Posted on 10/07/2014 4:28:44 PM PDT by Kaslin
Twitter had a lot of fun with this question last night, mostly at Dana Milbank’s expense, but the emergence of several tell-all accounts while Barack Obama is still in office does seem a little … remarkable. At least three books in the past year or two have opened the ledger on Obama’s policies and decisions as President, an effort that usually — but not always — begins after a President leaves office. Leon Panetta is the third Cabinet official, and more importantly the third major member of Obama’s national-security team, to write memoirs that criticize him in highly detailed accounts. That, along with some White House officials joining the commentariat, looks like a pattern of disloyalty to Milbank:
George W. Bush got criticism from former advisers (Paul ONeill, John DiIulio), as did Bill Clinton (George Stephanopoulos, Dick Morris), but this level of disloyalty is stunning, even though softened with praise for Obamas intellect.
At the start of the year, Robert Gates, Obamas first defense secretary,wrote a memoir full of criticism of Obamas handling of Afghanistan, saying Obama made military decisions based on political considerations. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who also published a book this year, criticized Obama for rejecting her advice on Syria, and mocked the Dont do stupid stuff phrase used by administration officials to describe Obamas doctrine.
The lack of message discipline is puzzling, because Obama rewards and promotes loyalists. But hes a cerebral leader, and he may lack the personal attachments that make aides want to charge the hill for him. Also, as MSNBC reporter Alex Seitz-Wald tweeted in response to a question I posed, Panetta, Gates and Clinton didnt owe their careers to Obama. Clinton was a rival, Gates was a George W. Bush holdover and Panetta is a Democratic eminence grise. Loyalty didnt trump book sales or Clintons need to distance herself from Obama before a presidential run.
But theres also David Axelrod, long Obamas loyal strategist, saying on NBCs Meet the Press Sunday that Obama made a mistake in saying his economic policies will be on the ballot next month. In quibbling with his old boss, Axelrod followed a path well worn by former Obama press secretary Robert Gibbs, who once accused his old boss of exceedingly passive action.
Axelrod and Gibbs took jobs as media analysts that require them to approach these issues differently (as did Jay Carney). If they act like White House press secretaries, they have no value in the media market, outside of MSNBC’s prime-time shows. Choosing to take these jobs might be problematic in terms of personal loyalty, although it’s doubtful that anyone at the White House thought so at the time. They probably cheered each of these hires as ways to promote their own narrative, and most of the time they’d probably be correct. The occasional chide to preserve credibility doesn’t negate the overall water-carrying value that these transfers to media jobs have for Obama.
The books are different, though, because the expectations for Cabinet officials are different. People expect White House advisers to move into the commentariat, but those who run important agencies are expected to wait for their boss’ exit to cash in on the relationship. For the most part, they usually do. Of the examples Milbank uses above, only Paul O’Neill was a Cabinet official (Treasury), whose departure from the Bush administration was widely known to be acrimonious even before his book came out. The book had no impact on Bush’s presidency, though, and none of the others cited by Milbank had much real impact on presidencies either.
What changed in this presidency? Hillary Clinton’s memoir is easy to explain; she wants to run for President and wanted to address some of the more difficult aspects of her record ahead of the election. It will likely have the least impact on Obama for that reason. Panetta and Gates are more difficult to explain. Gates was a Bush holdover, sure, and Panetta is a longtime ally of the Clintons, but that shortchanges both men, whose records of public service go back a very long way. Their memoirs appear to be less about personality and more about policy and security — and both have grave concerns about the national-security policies pursued by Obama over their own objections. Hillary Clinton’s memoir also makes this argument.
On one level, then, the issue of loyalty may be moot. It appears that Obama wasn’t listening to the people who held authority and expertise in these national-security issues, and now with things going as badly as they are, the three of them (and especially Gates and Panetta) want to make sure the record remains straight on whose decisions led to the debacle. On a broader level, the two men may have their loyalties focused less on Obama than on the nation as a whole. That’s not to say that personal loyalty to the President who appoints one to those positions should be of no account, but it shouldn’t trump the broader commitment to American national security, either.
In other words, the question and focus on these memoirs should be less about what they do to Obama, but what Obama himself is doing.
Poor Dana Milbank! He is like a little tapeworm, enjoying slithering around in the fecal matter, and wondering why his buddies are not with him.
Come out into the light Dana, there's whole wide world out there.
I wonder how much of this “disloyalty” is payback for Obama’s arrogance and unwillingness to listen to any of his advisors.
They are doing it for cash and Hillary.
If they had resigned in protest, I would have hope for the future of this nation.
But these guys don’t care about America anymore than the Kenyan does.
Maybe they are more disloyal because Obama is actually worse than the other presidents?
They are all burning their bridges to Obama (with his permission) to allow Benghazi Clinton to distance herself from Obama. It’s all a ruse. The Communists are throwing everything in to get Benghazi elected in 2016. You’ll see all these “traitors” hovering around Slick Willy’s fly during the 2016 election.
I once read an article about what the Soviet Union thought of the American traitors who turned on their own country to spy for them.
They used them but regarded them as weak, disgusting and never to be trusted. As I see it, the same should apply to the likes of Panetta, Clinton and all these liberals who worshipped THEIR president but now that they are running scared for office can’t get far enough away from him.
They are weak, disgusting and never to be trusted.
Val or one of her ilk pissed them off.
Right. Every president has former appointees trash him. I’d bet Obama gets fewer turncoats than most.
Sentient People Wonder: Why is Obamas Current Official Milbank so loyal?
Like remora, they abandon the dying host to attach themselves to a new one. The cankalouse clintona
“Remora remora is a short, thick-set sucking fish (Marshall 1965).The Remora has 28-37 long slender gillrakers, 21-27 dorsal fin rays, 20-24 anal fin rays, and 25-32 pectoral fin ray”
Well they could be trying to avoid or deflect that big bus that resident evil likes to toss anyone he can under.
They might just have a shred of morals left. **snicker**
Money, power and since he is not up for re-election, they will be wanting to hook up with some other POS to keep access. A way to distance themselves from him.
Makes “Billy Beer” look so tame.
That there is a good line.
Could be that the hooves will serve him well where he's headed anyway.
They’re. ...wascists?
Political ploy. They have to rat out Barry to give the Dems a chance in the coming elections. They have lost all credibility.
Instead of worrying about the loyalty of former ‘O’ regime
officials, Mr Milbunk should be concerned about his own
disloyalty to the truth and objective critical analysis.
Didn't Milbank get the talking points that the rest of the press has long been uncritically parroting?
You know, about the political genius of Obama in assembling a "Team of Rivals" like Lincoln and all of the rubbish that went with it.
You're not supposed to point out the obvious, that Obama mainly surrounds himself with mediocre yes-men who can be counted on to follow orders and not to contradict or upstage the Dear Leader.
Milbank needs to prepare himself for an IRS audit.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.