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World leaders recalibrate as they consider a Harris presidency

Until last Sunday, governments and actors on all sides of the Middle East’s varied conflicts agreed on one thing: A second Donald Trump presidency appeared inevitable.

But the arrival on the scene of Vice President Kamala Harris – a relative foreign policy unknown – is forcing politicians in the Middle East and elsewhere in the world to ask themselves an unexpected question.

Why We Wrote This

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A world that was increasingly anticipating a second Trump presidency is suddenly asking itself how a putative Harris administration might treat its allies and foes.

What would a Harris presidency look like from abroad?

A former district attorney and public prosecutor, Ms. Harris has already brought a strong sense of right and wrong to her nascent presidential campaign. That will perhaps guide her in the absence of the deep international relationships and experience that Joe Biden enjoys or the transactional approach that Mr. Trump takes to the world.

Facing the prospect of a Harris or a Trump presidency, an unknown quantity or an isolationist, Middle East actors are now in a diplomatic flurry to get what they can from a U.S. administration that is still heavily invested in the region.

“The region cannot risk letting this stretch into the next administration,” says one Gulf diplomat, speaking of the war in Gaza and regional diplomatic stalemate. “No one knows where America – or us – will be by then.”

Until last Sunday, governments and actors on all sides of the Middle East’s varied conflicts agreed on one thing: A second Donald Trump presidency appeared inevitable.

But this week’s arrival on the scene of Vice President Kamala Harris – a relative foreign policy unknown without the international relationships and experience of Mr. Biden or Mr. Trump – is forcing politicians in the Middle East and elsewhere in the world to ask themselves an unexpected question.

What would a Harris presidency look like from abroad?

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

A world that was increasingly anticipating a second Trump presidency is suddenly asking itself how a putative Harris administration might treat its allies and foes.

In the Middle East, a region at war whose players had planned their strategies for a Trump presidency with a Biden contingency, Ms. Harris’ emergence has them racing to recalibrate.

Ms. Harris’ background as a district attorney and prosecutor, with a strong sense of right and wrong that she is already playing up in her nascent campaign, makes her an unusual figure. She shares neither Mr. Trump’s transactionalism nor Joe Biden’s long history of internationalism.

A new view of Israel? 

Vice President Kamala Harris’ Middle East experience is limited to two brief trips to the United Arab Emirates.

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