With Taiwan, Ukraine and Jan. 6 as backdrop, U.S. hosts global Summit for Democracy
WASHINGTON — It’s hard to imagine a more dramatic backdrop as President Joe Biden’s virtual Summit for Democracy gets underway today: authoritarianism looming large over Ukraine, Taiwan — and the United States itself.
Biden and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will kick off the proceedings this morning, hosting government officials, civil society advocates and business leaders from more than 110 countries, including Canada.
It comes with the world nervously watching two of the summit’s most glaring absences — Russia and China — flex their military muscles at two woefully undermatched neighbours.
Biden has threatened economic sanctions should Russia invade Ukraine, while Blinken has called a Chinese incursion into Taiwan a “potentially disastrous decision.”