An 80-Year-Old President’s Whirlwind Trip: Confirming the Evening

An 80-Year-Old President’s Whirlwind Trip: Confirming the Evening


On the 13th hour of the third day of a two-country trip, President ‌Biden stepped onstage at a news conference in Vietnam and bid reporters there ‌a good evening.

At least, he⁢ thought⁣ so.

“It is evening, isn’t it?” the president said,‍ drawing laughs from the jet-lagged ⁢masses.⁣ “This around-the-world-in-five-days is interesting, isn’t it?”

He was joking, but only sort of.

The trip, ‍which began in New Delhi with the Group ⁢of 20 summit, was a whirlwind for Mr.‍ Biden. He went ⁢abroad with a list of diplomatic to-dos,⁤ most of​ which were aimed at signaling to​ China that the United States was⁤ working ⁤to line ⁢up allies who are fed ⁢up ⁣with Beijing’s aggression in the ‍region. In Hanoi, he celebrated the elevation of the‍ U.S.-Vietnamese partnership⁣ to⁣ the highest level in Vietnam’s diplomatic hierarchy, and said it was part of his administration’s strategy to bolster the American presence in the Indo-Pacific.

But Mr. Biden took another objective overseas, too,‍ as he enters an election season facing questions about his age and stamina: showing ‍that he is still up to ‍the challenges of globe-trotting statesmanship.

His aides described a president in near constant motion. Before ‌traveling to Hanoi, advisers said that Mr. ⁢Biden had‌ met with‌ more than 30 world leaders, mostly in informal meet-and-greets, at the G20 summit in ‌India. The interactions,⁣ they‌ said, were designed to be more ad hoc than the⁢ traditional bilateral meetings that accompany⁣ international ⁣summits.

Before Saturday’s diplomacy, Mr. Biden, ​80, participated in Mass remotely, according to aides⁣ who ‍asked⁢ not to ⁢be named because they were not authorized to publicly discuss behind-the-scenes movements. The president also ⁢told aides that he wanted to reach out⁤ to the tennis​ player Coco Gauff, who had just won‍ the U.S. Open, so they worked to ⁣find time for a call. (Aides said‍ he’d been following the‍ tournament.)

With all the running around, it seemed like little coincidence when, in Hanoi, Mr. Biden repeated ⁤himself: “These five-day trips⁤ around the world are no problem,” he told a BBC reporter who confirmed the time of day.

Mr. Biden’s trip may ultimately⁢ do little to alter his ⁢political fortunes⁢ back home, where‍ his polling numbers⁢ are low and he seems headed toward a tight race against his predecessor, Donald J. Trump. House Republicans are itching to push ahead‌ on a long-shot impeachment inquiry, and his son, Hunter, is facing federal indictment on ​a gun ⁢possession⁣ charge.

The president is also facing persistent questions about his age and effectiveness as a messenger for his⁤ own agenda —⁣ part of a broader ‌conversation in Washington about leaders, ⁢some​ with health problems, who remain in office ​well into their ‌80s or 90s.

As aging politicians of both parties,⁣ including Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky ​and Senator Dianne​ Feinstein of California, suffer from health complications in‍ the public eye, some are beginning to call for more transparency into ⁤the medical⁣ history of…

2023-09-11 03:44:36
Original from www.nytimes.com
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