Posted on 11/26/2014 5:39:00 AM PST by SJackson
Chuck Hagels unceremonious dismissal as secretary of defense has refocused attention, once again, on the insularity of President Obamas inner circle, its suspicion of outside voices, and its distaste for dissent. But it has changed in one way: this time, the concerns about secrecy, enforced groupthink, and high school clique behavior dont center on Valerie Jarrett. Instead, the name that keeps surfacing is that of National Security Advisor Susan Rice.
Its true that this isnt the first time were hearing of the toxic atmosphere and mismanagement at Rices National Security Council. But its striking how clearly the battle lines appear to be drawn in the steady stream of bitter leaks aimed at Hagel, designed to kick him while hes down. The cruelty with which the Obama insiders are behaving right now is unsettling, to be sure. But more relevant to the formation of national-security policy is the question of whether Susan Rices incompetence and pride are playing a role in the constant stream of Obama foreign-policy failures.
About two weeks ago, Foreign Policy magazine CEO David Rothkopf, a former Clinton administration official, previewed his new book on American foreign policy in the age of Obama by sitting for an interview with Jeffrey Goldberg. Rothkopf has written a book on the history of the NSC, so Goldberg asked him about the NSC under Susan Rice. His opinion was pretty brutal.
Goldberg and Rothkopf discussed the mixed record of national security advisors over the last few decades, and Rothkopf summed it up this way: If there are lessons to be drawn from this track record, they include the fact that its harder to be the first national security advisor of a president with little foreign-policy experience and, in the end, more broadly, the national security advisor is really only ever as good as his or her president enables him or her to be.
That sounded like he was letting Rice off the hook a bit, but he returned to the topic to dispel any such impression. In fact, Obama and Rice seemed to reinforce each others weaknesses:
If Obama had any material management or foreign-policy experience prior to coming in to office or if he had the character of our stronger leaders on these issuesnotably a more strategic than tactical orientation, more trust in his team, less risk aversion, etc.she would be better off, as would we all. But his flaws are compounded by a system that lets him pick and empower those around him. So, if he chooses to surround himself with a small team of true believers who wont challenge him as all leaders need to be challenged, if he picks campaign staffers that maintain campaign mode, if he over-empowers political advisors at the expense of those with national-security experience, that takes his weaknesses and multiplies them by those of the team around him.
And whatever Susan Rices many strengths are, she is ill-suited for the job she has. She is not seen as an honest broker. She has big gaps in her international experience and understandingAsia. She is needlessly combative and has alienated key members of her staff, the cabinet, and overseas leaders. She is also not strategic and is reactive like her boss. So whereas the system does have the capability of offsetting the weaknesses of a president, if he is surrounded by strong advisors to whom he listens and who he empowers to do their jobs, it can also reinforce and exacerbate those weaknessesas it is doing now.
And indeed, while Hagel was no superstar, Rice crops up in each account of his ouster. Politico reports that Hagels main gripe, according to people close to him, was what he viewed as a disorganized National Security Council run by Ricea criticism shared by [White House chief of staff Denis] McDonough, according to a senior administration official. Politico also points out that in this respect, Hagel was no outlier; his predecessors, Bob Gates and Leon Panetta, shared this concern.
And according to the New York Times: White House officials also expressed annoyance over a sharply critical two-page memo that Mr. Hagel sent to Ms. Rice last month, in which he warned that the administrations Syria policy was in danger of unraveling because of its failure to clarify its intentions toward President Bashar al-Assad. Senior officials complained that Mr. Hagel had never made such a case in internal debates, suggesting that he was trying to position himself for history on a crucial issue as he was talking to Mr. Obama about leaving his job.
Its debatable what the worst part of that is. That the White House was bothered enough by one critical memo for it to appear in a story on the secretary of defenses dismissal? That the secretary of defense and the national security advisor are communicating this through memos? That White House officials thought Hagel put his thoughts in writing out of borderline-disloyalty and the hope of abandoning a sinking ship?
I was among those singing Rices praises as a whipsmart advisor and a tough-as-nails negotiator, at least in the context of her candidacy to be secretary of state. Yet its become clear she feeds on conflict. Its possible that instinct would be more beneficial were she at State and dealing with those shoving John Kerry around on the world stage. But Chuck Hagel is not Sergei Lavrov, and Rices conflation of all adversaries, personal and political, is tearing the White Houses national-security team apart.
More incompetent AA BS!
ImPOTUS Clinton should have used a better connection
when he called and urged the Impostor pRes_ _ent
to put some “ice on it”
Hiring and promoting people based on their sex and color is never a good idea. Look at what has happened personnel wise during obunglers second term. Notice any trends?
Bad policy is bad policy. Yet is was predictable to the discerning in 2008 that this Administration would behave as disastrously as it has. The real problem is that Gruber is more right about the American voter than most will dare to admit. These political decisions and policies are not happening in a cultural vacuum.
As big a problem as her damn boss and his whole administration of anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, socialist mutants.
We don’t have a Presidential @Administration in Washing t on, DC, we have a criminal Chicago Syndicate of anti-western racists posing as a left-wing socialist menagerie.
On a broadcast TV presser---Psaki could not find a State Dept report--that supposedly listed the "achievements of the ISIS airstrikes." Did you know Psaki regularly communicates w/ ISIS to get valuable inside information? Just the other day, Psaki said: "ISIS surprised itself w/ its ability to take so much territory in such a short time."
And we have this imbecile monitoring our ntl security.
Grammar police: It should be “How Big A Problem is Susan Rice”. No “of”.
Rice connivingly undermined Hagel.
She didn’t get the Secy of State job-—looks like Secy of Defense is her next job of choice.
I almost upchucked when I saw Rice’s ugly puss w/ Obama in China.
The Chinese musta had a good laugh over that.
I've been referring to Harf and Psaki as the Laverne and Shirley of the Obama administration.
I've been referring to Harf and Psaki as the Laverne and Shirley of the Obama administration.
Either one of Holder’s people, or a campaign bundler of little or no experience.
Either way is a certain bet.
“Rices conflation of all adversaries, personal and political, is tearing the White Houses national-security team apart.”
As it should be.
Rice is strongly angling for the SecDef job to set up her run for President in the future ...
AAA Award!
Affirmative Action Administration!
A link to the full-text Free Republic thread posted today.
Hey! Samantha Powers feels slighted ... a lawsuit in your future, it may be ...
Not as big a problem as the Communist in charge of our government, Valerie Jarrett. That’s where the investigations should be focused.
How can someone so stupid (Susan Rice) be so powerful?
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