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Incoming Foreign Affairs chair Meeks says US must lead by 'humble example'

Rep. Gregory MeeksGregory Weldon MeeksThe Hill’s Morning Report – Presented by Mastercard – Congress inches closer to virus relief deal Overnight Defense: Lawmakers release compromise defense bill in defiance of Trump veto threat | Senate voting next week on blocking UAE arms sale | Report faults lack of training, ‘chronic fatigue’ in military plane crashes Rep. David Scott wins House Agriculture Committee gavel MORE (D-N.Y.), the incoming chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the U.S. must lead by “humble example” in confronting global challenges and reasserting the American presence on the world stage. 

Meeks, who was elected in a caucus-wide vote on Thursday to chair the committee beginning in January, will be the first African American to lead the influential panel, charged with oversight of the State Department and U.S. foreign policy. 

In a statement released Thursday night, the New York lawmaker laid out his vision for the committee and foreign policy priorities for the next Congress, calling for a shift from the Trump administration’s “America first” foreign policy to “America forward” in reasserting the U.S. position on the global stage. 

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“The committee under the next Congress will preside over an historic shift in US foreign policy, and there is no shortage of work ahead of us. Not only will we need to re-engage with a world that has felt the marked absence of U.S. global leadership, but we must also rethink traditional approaches to foreign policy,” he said in the statement. 

“This will not be a return to normal, but a leap towards a new way of doing business.”

Meeks, a senior member of the panel who has served over two decades in Congress, said lawmakers must “tighten the scope” of the Authorization for Use of Military Force, a piece of legislation that gives broad authority to the executive branch to launch military action and has raised fears in Congress over its possible use to justify a strike on Iran during the Trump administration. 

The risk of military confrontation between the U.S. and Iran is high following the killing last week of a top Iranian nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. Iran has blamed Israel for the killing, and claims that President TrumpDonald John TrumpBiden says GOP senators have called to congratulate him Biden: Trump attending inauguration is ‘of consequence’ to the country Biden says family will avoid business conflicts MORE pulled back from green lighting a U.S. military strike in Iran. 

The U.S. is also temporarily withdrawing some of its staff from the American embassy in Baghdad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq said on Thursday. The move comes ahead of the one-year anniversary of the U.S. drone strike attack that killed Iran’s top military commander Qassem Soleimani outside Baghdad’s airport.

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The killing led to an escalation of attacks on U.S. forces by Iranian-back shia militias in the country.  

Meeks, in his statement, emphasized the importance of standing with U.S. allies in confronting global challenges like Iran, putting his support behind President-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenBiden says GOP senators have called to congratulate him Biden: Trump attending inauguration is ‘of consequence’ to the country Biden says family will avoid business conflicts MORE’s push to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Meeks also expressed his support of the U.S. rejoining the World Health Organization (WHO). 

President Trump withdrew the U.S. from the JCPOA in 2018 and gave formal notice of withdrawal from the WHO in July, but that withdrawal will not take effect until July 2021. 

“Our challenges before us are global in scale, and it will require global cooperation, spearheaded by American leadership. I am eager to begin work with my colleagues on the committee, and look forward to working with the new Biden-Harris administration on the tasks ahead of us,” he said.

Meeks also said that America must push further on the fight for human rights across the world.

“We must lead by humble example with the weight of U.S. moral credibility,” he said.

U.S. adversaries like China and Russia have sought to deflect criticism of their own human rights abuses by pointing out America’s reckoning with racial injustice and, in particular, the death of George Floyd. Floyd’s death in late May sparked a social justice movement that resulted in continuing demonstrations across the country.  

The lawmaker also committed to pushing for greater diversity within the State Department and emphasized  diplomacy over military action. 

“The Foreign Affairs Committee must take a leading role in how we rebuild the State Department. We will broaden the conversation, hearing testimony from organizations and non-traditional diplomats. We will press for greater diversity so our diplomatic corps looks more like the America it represents abroad, strengthening the initiatives that serve as a pipeline for diverse communities,” he said.