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The Senate on Tuesday easily confirmed Tony Blinken to be President Biden’s secretary of state.

Blinken won broad bipartisan support in the 78-22 vote. He previously was deputy secretary of state under former President Barack Obama.

At his confirmation hearing this month, Blinken praised former President Donald Trump for taking a tougher approach to China, but was grilled on Obama-era Mideast policies.

“President Trump was right in taking a tougher approach to China. I disagree very much with the way that he went about it in a number of areas, but the basic principle was the right one, and I think that’s actually helpful to our foreign policy,” Blinken told senators.

Blinken pledged to continue US support for Israel, and argued the US and allied “techno democracies” should oppose China and “techo autocracies” in defining future use of the internet.


  Tony Blinken won broad bipartisan support in the 78-22 vote. Alex Edelman/Pool/AFP via Getty Images Tony Blinken won broad bipartisan support in the 78-22 vote. Alex Edelman/Pool/AFP via Getty Images

Blinken won 15-3 committee approval, but Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said he was concerned about more “regime change” wars, while some Republicans expressed concern about a possible softening approach toward Iran.

“Mr. Blinken has been a full-throated advocate of military intervention in the Middle East for 20 years,” Paul said on the Senate floor Tuesday before the vote.

During his confirmation hearing, Paul grilled Blinken on the Iraq War and the Syrian and Libyan civil wars, where the Obama administration supported Islamist militants who fought secular dictators, triggering a decade of bloodshed in each country.

“We’re going to get more of the same. In his hearing I said to him, the problem isn’t that we don’t compromise or that we don’t have bipartisan consensus. The problem is we have too much bipartisan consensus for war. For 20 years, he has advocated for military intervention,” Paul said.

“Blinken and Biden both supported the Iraq War. It was an utter failure. They admit as much. They supported the Libyan deposing of Gadhafi and war … but then they don’t take any learning or knowledge from that and say, ‘Maybe we shouldn’t go into the next one, Syria.’ And yet they went into Syria,” Paul said.

“The lesson is that regime change doesn’t work, that you often get unintended consequences,” Paul said.

Paul said he’s concerned that “the lesson to Blinken and Biden and his administration isn’t that regime change doesn’t work. It’s that if we’re going to do it, we need to go bigger. We need to go all in.”

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