The outgoing national security adviser said U.S. alliances have grown stronger as its adversaries weakened.
Outgoing National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan lauded the Biden administrationâs policies on Sunday, saying the United States is âsaferâ and âbetter offâ than it was four years ago.
Reflecting the administrationâs performance days before President-elect Donald Trumpâs inauguration, Sullivan said U.S. alliances have become stronger in the past four years while its adversaries grew weaker.
âNATO is more powerful, purposeful, and bigger, our alliances in the Asia Pacific are at all-time highs, and our adversaries and competitors are weaker across the board. Russia is weaker, Iranâs weaker, China is weaker,â he said, adding that the administration has âkept America out of war.â
Sullivan said the incoming Trump administration will inherit a safer and stronger America.
âThe American people are safer, and the country is better off than we were four years ago, and weâre handing all that off to the next team, as well as having the engines of American power humming: our economy, our technology, our defense industrial base, our supply chains,â Sullivan said.
âSo the United States is in a stronger, more secure position, and our competitors and adversaries are weaker and under pressure.â
Sullivan defended the Afghan withdrawal, saying âAmericans would be fighting and dyingâ if they remained in the Asian country, which is now under Taliban control. âRussia would have more leverage over us; we would be less able to respond to the major strategic challenges we face,â he said.
On the likelihood of reaching a cease-fire and hostage deal between Israel and Hamas before Trumpâs inauguration on Jan. 20, the outgoing national security adviser said, âWe are very, very close, and yet being very close still means weâre far because until you actually get across the finish line, weâre not there.â
Negotiators are currently discussing a phased cease-fire, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signaling that he is committed only to a first phase, a partial hostage release in exchange for a weeks-long halt in fighting.
Hamas has demanded a complete Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip. Netanyahuâs government has insisted on retaining the Philadelphi Corridor, along the GazaâEgypt border, and the Netzarim Corridor, which cuts the Gaza Strip in two, as a necessary condition in order to prevent arms smuggling and to impede Hamasâs movement throughout Gaza.
Sullivan said White House Coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa Brett McGurk is negotiating the âfinal detailsâ with mediators in Doha, and that the team is âdetermined to use every day we have in office to get this done.â
He said itâs possible that a deal can be agreed on before Jan. 20, and itâs also possible that âHamas in particularâ will collapse the deal again.
Trumpâs designated Mideast envoy, Steve Witkoff, who recently met with Netanyahu, has said he hopes an agreement can be reached before the inauguration.
The president-elect has also warned that âall hell will break outâ if Hamas doesnât release the remaining hostages before he returns to the White House.
Also on Sunday, Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.), Trumpâs incoming national security adviser, said the administration will âconfront the evolving challenges of todayâs world and hold firm against those who would harm our way of life.â
âAmericaâs greatest strength is its booming economy and our energy dominance, and those tools will keep us out of wars and allow us to once again lead from a position of strength,â he said, adding that he âfully believe[s] that Americaâs best days are still ahead.â
Dan M. Berger contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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