James Carafano is vice president of foreign and defense policy studies at the Heritage Foundation. As Biden takes on Putin, Carafano takes stock of recent geopolitical developments.

Carafano: “With COVID corralled for now, the G-7 band got back together last week. In the past, whenever the heads of the free world’s seven leading economies gathered, they served up pretty much only nothing-burgers, smothered in bupkis, with a side of zilch. This, the first post-pandemic G-7 summit, delivered more of the same. However, this was also Joe Biden’s first trip abroad as president, and the meeting revealed some insights about Biden as a foreign policy leader.

Lesson #1. The Grandpa Thing Works. Biden has the folksy, friendly Chauncey Gardener shtick down…What’s behind Biden’s genial smile and aviator glasses? The recent Pew poll is interesting. Globally, he gets great marks for making the U.S. be seen in a more favorable light. Yet when it comes to their views of U.S. leadership, the state of American democracy and their belief that U.S. foreign policies adequately consider the interests of other countries, the poll numbers are much worse.

That is mirrored here at home. Biden’s personal poll numbers are high. Yet many of his signature polices, like those on immigration and border security, are deeply unpopular. It seems that we like Biden, but we don’t like Bidenism. What are the odds that the G-7 will find Biden’s winning smile sufficient to compensate for the weakening of the global defense proposed in Biden’s defense budget?

Lesson #2. He Prefers Finger-Waving to Putting Hand to Plow. When the G-7 start looking for serious leadership, they cannot expect much from the U.S. So far, Biden seems to be content with saying ‘the right things.’ He is more than ready to tell us that he will tell the Chinese and the Russians exactly what he thinks about their poor behavior—from cyber-attacks and cyber-theft to religious persecution.

The problem is: Moscow and Beijing don’t care what Biden says. They pay attention to how their competitors and adversaries leaders use their power. To date, Biden’s foreign policy looks indistinguishable from Obama’s. It’s an approach that places a premium on avoiding risk, doing as little as possible and, when action is unavoidable, ‘leading from behind.’ That’s a risky approach in a world in which great powers are striving mightily to diminish U.S. power and influence.

Lesson #3. Foreign Policy Is the Handmaiden to His Domestic Agenda. One thing made abundantly clear at the meeting: the president is most interested in foreign policy initiatives that add legitimacy to his domestic agenda aiming to transform America into a progressive la-la land. The administration, for example, reentered the Paris Accord, a climate change pact that can be used to justify radical energy and economic policies such as those in the Green New Deal. Similarly, he used the summit to endorse a global minimum corporate tax rate—a move that will be used to demand higher corporate taxes here at home.” So at home and abroad Biden is a failure and Americans pay the price. Yes, elections have consequences.