Three days earlier than he went to New York to ship his valedictory speech to the United Nations Common Meeting as president of america, Joe Biden hosted his last summit of the Quad, the Indo-Pacific alliance he fortified as a U.S.-led bulwark in opposition to China.
The gathering at Biden’s Delaware dwelling, attended by the leaders of India, Australia and Japan, was another step in a serious push by the U.S. and its allies to “Trump-proof” world safety forward of the fast-approaching November presidential election that might result in a dramatic change in U.S. overseas coverage.
Former President Donald Trump’s views on the U.S. position on the planet are well-known. In consequence, the prospect that he may emerge victorious in what stays a neck-and-neck race with Vice President Kamala Harris is a supply of profound concern amongst Washington’s allies.