currently negotiating a defense pact with the Saudis, which is clearly intended to assuage their concerns about the Iranians and their nuclear capabilities. This would beĀ similar to US agreementsĀ to defend allies like Japan or South Korea

During the debate, Iā€™ll be listening for how the candidates will deal with the theocratic regime in Iran now that it is close to being armed with nuclear weapons.

Abandoning an American ally

Trump and Biden jointly engineered what is perhaps the most embarrassing and cynical abandonment of an American ally in history when Trump signed a withdrawal deal from Afghanistan with theĀ Taliban in 2019,Ā and Biden went through with that dealĀ two years later.

TheĀ panicky, deadly US withdrawalĀ from Afghanistan in August 2021 made the hasty American retreat from Saigon in 1975 look like the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace.

The AmericansĀ left tens of thousands of AfghansĀ who had worked with them behind and allowed the Taliban to re-establish their misogynist theocratic rule, while the country is now home to some twenty terrorist groups, according to theĀ UnitedĀ Nations.Ā Bidenā€™s repeated invocations of hisĀ love for democracyĀ didnā€™t play well during this episode.

The Association of Wartime Allies, an advocacy group for Afghans who had worked for the US, estimated that onlyĀ about 3%Ā who had worked for the US government and had applied for special visas were evacuated out of Afghanistan, leaving 78,000 behind.

Given that each candidate bears some responsibility for this mess, Iā€™m hoping that the candidates might address how best to bring those American allies out of Afghanistan, since the US doesnā€™t recognize the Taliban regime or have anĀ embassy in the country.

The border

And even on an issue as fraught as the southern border ā€” something that we will surely be hearing a lot about from Trump during Thursdayā€™s debate ā€” for two years, Biden kept in place a Trump-era COVID health code known asĀ Title 42,Ā that kept most migrants to the US from being able to claim asylum. Title 42 resulted inĀ 2.8 million immigrant expulsionsĀ from the US, many of them during Bidenā€™s term in office. The Biden administration did try to lift Title 42 in 2022 but wasĀ challenged in the courts,Ā so the measure remained in place until May 2023.

After Title 42 expired, the largest wave of migrants in US history, many of them claiming asylum,Ā surged across the southern border.Ā In response this month, Biden orderedĀ that migrants who cross the border illegally cannot claim asylum if migrant arrests at the border surpass an average of more thanĀ 2,500 a day,Ā which has been the average since he came into office.Ā In plain English, the Biden administration has effectively closed the southern border to asylum seekers.

Biden also even allowed portions of Trumpā€™s southern border wall to continue to be built, saying the money for the wall hadĀ already been appropriated.

To be sure, there are real differences between Trump and Biden on immigration; this month, Biden said that hundreds of thousands of spouses of American citizens who are in the US illegally could get aĀ path to citizenship,Ā while Trump has promised if he were reelected that there would beĀ mass deportationsĀ of illegal immigrants.

When Trump was in office, his administration also presided over the cruel practice of separating moreĀ thanĀ 3,000Ā migrant childrenĀ from their families. But the fact remains that when you look at the larger picture, Trump and Bidenā€™s policies on the southern border now more resemble each other than not.

TheĀ nonpartisanĀ Congressional Budget OfficeĀ estimated this year thatĀ immigrant workers will addĀ $7 trillionĀ to the USĀ economy over the next decade. Given the significance of immigrants to the American economy, Iā€™m hoping to hear both candidatesā€™ plans for how best to encourage legal immigration that go beyond bumper-sticker slogans like ā€œBuild the wall.ā€

Ukraine and NATO

Then there isĀ theĀ rather large elephant in the room, which is Trumpā€™s bizarre bromance with Russian President Vladimir Putin.Ā Were Trump to be reelected, mightĀ he end all US support for the war in Ukraine?

That is a real possibility, especially since Trump has said he could end the warĀ within 24 hours.Ā (Since the Ukrainians and the Russians have been fighting for a decade since Russia invaded Crimea in 2014, this claim seems improbable at best.)

Also, Trumpā€™s former national security advisor, John Bolton,Ā told me for the podcastĀ In the RoomĀ that he believes if Trump were reelected, he would carry through on threats he made privately while in office to pull out of NATO.

But consider that this spring, Trump didnā€™t get in the way of aĀ massive $61 billionĀ US aid package for Ukraine. Given Trumpā€™s iron grip on his party, he could have opposed this package, and it then would have surely failed to pass in the US House; instead,Ā Trump kept silent, which last month gave more thanĀ 100Ā Republican House members permission to vote for the desperately needed aid to Ukraine.

So what I will be listening for during the debate is some explanation of what the Trump plan is for the Ukraine war and more broadly for NATO in general, which his own former defense secretary,Ā Jim Mattis,Ā publicly described as theĀ ā€œmost successful and powerful military alliance in modern history.ā€

To be sure, Biden and Trump have striking differences in style and temperament.Ā But itā€™s also helpful to recognize that beyond their shared, advanced ages, on some key policy issues, Biden and Trump also share some of the same positionsĀ ā€”Ā even if itā€™s politically inconvenient for them or their supporters to admit it.

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