Posted on 10/28/2013 10:03:29 AM PDT by MissesBush
President Obamas aides went to extraordinary lengths to uncover the identity of a senior official who was using Twitter to make snarky comments about White House staffers. Suspicion gradually centered on Jofi Joseph, the point man on nuclear nonproliferation at the National Security Council. So at a meeting in which everyone was in on the scam an inaccurate but innocuous news tidbit was revealed. When Joseph used his anonymous Twitter handle #natlsecwonk to broadcast the tidbit he was caught and promptly fired. He was not fired for revealing any secrets, but for making disparaging comments about thin-skinned administration players ranging from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel.
What apparently intensified the campaign to identify the snarker was a comment about Valerie Jarrett, the senior Obama adviser who has her own Secret Service detail and appears to exercise an inordinate amount of power behind the scenes. Joseph tweeted Im a fan of Obama, but his continuing reliance and dependence upon a vacuous cipher like Valerie Jarrett concerns me.
Jarrett, an old Chicago friend of both Barack and Michelle Obama, appears to exercise such extraordinary influence she is sometimes quietly referred to as Rasputin on Capitol Hill, a reference to the mystical monk who held sway over Russias Czar Nicholas as he increasingly lost touch with reality during World War I.
Darrell Delamaide, a columnist for Dow Joness MarketWatch, says that what has baffled many observers is how Jarrett, a former cog in the Chicago political machine and a real-estate executive, can exert such influence on policy despite her lack of qualifications in national security, foreign policy, economics, legislation or any of the other myriad specialties the president needs in an adviser.
Delamaide believes the term vacuous cipher that was applied to Jarrett stung so much because it could be used as a metaphor for the administration in general. He writes that what has remained consistent about the Obama administration is that vacuity the slow response in a crisis, the hesitant and contradictory communication, a lack of conviction and engagement amid constant political calculation. The stunning revelation that President Obama wasnt kept properly apprised of problems with Obamacares website is just the latest example of how dysfunctional Obama World can be.
Whether Jarretts influence is all too real or exaggerated is unknowable. What is known is the extent to which she has long been a peerless enabler of Barack Obamas inflated opinion of himself. Consider this quote from New Yorker editor David Remnicks interview with her for his 2010 book The Bridge.
I think Barack knew that he had God-given talents that were extraordinary. He knows exactly how smart he is. . . . He knows how perceptive he is. He knows what a good reader of people he is. And he knows that he has the ability the extraordinary, uncanny ability to take a thousand different perspectives, digest them and make sense out of them, and I think that he has never really been challenged intellectually. . . . So what I sensed in him was not just a restless spirit but somebody with such extraordinary talents that had to be really taxed in order for him to be happy. . . . Hes been bored to death his whole life. Hes just too talented to do what ordinary people do.
Up against a court flatterer of that caliber its no surprise that Jarrett has outlasted almost everyone who was in Obamas original White House team from chief of staff Rahm Emanuel to political guru David Axelrod to Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. All are known to have crossed her, and all are gone. As one former Obama aide once told me: Valerie is She Who Must Not be Challenged.
When the revealing histories of the Obama White House are written it will be fascinating to learn just how extensive her role in the key decisions of the Obama years was.
If you did a “Jay Walk” and asked 100 random strangers on the sidewalk if they had ever heard of Valerie Jarrett, you’d be lucky to find even one who had ever heard her name.
I wonder how many Germans knew the various minions of Hitler.
Me likey! A lot!
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