Influencers with Andy Serwer: Ian Bremmer

In This Article:

In this episode of Influencers, Andy speaks with Eurasia Group President, Ian Bremmer, about the U.S. decision to pull out of Afghanistan, implications for President Biden, and what it means for America’s standing as a global superpower.

Video Transcript

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ANDY SERWER: For political scientist Ian Bremmer, solving the mysteries of international affairs is his life's work. Over the past 23 years, he's become the go-to foreign policy expert for CEOs, news organizations, and Wall Street alike, providing valuable insight and intelligence as we make sense of the world around us. In this episode of Influencers Eurasia Group's Ian Bremmer joins me as we discuss the US decision to pull out of Afghanistan, implications for President Biden, and what it means for America's standing as a global superpower.

Hello, everyone, and welcome to Influencers. I'm Andy Serwer. And welcome to our guest Ian Bremmer, president and founder of research firm Eurasia Group and the author of 10 books, as well as the forthcoming work, The Crises We Need, How to Confront the Three Greatest Dangers of Our Time. Ian, welcome.

IAN BREMMER: Good to see you, Andy.

ANDY SERWER: So how would you characterize what's going on in Afghanistan right now and what's likely to follow in the coming days and weeks?

IAN BREMMER: I mean, this is an extraordinary foreign policy crisis, by far the most important of the Biden administration and largely self-imposed. By the way, it's very clear that the strategic decision to end the US military presence in Afghanistan is one that was thoughtfully considered and on balance I agree with it. We can get into that, we can talk about that if you like. But that's very different from the execution of that policy, the implementation on the ground, which has been a disaster on pretty much every front.

And that is going to affect Biden's credibility domestically, and depending on what happens over the coming days, it might be critical for his presidency. And it's going to affect American credibility internationally. It makes it much harder to say that the United States is back, it makes it much harder for the Americans to maintain strong commitments that our allies really believe in around the world. So much of this was unilateral, and so much of this was badly handled on the part of the past few days.

And it's very painful for me to say that, especially as someone who knows most of the cabinet in the Biden administration. These are capable people, they're thoughtful people, they're experienced people, and we want to see them do well. I mean, you know, a lot of people would have expected that you would have this kind of mismanagement under the Trump presidency, given the kind of individual he was but you expected a lot better under Biden and they have really, really failed here.