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The World Next Week

U.S. Presidential Campaign Picks Up, Iran Mulls Retaliation, Bangladesh’s New Government, and More

Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her new running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, campaign ahead of the party’s convention; world leaders and diplomats reach out to Iran and Israel to head off a wider regional war after the assassination of Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran spurred retaliation threats; Bangladesh prepares an interim government after former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country; and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government responds to anti-immigrant riots across the country.      Mentioned on the Podcast   Fred Kaplan, “Kamala Harris Has Been Much More Involved in Foreign Policy Than We Realize,” Slate   Jonathan Masters, “The U.S. Vice President and Foreign Policy,” CFR.org   Recommended Reading Swift Boats at War in Vietnam, edited by Guy Gugliotta, Neva Sullaway, John Yeoman   For an episode transcript and show notes, visit The World Next Week at: https://www.cfr.org/podcasts/twnw/us-presidential-campaign-picks-iran-mulls-retaliation-bangladeshs-new-government-and-more

Duration:
27m
Broadcast on:
08 Aug 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her new running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, campaign ahead of the party’s convention; world leaders and diplomats reach out to Iran and Israel to head off a wider regional war after the assassination of Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran spurred retaliation threats; Bangladesh prepares an interim government after former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country; and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government responds to anti-immigrant riots across the country.   

 

Mentioned on the Podcast

 

Fred Kaplan, “Kamala Harris Has Been Much More Involved in Foreign Policy Than We Realize,” Slate

 

Jonathan Masters, “The U.S. Vice President and Foreign Policy,” CFR.org

 

Recommended Reading

Swift Boats at War in Vietnam, edited by Guy Gugliotta, Neva Sullaway, John Yeoman

 

For an episode transcript and show notes, visit The World Next Week at: https://www.cfr.org/podcasts/twnw/us-presidential-campaign-picks-iran-mulls-retaliation-bangladeshs-new-government-and-more 

 

Today's high school and college faculty play a vital role in advancing their students' global literacy, which is essential to our national security and prosperity. CFR knows educators are on the front lines protecting American democracy and preparing for back to school. So if you're a teacher, CFR education has your back. They create teaching and learning resources for use in the classroom, videos, simulations, readings, and class activities that are accessible, accurate, authoritative, and best of all, free. So visit CFR's education website at education.cfr.org and sign up for their weekly educator newsletter. That's education.cfr.org. In the coming week, diplomacy intensifies to prevent wider war in the Middle East. The U.S. presidential campaigns ramp up with a complete democratic ticket, and Bangladesh prepares for a new interim government after its long-time leader fled. It's August 8th, 2024, and time for the world next week. I'm Bob McMahon. And I'm Carlian Robbins. Carla, let's kick off in the United States. This week was a big one for the democratic side of the competition for president. Vice President Kamala Harris was certified as the democratic presidential nominee, and she announced her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. Now, governors tend to not have large foreign policy portfolios, and as we know, vice presidents don't necessarily come in with a major foreign policy portfolio as well. However, we are the Council on Foreign Relations, and we like to talk about these things, whether it's vice president or president. Wait, let's back up here. We had Al Gore, who took responsibility with Clinton to responsibility for Russia, and Joe Biden with Obama, or experienced on foreign policy. No, no, absolutely. But please continue. No, as has been borne out, and we actually have a background around this on our site, vice presidents actually have stepped up and taken on important initiatives in foreign policy. But as you get into the campaign, as President Trump said recently, the president is the one that matters. And so, we'll see. It got a lot of attention. Tim Walz was the leading news cycle figure in a very busy news week at the start of the week. What can we say about his foreign policy chops? You know, I was thinking about all this, and particularly thinking about this question of this commander in chief challenge for presidential candidates themselves typically face. Remember, Hillary Clinton, that 3 a.m. phone call ad from the 2008 primary showed that picture of sleeping children with that voice over it's 3 a.m., and a phone is ringing somewhere in the White House. And part of that was, you know, pushing back against sexism, of course. But even male candidates, you know, with Bill Clinton ran as the Arkansas governor, first term Senator Barack Obama ran, neither of them had foreign policy credit, and they chose vice presidential candidates with much stronger resumes to bolster their bona fides. And Kamala Harris has built her career on domestic policy, and then while she got another candidate who was built a career on domestic issues, in fact, all of her final candidates for the job except Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, who spent 25 years in the Navy and flew combat missions in the Gulf War had domestic policy credentials and not foreign policy credentials. So what I was asking myself is why haven't we heard more about the commander in chief test? Although we have been getting on the swift boating about Walz in the last 24 hours, but we can talk about that. So what's the answer? Well, nearly four years as vice president, certainly good understudy preparation, even if until recently this White House has downplayed Harris's role. I was intrigued to read in Fred Kaplan's column in slate that she has attended almost every one of Biden's PDBs, these presidential daily briefs in which a top Intel officer outlines the major threats for the president and other developments around the world. But I suspect the main reason why this test hasn't come up, either from the Chattering class or from US allies, is that the anxiety over Trump and getting out of NATO and disrupting alliances and everything else so intense. And they've seen Kamala so often out there, including at Munich and all the things we've talked about, that it's been enough to persuade themselves that the alternative and this by proxy internationalism looks plenty good enough. And so who cares if Walz is not a major international player? And so the commander in chief test hasn't come up that much, which is a long intro to the question you asked me, but one that I've been spending a lot of time thinking about. As for what Walz brings to the foreign policy conversation, there was no mention of his foreign policy credentials in his rollout, at least that I've heard so far. But he isn't a complete neophyte, he served in the armed services committee in Congress. He was ranking on veterans affairs. He served 24 years in the Army National Guard, although not in combat. And as for his policy positions, there was a lot of scrambling going on as soon as he was announced to find him on the record on foreign policy. But that's not that surprising for a man who's mainly a governor, he left the House in 2019. And I don't remember having him in especially high profile, certainly not on foreign policy when he was there. So what did we find? Like Harris, he's a supporter of Israel's right of self-defense while criticizing its handling of the war in Gaza. He called in March for the United States to push for a ceasefire and hostage release. On other issues, he ran originally in Congress, in part in a platform of posing the war in Iraq. He traveled to Syria in 2009 on a codel that met with Bashar al-Assad that pushed unsuccessfully to cut off the pipeline of weapons to militants in Iraq where, you know, National Guard members from Minnesota were serving. In 2013, he spoke out against Obama airstrikes in Syria. He supported the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. I think the things that, most importantly, is a trade skeptic like Biden and Harris, although as a governor of an agricultural state, he's been more flexible on that issue. And he's very good on environmental issues. And I think for US allies, that's going to be a big deal. Yeah. And I think that extends to his energy policy. I think he's been bullish on trying to promote electric vehicles, for example. As you say, as a governor, he brings those kind of governor credentials of someone who's had to make the tough trade off choices and having a state that produces things that they would like to sell abroad makes them a bit more pragmatic on trade policies too. So I think you're right. I think immigration is another interesting issue because Minnesota has a lot of people who are either refugees or asylum seekers, some alleys in particular in the state, but also others. And he was also outspoken on the Ukraine war, you know, condemning Russia's invasion. So he's got a voice. We're going to hear a lot more of it. I think, as you say, very domestically focused, seen as very willing to take on the Trump ticket and challenge them in a number of ways. It'll be interesting to see if they do end up coming up with either a first-ever Trump-Harris debate or a J.D. Vance and Waltz debate and see what comes out at that time because you're starting to see some of the veterans type squabbling going on involving his record there vis-a-vis events who served in Iraq. And I think it was a communication office if I'm not mistaken. Yeah. This swift boating thing is we'll see how much legs it has. I mean, the Kerry campaign. We should know what swift boating is really quickly for those who might not be totally familiar with the 2004 campaign. Okay. So when Kerry ran, Kerry was a swift boating veteran, and some people who served with him falsely claimed he had exaggerated his service in Vietnam. And they didn't push back. I mean, they just let it go. They didn't think it was going to be a big deal. And the things that were said were not true, but it hurt him. And he, of course, had been someone who had served in Vietnam and then had opposed the war when he'd come out. And it had become a very emotional issue for a lot of people who served in Vietnam. But the term itself, the verbs with boating becomes part of the political lexicon. And now here's walls who served 24 years in the National Guard. And the accusation is from Vance, for which there appears to be absolutely no substances that he left to run for Congress to avoid going to Iraq for deployment. And what the record seems to show is that he made the decision to go before they got their orders. And so thank you very much. But what we know is when he ran for governor, there were several people who surfaced this charge, people who were opposed to him. And he opposed the war in Iraq. So it got much like with Kerry and Vietnam that there's, you know, there are these divisions. My husband is a swift boating veteran himself. And I see this division among the swift boating. People opposed the war in Vietnam, people now posing the war in Iraq. You can see how that can get very, very emotional. But he, you know, walls made the decision to run for Congress. He ran for Congress in part, as I said, opposing the war in Iraq, drew this, you know, some flag for this when he ran for governor, and then it went away. And now Vance has serviced it again. So they're using terms like stolen valor. They're doing all sorts of other things that are going on. I would think that the public having seen it, I'm not sure it's going to have legs a second time around, but they're certainly pushing it really hard. We'll see if it's a one day story or a two day story. Yeah. And it's interesting to note that Vance, while having served in Iraq, has also come out as being very outspoken against entangling military involvement of the US, whether in the Middle East or elsewhere. So, but that's a separate topic for debate. I think it is an interesting point. And then we of course haven't even gotten into, and they haven't even gotten into, you know, President Trump, who was hugely critical of the war in Iraq. And, and, you know, I don't like, you know, his criticism of John McCain, who he said he wasn't a hero because he got shot down. And it was terrible things. And his refusal to visit an American were one one cemetery in France. And all of that, I mean, this is a very problematic thing for the Republican ticket itself. So, JD Vance served, he should be thanked for his service, while served, he should be thanked for his service. And this sort of nastiness is really not a substance of a campaign. I mean, let's move on from it. Well, Carla, we are going to return to another topic that I think will be a frequent topic on this podcast, which is the Middle East. We are in a state of heightened anticipation about Iran's expected retaliation against Israel for the assassination in Tehran, of Hamas leader Ismail Haniah. Leaders and diplomats have been scrambling to avoid a wider regional war. Iran insists there's no room for compromise on this front. But there are also reports, persistent reports that it also may be reconsidering how it responds. Hamas, meanwhile, has named Yahya Sinwar, who was the main architect of the brutal October 7 attacks against Israel as its new top official. And Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister, has said Israel's prepared to engage in a multi-front war with Iran. So, what to think of the diplomacy going on in this anticipation, Carla? This is one of the moments when both of us desperately miss daily journalism. I'm sure in your case, wire service journalism, because at least you get to do it hourly. We're taping this Thursday morning with no certainty that it won't all be OBE by the time the podcast drops. So, with that enormous caveat, we, like everyone else, are waiting to see what Iran does and predictions on both the when and the how big have swung wildly, as you noted in recent days. Iran has warned Israel that it's going to hit back hard for the Haniah assassination. But also, as it didn't April, it was signaled that it doesn't want to spark a much wider war, or at least that's what Iran's new, somewhat more reform-minded president, Masoud Possession, said earlier this week when he declared that Israel, quote, "will definitely receive a response for its crimes in insulin." But he also said that Iran was not seeking to, quote, expand the scope of the war in the region. That was his statement, whether the Revolutionary Guard Corps, whether the Supreme Leader feels that way, who knows. Many countries very nervously urge their citizens to leave Lebanon and avoid traveling the region. Some airlines cancel flights to Israel and then resume the flights. Others have stopped flying to Beirut altogether. And over the weekend, Secretary of State Tony Blinken reportedly told his G7 counterparts that an attack on Israel from Iran and Hezbollah was imminent and urged them to use their diplomatic influence not to avoid it, but to halt further escalation. It seemed so inevitable at that point. But yesterday, we began hearing, while U.S. officials still expect some Iranian response, they began to think it may not be as large as they originally feared. And that the Iranians have been "talked down," either by diplomatic pressure or the U.S. military buildup in the region. Or one explanation that I found puzzling but intriguing is the argument that Hani'a was killed by a bomb, not by a missile, as originally believed, which seems somehow to be a much smaller assault on their sovereignty and a tactic that Iran also uses. Who knows? But I was also what we're hearing is that even if the Iranians may be rethinking the size of it, does that mean that Hezbollah is rethinking what they're going to do? We do know that in private Jordan, Qatar, Egypt, and the Saudis have warned Iran to calibrate any response. After the humiliation of Hani'a being murdered, the betting had been that Iran was going to try to inflict a much larger pain than it managed in April. They sent 300 drones and missiles, the U.S. and its allies managed to push back with the Israelis. The U.S. has again moved forces into the region. But the feeling was that the Iranians, if they were going to do it bigger, could perhaps get through this defense by not just sending its own missiles but also having barrages from this axis of resistance. Things coming from Hezbollah, things coming from the Houthis, things coming from Syria and Iraq. So we don't know what's going to happen. Has Iran been persuaded to scale it back? Can Iran control with Hezbollah does? And if the Iranians do hit, can the U.S. persuade BB to once again cool it in his own response? So we'll have to watch. Yeah, and I think particularly what you said about Hezbollah is important because it wasn't just Hani'a who was assassinated the day before. A very senior military commander in Hezbollah was killed in a Beirut suburb, which is another very, very clear warning shot from the Israelis that they can go very high if they have to, to go after the leadership in Hezbollah. Hezbollah leader Nasrallah came out with another sort of fire in brimstone speech this week warning about repercussions. And so I think where maybe things have tempered a little bit on the Iranian side itself, Hezbollah is the place to watch. And you're seeing special jitters in the region, in and around Lebanon. So I think that's what we should watch. And again, as you say, as we take this, all bets are off. Something else could have overtaken our discussion as this podcast drops. And we also don't know if this is sort of like the Star Trek Prime Directive. Even by when the reports come out to say that the Iranians have been persuaded to calibrate their response, how is that going to go down in Tehran? Do not underestimate us because this was a huge assault on their sovereignty. So we do know that the U.S. has moved forces into place, that they have put together once again a coalition, how many Arab states are willing to participate in it, not so publicly this time with radar with the Jordanian still going to be willing to shoot drones down over Jordan. We certainly know they don't want it. Most of the Arab states don't want to get sucked into a regional war. Huge numbers of uncertainties there. And then there's the question about the ceasefire talks. Right. The White House is still predicting that there's some sort of a deal is within reach. You know, is this the triumph of hope over experience? Are they trying to jolly them along? We know that CIA director Bill Burns and officials from Israel on Gutter in Egypt met again last week, and they're trying to move things ahead and pretty much everyone agrees, including the Israeli military leadership, the BB is the main obstacle. But how Hamas is in your face naming of Yaya Sinwar, who is the architect of the October 7 attack to succeed, honey, changes the dynamic isn't clear. U.S. officials say that Sinwar always had veto power over any deal, but at least with any of there was at least a small voice, some voice for compromise. That's now gone. And then there's the basic logistical challenge of negotiating with a man who's hiding in tunnels and refuses to use electronic communication and add to that is BB going to compromise with a man he describes as dead man walking. Certainly an in-your-face appointment of Sinwar. And I really don't know why the White House keeps saying that this is so close to happening. Other than that, the stakes are incredibly high and they certainly have been active and it would like that to be the case. But as you say, is it wishful thinking or there's something really going on? Yeah. Bob, let's move to Dakar Bangladesh, where after weeks of bloody protests, some 400 plus people reportedly died, long serving increasingly autocratic Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina fled to India, basically just ahead of the crowds. These protests began after a high court reinstated a quota that reserved more than half of civil service jobs for specific groups. Including 30% for the descendants of those who fought in Bangladesh's 1971 War of Independence. This is a constituency that is largely made up of supporters of Hasina's Awami League party. And this is particularly intolerable in a country where youth unemployment is really high and Hasina's repression getting worse and worse and increasingly undermining any legitimacy that she had left. So what happens now? Hasina had ruled the country for what 15 years? This is a pretty big change. Absolutely, it's extremely breathtaking to watch and potentially in a positive way, the term people power has been used in terms of what's happened with these protests and the dislodging of someone who had been thought to be a very powerful leader. First, let's just take a quick note. Bangladesh, eighth largest country by population in the world, third largest Islamic country in the world. One of the world's factories for what's called fast fashion produces an enormous amount of textiles. And yet with some deep problems, deep root problems that we've seen these protests really bear out. As we were taping this podcast and other fluid situation, there was the installation going on of Muhammad Yunus as ahead of an interim government, which was agreed on by the current president of Bangladesh, Muhammad Shahabuddin, military leaders and student leaders. Then student leaders in particular had said they would not accept a military-led government but wanted Muhammad Yunus to lead. He is a noble laureate. He's well-known for establishing what's known as Grameen Bank. A micro credit organization was aimed at lifting the poor from the abject poverty and seen as a real solution and not just Bangladesh, but really worldwide. He became almost a global rock star in this way. Very well-known internationally had been seen as an opposition figure by Hasina's government and now could be coming back and bringing Bangladesh to some sort of a new era of stability. He said as he was returning to the country today, today is a glorious day for us. And also referring to it as saying it's as if Bangladesh has got a second independence. And then he also called for the restoration of law and order. So we'll see what kind of ability he has to bring about that law and order. As you said, 400 people killed. These were increasingly dangerous and lethal protests that caused the prime minister to leave. There were a lot of people killed. Police were killed. Thuggish attacks happening by O'amilly supporters in particular. And a country that still can be considered a powder keg, but I think there seems to be this prevailing mood that they want to bring it into a new era and that Yunus could be this transitional figure that helps to bring that about. We'll take it day by day, Carla, but it's certainly a different situation than what we're seeing in Venezuela, another place we talked about recently. The protesters wanted Yunus hooves to take over. This really isn't actually a legal or constitutional process that's going on here. And the military is the one that said, "Okay, you can have him." Is the military really going to be pulling the strings? Do we have a process actually? Is there going to be elections? Is there some constitution behind it that actually makes this a legitimate transition? All really good questions. The military, as it so often is, in these cases, is really crucial. And apparently it was the military that had reached his tipping point and signaled to Hasina, as well as members of her family and some others that she needed to lead the country that they were not going to be engaging in a violent crackdown on protesters. So the military could be in place to back up and support a peaceful transfer of power. And yes, it currently seems to be outside the bounds of constitutional change, but Hasina's government was reelected and what was widely seen as a not free and fair vote earlier in the year. So I think the country is trying to put things back together. And that would seem to have to include the main opposition party, known as the BNP, and headed up by the longtime rival, another legendary woman figure in Bangladesh, Calida Zia. She was released from house arrest. She herself has been urging her followers for, quote, "no destruction, revenge or vengeance." So she wants to, you know, basically help to contribute to democratic national elections. So I think the hope is that you're going to see emerge from this process. UNICE's installation is relatively quickly some sort of a path towards elections that will be free and fair and where people can feel like they have some sentence of agency and move beyond this kind of corruption, cronies, and sluggishness that was leading the country. It's been a tough half century of independence, though, and we'll see if Bangladesh is ready. Lots to watch there. Bob, time to discuss our audience figure of the week. And this is the figure listeners vote on every Tuesday and Wednesday at CFR_org's Instagram story. And this week, our audience selected 400 arrested in UK anti-immigrant riots. Far right groups using social media and a huge amount of disinformation have been driving the violence. In UK science and tech secretary Kyle has been especially critical of ex and its owner Elon Musk who tweeted on ex that, quote, "civil war is inevitable in response to the riots." Is the UK's new prime minister, Keir Storm, are getting this under control? That is the major question. Obviously, the first big test for him, worst riots in more than a decade in the UK. We are just taping this after a night in which they were counter protesters who were trying to change the narrative. So there were bracing for protests to resume again on Wednesday night. They were pretty muted and actually the biggest voices that came out were those seeking to protest against the violence, against the anti-immigrant hatred that has come out of this. But let's just take a quick note about what spawned this. A truly horrible event occurred in late July. A 17 year old man with a knife killed three girls between the ages of six and nine injured eight other children, two adults at a dance event in a seaside town of Southport in Northern England. Initially, the name of the accused of silent was not released under British law. People under 18, they would not release the name. And social media that you were referencing was sort of filled the vacuum along with people who in the UK and outside the UK, who are from the UK sort of whipping up hatred as well and basically saying it was an immigrant, it was Muslim, it was somebody who came in the country by a boat last year, none of which was true. It turned out and they did release the name of the accused of silent. It was a person born in the UK in Cardiff Wales of Rwandan background and still not known exactly what triggered this attack. But that almost became beside the point because these protests have whipped up, which was this sort of percolating hatred of immigrants of the quote unquote other that has come in and to some in England and UK have started to pose this huge threat to life and limb. And so it really became this situation that was kind of building on itself. Keir Starmer has a background as a public prosecutor, very much had a law and order response in terms of sweeping arrests, threatening of jail time and so forth. What he's being looked to for now though is kind of more of the political messaging that the country really needs to kind of overcome this really traumatic period. I think last night's counter protests tapped into some of the concern, the deep concern that many in the UK feel about just the violence that was happening. I mean, you saw people breaking into hotels that had been temporary lodging for asylum seekers and trying to set them on fire, trying to burn people to death. They actually set on fire at library. And it was a combination of sort of people who are deeply resentful of immigrants as well as people who are looking to basically just pile on, frankly. It's been a real ugly period of time for the country. And Starmer is really on the spot. Again, first big test for him. And he's going to be looked to he's been described as a bland technocratic figure in some ways. He's going to be looked to for some, if not eloquence, at least some consistent messaging that gets the country back on its feet. Social media has played such a central role in this. And you were always caught between questions of free speech and the problems of disinformation. And you see how potentially destructive. Are they handling that? Do they have new legislation over there? Are they handling it any better than we're handling it? Is there some sort of model there? Or are they overstepping our whole notion of the First Amendment? It's a really good test of what is still an emerging piece of legislation known as the Online Safety Act that allows for the prosecution of people who convey information they know to be false, which has certainly happened in this case. And if the information was intended to cause either psychological or physical harm to a likely audience, this act is not in effect yet. It's still sort of going through its implementation phase. And so the government is in this really challenging interim period. It can still go ahead and prosecute people who are trying to incite violence online. But it's not able to sort of employ the full effect of the Online Safety Act. The European Union has very vigorous online safety legislation that the UK would have been able to take advantage of had it still been part of the European Union. But it's now sort of facing its own threat here. There is this really difficult exchange as you cited between Elon Musk and the starmer government. And it must be said that the platform X is really continuing to show consistently. It is a not responsible place in these moments. So this is going to be something that is going to be have to be closely watched as well. And that's our look at the turbulent world next week, Carla. Here's some other stories to keep an eye on. Japan's Prime Minister Kishida Fumio visits Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia. End. And I know you're waiting for this one. San Diego Zoo officially welcomes back to new pandas. Yay! Please subscribe to the World Next Week on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. And leave us a review while you're at it. We appreciate the feedback. If you'd like to reach out, please email us at twnw@cfr.org. The publications mentioned in this episode, as well as a transcript of our conversation, are listed on the podcast page for the World Next Week on cfr.org. Please note that opinions expressed on the World Next Week are solely those of the hosts not of CFR, which takes no institutional positions on matters of policy. Today's program was produced by Esther Fang, the director of podcasting Gabriel Sierra, and special thanks to Helena Copens-Johnson and Emily Hallsmith for their research assistance. Our theme music is provided by Marcus Zacharria, and this is Carla Robin Singh, so long, and get ready to vote. And this is Bob McMahon saying goodbye, and please be careful out there. [BLANK_AUDIO]