After months of aggressively rallying support for domestic objectives like Medicare for All, union rights, and a $15 minimum wage, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in a speech on Thursday turned his attention to American foreign policy and the so-called war on terror, which he says has been a “disaster” for the world and for the United States.
The address covered a wide range of topics—from the history of U.S. interventionism to the threats posed by climate change and nuclear proliferation—and called for an “expansive” view of foreign policy that encompasses such issues as global inequality, the power of multinational corporations, and the rise of racist movements in the United States and abroad.
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“Foreign policy is about whether we continue to champion the values of freedom, democracy, and justice, values which have been a beacon of hope for people throughout the world, or whether we support undemocratic, repressive regimes, which torture, jail, and deny basic rights to their citizens,” Sanders said.
Watch the speech:
According to excerpts obtained by The Daily Beast ahead of the speech, Sanders will argue that American interventionism abroad feeds the very problem it claims to be eradicating.
“Orienting U.S. national security strategy around terrorism essentially allowed a few thousand violent extremists to dictate policy for the most powerful nation on earth,” Sanders will say. “It responds to terrorists by giving them exactly what they want.”
The speech is set to take place at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, the site of Winston Churchill’s famous “Iron Curtain” speech, and many progressives are suggesting that the address could be a defining moment for Sanders, who is widely viewed as a leading 2020 presidential candidate.
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