Reflections on America
This debate was particularly vivid in the United States. This was partly because 2020 was an election year in the U.S. and partly because the country was the nonstop epicenter of the pandemic starting from April 2020 to the end of the year. For the domestic politics in the U.S., the handling of the COVID-19 crisis by former U.S. President Donald Trump was one of the most significant determinants of the U.S. presidential elections. After enjoying the lowest unemployment numbers seen in decades, being acquitted in his impeachment case and benefiting from internal feuding among the Democratic candidates, the political observers argued that Trump could win the 2020 election battle, maybe even by a higher margin than the 2016 elections. However, the COVID outbreak and ensuing economic crisis generated the biggest challenge for Trump. The way that he handled the crisis caused a lack of confidence in him among the electorate. Thus it contributed to the electoral victory of Joe Biden and the Democrats. Following his inauguration, Biden made it his main priority to deal with the COVID-19 crisis and its economic aftershocks. The pace of the vaccination of Americans and the economic packages to stimulate the country helped him stabilize the situation in the U.S.Biden's COVID-19 policy
Although there are still high numbers of positive cases of COVID-19 in the country, it is nowhere close to 2020. Now the Biden administration is trying to make the fight against COVID-19 another World War II moment for U.S. global leadership. After strong criticism from its allies regarding the export control in vaccines, the Biden administration wants to make the coronavirus fight the signature of the “return of America.” The permission to export the vaccines to other parts of the world and generating a debate about the patents of the different vaccines can be the first steps in this process. According to Biden, this process can create a similar impact to that of the reconstruction and development of allied nations in the aftermath of World War II. If Biden achieves these goals, the COVID-19 pandemic can generate those frequently stated transformative impacts in terms of both U.S. politics and foreign policy. After causing a change in the government in the U.S., the pandemic may also transform the U.S.' perception and the country's role in the international system as well.
[Daily Sabah, May 10 2021]