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At G20, Biden promotes US leadership, but faces its limits

When world leaders assembled for their group photo at the G20 summit in New Delhi Sunday, there was no Xi Jinping to showcase China’s rise, no Vladimir Putin to glad-hand and lobby for Russia’s perspective on its war in Ukraine.

Alone with big-power status was President Joe Biden, relishing the United States’ still-unrivaled position in the world.

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Even without the leaders of Russia and China in attendance at the G20 summit in India, their influence created real challenges for President Joe Biden, who drew on creative diplomacy to assert U.S. global leadership.

Still, Mr. Biden’s affirmative moment on the world stage, which wrapped up Monday with a stop in Vietnam, was not one of unmitigated triumph. One challenge was evident in the G20 summit’s final statement, which contained softer language on Russia’s war in Ukraine than it did last year.

Mr. Biden may have won some points with proposals he championed at the summit, including an infrastructure project to connect India to the Middle East and Europe through rail and ports. But countries are unlikely to be won over until the shovels hit the dirt, some experts say.

“The Global South’s point of view is that so far they’ve heard mostly talk even as China has steadily moved infrastructure projects along,” says Robert Daly at the Wilson Center in Washington. “If you want to win them over, you have to change their perspective that we [the West] provide lectures, while China provides easy cash.”

When world leaders assembled for their group photo at the G20 summit in New Delhi Sunday, there was no Xi Jinping to showcase China’s rise, no Vladimir Putin to glad-hand and lobby for Russia’s perspective on its war in Ukraine.

Alone with big-power status at the elaborately decorated Gandhi monument was U.S. President Joe Biden. He was “disappointed,” he said, that Mr. Xi skipped the meeting, yet relishing a moment that underscored the United States’ still-unrivaled position and breadth in the 21st-century world.

It was affirmative for a president who took office in January 2021 asserting that “America is back” after the retrenchment and disdain for U.S. global leadership of the Trump presidency.

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Even without the leaders of Russia and China in attendance at the G20 summit in India, their influence created real challenges for President Joe Biden, who drew on creative diplomacy to assert U.S. global leadership.

“The message ‘America is back’ is pretty easy to sell at a G20 where the president of the United States is in attendance, but Xi and Putin are not,” says Daniel Drezner, a professor of international politics at Tufts University’s Fletcher School in Medford, Massachusetts, and an expert in U.S. grand strategy and geopolitics.

Mr. Biden was “engaged in what [former Secretary of State] George Shultz used to refer to as ‘gardening,’ and it’s something Biden really goes out of his way to do,” he adds. “You take care of your allies and partners and work with them along the way so they will trust you and work with you and with international institutions” – like the G20, NATO, or the AUKUS grouping of Asia-Pacific powers.

Still, Mr. Biden’s turn to the world stage, which wrapped up Monday with a stop in Vietnam, was not one of unmitigated triumph. The trip also highlighted a rising challenge to established global powers from developing countries, as well as growing doubts about America’s staying power as the 2024 presidential election looms.

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