U.S. policy is not about one individual, and no matter how
much faith people place in President-elect Barack Obama, the
policies he enacts will be fruit of a tree with many roots.
Among them: his personal politics and views, the disastrous
realities his administration will inherit, and, of course, unpredictable
future crises. But the best immediate indicator of what an Obama
administration might look like can be found in the people he
surrounds himself with and who he appoints to his Cabinet. And,
frankly, when it comes to foreign policy, it is not looking
good.
Obama has a momentous opportunity to do what he repeatedly
promised over the course of his campaign: bring actual change.
But the more we learn about who Obama is considering for top
positions in his administration, the more his inner circle resembles
a staff reunion of President Bill Clinton's White House. Although
Obama brought some progressives on board early in his campaign,
his foreign policy team is now dominated by the hawkish, old-guard
Democrats of the 1990s. This has been particularly true since
Hillary Clinton conceded defeat in the Democratic primary, freeing
many of her top advisors to join Obama's team.
"What happened to all this talk about change?" a
member of the Clinton foreign policy team recently asked
the Washington Post. "This isn't lightly flavored
with Clintons. This is all Clintons, all the time."
Amid the euphoria over Obama's election and the end of the
Bush era, it is critical to recall what 1990s U.S. foreign policy
actually looked like. Bill Clinton's boiled down to a
one-two punch from the hidden hand of the free market, backed
up by the iron fist of U.S. militarism. Clinton took office
and almost immediately bombed Iraq (ostensibly in retaliation
for an alleged plot by Saddam Hussein to assassinate former
President George H.W. Bush). He presided over a ruthless regime
of economic sanctions that killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis,
and under the guise of the so-called No-Fly Zones in northern
and southern Iraq, authorized the longest sustained U.S. bombing
campaign since Vietnam.
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Under Clinton, Yugoslavia was bombed and dismantled as part
of what Noam Chomsky described as the "New Military Humanism."
Sudan and Afghanistan were attacked, Haiti was destabilized
and "free trade" deals like the North America Free
Trade Agreement and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
radically escalated the spread of corporate-dominated globalization
that hurt U.S. workers and devastated developing countries.
Clinton accelerated the militarization of the so-called War
on Drugs in Central and Latin America and supported privatization
of U.S. military operations, giving lucrative contracts to Halliburton
and other war contractors. Meanwhile, U.S. weapons sales to
countries like Turkey and Indonesia aided genocidal campaigns
against the Kurds and the East Timorese.
The prospect of Obama's foreign policy being, at least in part,
an extension of the Clinton Doctrine is real. Even more disturbing,
several of the individuals at the center of Obama's transition
and emerging foreign policy teams were top players in creating
and implementing foreign policies that would pave the way for
projects eventually carried out under the Bush/Cheney administration.
With their assistance, Obama has already charted out several
hawkish stances. Among them:
-- His plan to escalate the war in Afghanistan;
-- An Iraq plan that could turn into a downsized and rebranded
occupation that keeps U.S. forces in Iraq for the foreseeable
future;
-- His labeling of Iran's Revolutionary Guard as a "terrorist
organization;"
-- His pledge to use unilateral force inside of Pakistan to
defend U.S. interests;
-- His position, presented before the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC), that Jerusalem "must remain
undivided" -- a remark that infuriated Palestinian officials
and which he later attempted to reframe;
-- His plan to continue the War on Drugs, a backdoor U.S. counterinsurgency
campaign in Central and Latin America;
-- His refusal to "rule out" using Blackwater and
other armed private forces in U.S. war zones, despite previously
introducing legislation to regulate these companies and bring
them under U.S. law.
Obama did not arrive at these positions in a vacuum. They were
carefully crafted in consultation with his foreign policy team.
While the verdict is still out on a few people, many members
of his inner foreign policy circle -- including some who have
received or are bound to receive Cabinet posts -- supported
the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Some promoted the myth
that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. A few have worked
with the neoconservative Project
for the New American Century, whose radical agenda was adopted
by the Bush/Cheney administration. And most have proven track
records of supporting or implementing militaristic, offensive
U.S. foreign policy. "After a masterful campaign, Barack
Obama seems headed toward some fateful mistakes as he assembles
his administration by heeding the advice of Washington's Democratic
insider community, a collective group that represents little
'change you can believe in,'" notes
veteran journalist Robert Parry, the former Associated Press
and Newsweek reporter who broke many of the stories
in the Iran-Contra scandal in the 1980s.
As news breaks and speculation abounds about cabinet appointments,
here are 20 people to watch as Obama builds the team who will
shape U.S. foreign policy for at least four years:
Joe Biden
There was no stronger sign that Obama's foreign policy would
follow the hawkish tradition of the Democratic foreign policy
establishment than his selection of Sen. Joe Biden as his running
mate. Much has been written on Biden's tenure as head of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but his role in the invasion
and occupation of Iraq stands out. Biden is not just one more
Democratic lawmaker who now calls his vote to authorize the
use of force in Iraq "mistaken;" Biden was actually
an important facilitator of the war.
In the summer of 2002, when the United States was "debating"
a potential attack on Iraq, Biden presided over hearings whose
ostensible purpose was to weigh all existing options. But instead
of calling on experts whose testimony could challenge the case
for war -- Iraq's alleged WMD possession and its supposed ties
to al-Qaida -- Biden's hearings treated the invasion as a foregone
conclusion. His refusal to call on two individuals in particular
ensured that testimony that could have proven invaluable to
an actual debate was never heard: Former Chief United Nations
Weapons Inspector Scott Ritter and Hans von Sponeck, a 32-year
veteran diplomat and the former head of the U.N.'s Iraq program.
Both men say they made it clear to Biden's office that they
were ready and willing to testify; Ritter knew more about the
dismantling of Iraq's WMD program than perhaps any other U.S.
citizen and would have been in prime position to debunk the
misinformation and outright lies being peddled by the White
House. Meanwhile, von Sponeck had just returned from Iraq, where
he had observed Ansar al Islam rebels in the north of Iraq --
the so-called al-Qaida connection -- and could have testified
that, rather than colluding with Saddam's regime, they were
in a battle against it. Moreover, he would have pointed out
that they were operating in the U.S.-enforced safe haven of
Iraqi Kurdistan. "Evidence of al-Qaida/lraq collaboration
does not exist, neither in the training of operatives nor in
support to Ansar-al-Islam," von Sponeck wrote
in an Op-Ed published shortly before the July 2002 hearings.
"The U.S. Department of Defense and the CIA know perfectly
well that today's Iraq poses no threat to anyone in the region,
let alone in the United States. To argue otherwise is dishonest."
With both men barred from testifying, rather than eliciting
an array of informed opinions, Biden's committee whitewashed
Bush's lies and helped lead the country to war. Biden himself
promoted the administration's false claims that were used to
justify the invasion of Iraq, declaring on the Senate floor,
"[Saddam Hussein] possesses chemical and biological weapons
and is seeking nuclear weapons."
With the war underway, Biden was then the genius who passionately
promoted the ridiculous plan to partition Iraq into three areas
based on religion and ethnicity, attempting to Balkanize one
of the strongest Arab states in the world.
"He's a part of the old Democratic establishment,"
says retired Army Col. Ann Wright, the State Department diplomat
who reopened the U.S. embassy in Kabul in 2002. Biden, she says,
has "had a long history with foreign affairs, [but] it's
not the type of foreign affairs that I want."
Rahm Emanuel
Obama's appointment of Illinois Congressman Rahm Emanuel as
Chief of Staff is a clear sign that Clinton-era neoliberal hawks
will be well-represented at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. A former
senior Clinton advisor, Emanuel is a hard-line supporter of
Israel's "targeted assassination" policy and actually
volunteered to work with the Israeli Army during the 1991 Gulf
War. He is close to the right-wing Democratic Leadership Council
and was the only member of the Illinois Democratic delegation
in the Congress to vote for the invasion of Iraq. Unlike many
of his colleagues, Emanuel still defends his vote. As chair
of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in 2006,
Emanuel promoted the campaigns of 22 candidates, only one of
who supported a swift withdrawal from Iraq, and denied crucial
Party funding to anti-war candidates. "As for Iraq policy,
at the right time, we will have a position," he said in
December 2005. As Philip Giraldi recently pointed
out on Antiwar.com,
Emanuel "advocates increasing the size of the U.S. Army
by 100,000 soldiers and creating a domestic spying organization
like Britain's MI5. More recently, he has supported mandatory
paramilitary national service for all Americans between the
ages of 18 and 25."
While Obama has at times been critical of Clinton-era free
trade agreements, Emanuel was one of the key people in the Clinton
White House who brokered the successful passage of NAFTA.
Hillary Rodham Clinton
For all the buzz and speculation about the possibility that
Sen. Clinton may be named Secretary of State, most media coverage
has focused on her rivalry with Obama during the primary, along
with the prospect of her husband having to face the intense
personal, financial and political vetting process required to
secure a job in the new administration. But the question of
how Clinton would lead the operations at Foggy Bottom calls
for scrutiny of her positions vis-a-vis Obama's stated foreign-policy
goals.
Clinton was an ardent defender of her husband's economic and
military war against Iraq throughout the 1990s, including the
Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, which ultimately laid the path
for President George W. Bush's invasion. Later, as a U.S. senator,
she not only voted to authorize the war, but aided the Bush
administration's propaganda campaign in the lead-up to the invasion.
"Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and
biological weapons stock, his missile-delivery capability and
his nuclear program," Clinton said when rising to support
the measure in October 2002. "He has also given aid, comfort
and sanctuary to terrorists, including al-Qaida members …
I want to insure that Saddam Hussein makes no mistake about
our national unity and for our support for the president's efforts
to wage America's war against terrorists and weapons of mass
destruction."
"The man who vowed to deliver us from 28 years of Bushes
and Clintons has been stocking up on Clintonites," New
York Times columnist Maureen Dowd recently
wrote. "How, one may ask, can he put Hillary -- who
voted to authorize the Iraq war without even reading the intelligence
assessment -- in charge of patching up a foreign policy and
a world riven by that war?"
Beyond Iraq, Clinton shocked many and sparked official protests
by Tehran at the United Nations when asked during the presidential
campaign what she would do as president if Iran attacked Israel
with nuclear weapons. "I want the Iranians to know that
if I'm the president, we will attack Iran," she declared.
"In the next 10 years, during which they might foolishly
consider launching an attack on Israel, we would be able to
totally obliterate them."
Clinton has not shied away from supporting offensive foreign
policy tactics in the past. Recalling her husband's weighing
the decision of whether to attack Yugoslavia, she said in 1999,
"I urged him to bomb. … You cannot let this go on
at the end of a century that has seen the major holocaust of
our time. What do we have NATO for if not to defend our way
of life?"
Madeleine Albright
While Obama's house is flush with Clintonian officials like
former Secretary of State Warren Christopher, Defense Secretary
William Perry, Director of the State Department Office of Policy
Planning Greg Craig (who was officially named Obama's White
House Counsel) and Navy Secretary Richard Danzig, perhaps most
influential is Madeleine Albright, Bill Clinton's former Secretary
of State and U.N. ambassador. Albright recently served as a
proxy for Obama, representing him at the G-20 summit earlier
this month. Whether or not she is awarded an official role in
the administration, Albright will be a major force in shaping
Obama's foreign policy.
"It will take time to convince skeptics that the promotion
of democracy is not a mask for imperialism or a recipe for the
kind of chaos we have seen in the Persian Gulf," Albright
recently
wrote. "And it will take time to establish the right
identity for America in a world that has grown suspicious of
all who claim a monopoly on virtue and that has become reluctant
to follow the lead of any one country."
Albright should know. She was one of the key architects in
the dismantling of Yugoslavia during the 1990s. In the lead-up
to the 1999 "Kosovo war," she oversaw the U.S. attempt
to coerce the Yugoslav government to deny its own sovereignty
in return for not being bombed. Albright demanded that the Yugoslav
government sign a document that would have been unacceptable
to any sovereign nation. Known as the Rambouillet Accord, it
included a provision that would have guaranteed U.S. and NATO
forces "free and unrestricted passage and unimpeded access
throughout" all of Yugoslavia -- not just Kosovo -- while
also seeking to immunize those occupation forces "from
any form of arrest, investigation or detention by the authorities
in [Yugoslavia]." Moreover, it would have granted the occupiers
"the use of airports, roads, rails and ports without payment."
Similar to Bush's Iraq plan years later, the Rambouillet Accord
mandated that the economy of Kosovo "shall function in
accordance with free-market principles."
When Yugoslavia refused to sign the document, Albright and
others in the Clinton administration unleashed the 78-day NATO
bombing of Serbia, which targeted civilian infrastructure. (Prior
to the attack, Albright said the U.S. government felt "the
Serbs need a little bombing.") She and the Clinton administration
also supported the rise to power in Kosovo of a terrorist mafia
that carried out its own ethnic-cleansing campaign against the
province's minorities.
Perhaps Albright's most notorious moment came with her enthusiastic
support of the economic war against the civilian population
of Iraq. When confronted by Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes”
that the sanctions were responsible for the deaths of "a
half-million children … more children than died in Hiroshima,"
Albright responded, "I think this is a very hard choice,
but the price -- we think the price is worth it." (While
defending the policy, Albright later called her choice of words
"a terrible mistake, hasty, clumsy, and wrong.")
Richard Holbrooke
Like Albright, Holbrooke will have major sway over U.S. policy,
whether or not he gets an official job. A career diplomat since
the Vietnam War, Holbrooke's most recent government post was
as President Clinton's ambassador to the U.N. Among the many
violent policies he helped implement and enforce was the U.S.-backed
Indonesian genocide in East Timor. Holbrooke was an Assistant
Secretary of State in the late 1970s at the height of the slaughter
and was the point man on East Timor for the Carter Administration.
According to Brad Simpson, director of the Indonesia and East
Timor Documentation Project at the National Security Archive
at George Washington University, "It was Holbrooke and
Zbigniew Brzezinski [another top Obama advisor], both now leading
lights in the Democratic Party, who played point in trying to
frustrate the efforts of congressional human-rights activists
to try and condition or stop U.S. military assistance to Indonesia,
and in fact accelerated the flow of weapons to Indonesia at
the height of the genocide."
Holbrooke, too, was a major player in the dismantling of Yugoslavia
and praised the bombing of Serb Television, which killed 16
media workers, as a significant victory. (The man who ordered
that bombing, now-retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark, is another
Obama foreign policy insider who could end up in his cabinet.
While Clark is known for being relatively progressive on social
issues, as Supreme Allied Commander of NATO, he ordered bombings
and attacks that Amnesty International labeled war crimes.)
Like many in Obama's foreign policy circle, Holbrooke also
supported the Iraq war. In early 2003, shortly after then-Secretary
of State Colin Powell's speech to the UN, where he presented
the administration's fraud-laden case for war to the UN (a speech
Powell has since called a "blot" on his reputation),
Holbrooke said: "It was a masterful job of diplomacy by
Colin Powell and his colleagues, and it does not require a second
vote to go to war. … Saddam is the most dangerous government
leader in the world today, he poses a threat to the region,
he could pose a larger threat if he got weapons of mass destruction
deployed, and we have a legitimate right to take action."
Dennis Ross
Middle East envoy for both George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton,
Ross was one
of the primary authors of Obama's aforementioned speech
before AIPAC this summer. He cut his teeth working under famed
neoconservative Paul Wolfowitz at the Pentagon in the 1970s
and worked closely with the Project for the New American Century.
Ross has been a staunch supporter of Israel and has fanned the
flames for a more hostile stance toward Iran. As the lead U.S.
negotiator between Israel and numerous Arab nations under Clinton,
Ross' team acted, in the words of one U.S. official who worked
under him, as "Israel's
lawyer."
"The 'no surprises' policy, under which we had to run
everything by Israel first, stripped our policy of the independence
and flexibility required for serious peacemaking," wrote
U.S. diplomat Aaron David Miller in 2005. "If we couldn't
put proposals on the table without checking with the Israelis
first, and refused to push back when they said no, how effective
could our mediation be? Far too often, particularly when it
came to Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy, our departure point was
not what was needed to reach an agreement acceptable to both
sides but what would pass with only one -- Israel." After
the Clinton White House, Ross worked for the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, a hawkish pro-Israel think
tank, and for FOX News, where he repeatedly pressed for war
against Iraq.
Martin Indyk
Founder of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Indyk
spent years working for AIPAC and served as Clinton's ambassador
to Israel and Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs,
while also playing a major role in developing U.S. policy toward
Iraq and Iran. In addition to his work for the U.S. government,
he has worked for the Israeli government and with PNAC.
"Barack Obama has painted himself into a corner by appealing
to the most hard-line, pro-Israel elements in this country,"
Ali Abunimah, founder of ElectronicInifada.net,
recently told
Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, describing Indyk and
Dennis Ross as "two of the most pro-Israel officials from
the Clinton era, who are totally distrusted by Palestinians
and others across the Middle East, because they're seen as lifelong
advocates for Israeli positions."
Anthony Lake
Clinton's former National Security Advisor was an early supporter
of Obama and one of the few top Clintonites to initially back
the president-elect. Lake began his foreign policy work in the
U.S. Foreign Service during Vietnam, working with Henry Kissinger
on the "September Group," a secret team tasked with
developing a military strategy to deliver a "savage, decisive
blow against North Vietnam."
Decades later, after working for various administrations, Lake
"was the main force behind the U.S. invasion of Haiti in
the mid-Clinton years," according to veteran journalist
Allan Nairn, whose groundbreaking reporting revealed U.S. support
for Haitian death squads in the 1990s. "They brought back
Aristide essentially in political chains, pledged to support
a World Bank/IMF overhaul of the economy, which resulted in
an increase in malnutrition deaths among Haitians, and set the
stage for the current ongoing political disaster in Haiti."
Clinton nominated Lake as CIA Director, but he failed to win
Senate confirmation.
Lee Hamilton
Hamilton is a former chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and was co-chairman of both the Iraq Study Group and
9/11 Commission. Robert Parry, who has covered Hamilton's career
extensively, recently ran
a piece on Consortium News that characterized him this way:
"Whenever the Republicans have a touchy national-security
scandal to put to rest, their favorite Democratic investigator
is Lee Hamilton. … Hamilton's carefully honed skill for
balancing truth against political comity has elevated him to
the status of a Washington Wise Man."
Susan Rice
Former Assistant Secretary of Sate Susan Rice, who served on
Bill Clinton's National Security Council, is a potential candidate
for the post of ambassador to the U.N. or as a deputy national
security advisor. She, too, promoted the myth that Saddam had
WMDs. "It's clear that Iraq poses a major threat,"
she said in 2002. "It's clear that its weapons of mass
destruction need to be dealt with forcefully, and that's the
path we're on." (After the invasion, discussing Saddam's
alleged possession of WMDs, she said, "I don't think many
informed people doubted that.")
Rice has also been a passionate advocate for a U.S. military
attack against Sudan over the Darfur crisis. In an op-ed co-authored
with Anthony Lake, she wrote, "The United States, preferably
with NATO involvement and African political support, would strike
Sudanese airfields, aircraft and other military assets. It could
blockade Port Sudan, through which Sudan's oil exports flow.
Then U.N. troops would deploy -- by force, if necessary, with
U.S. and NATO backing."
John Brennan
A longtime CIA official and former head of the National Counterterrorism
Center, Brennan is one of the coordinators of Obama's intelligence
transition team and a top contender for either CIA Director
or Director of National Intelligence. He was also recently described
by Glenn Greenwald as "an ardent supporter of torture
and one of the most emphatic advocates of FISA expansions and
telecom immunity." While claiming to oppose waterboarding,
labeling it "inconsistent with American values" and
"something that should be prohibited," Brennan has
simultaneously praised the results achieved by "enhanced
interrogation" techniques. "There has been a lot of
information that has come out from these interrogation procedures
that the agency has, in fact, used against the real hard-core
terrorists," Brennan said in a 2007 interview. "It
has saved lives. And let's not forget, these are hardened terrorists
who have been responsible for 9/11, who have shown no remorse
at all for the death of 3,000 innocents."
Brennan has described the CIA's extraordinary rendition program
-- the government-run kidnap-and-torture program enacted under
Clinton -- as an absolutely vital tool. "I have been intimately
familiar now over the past decade with the cases of rendition
that the U.S. Government has been involved in," he said
in a December 2005 interview. "And I can say without a
doubt that it has been very successful as far as producing intelligence
that has saved lives."
Brennan is currently the head of Analysis Corporation, a private
intelligence company that was recently implicated
in the breach of Obama and Sen. John McCain's passport records.
He is also the current chairman of the Intelligence
and National Security Alliance (INSA), a trade association
of private intelligence contractors who have dramatically increased
their role in sensitive U.S. national security operations. (Current
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell is former chairman
of the INSA.)
Jami Miscik
Miscik, who works alongside Brennan on Obama's transitional
team, was the CIA's Deputy Director for Intelligence in the
run-up to the Iraq war. She was one of the key officials responsible
for sidelining intel that contradicted the official line on
WMD, while promoting intel that backed it up.
"When the administration insisted on an intelligence assessment
of Saddam Hussein's relationship to al-Qaida, Miscik blocked
the skeptics (who were later vindicated) within the CIA's Mideast
analytical directorate and instructed the less-skeptical counterterrorism
analysts to 'stretch to the maximum the evidence you had,' "
journalist Spencer Ackerman recently
wrote in the Washington Independent. "It's
hard to think of a more egregious case of sacrificing sound
intelligence analysis in order to accommodate the strategic
fantasies of an administration. … The idea that Miscik
is helping staff Obama's top intelligence picks is most certainly
not change we can believe in." What's more, she went on
to a lucrative post as the Global Head of Sovereign Risk for
the now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers.
John Kerry and Bill Richardson
Both Sen. Kerry and Gov. Richardson have been identified as
possible contenders for Secretary of State. While neither is
likely to be as hawkish as Hillary Clinton, both have taken
pro-war positions. Kerry promoted the WMD lie and voted to invade
Iraq. "Why is Saddam Hussein attempting to develop nuclear
weapons when most nations don't even try?" Kerry asked
on the Senate floor in October 2002. "According to intelligence,
Iraq has chemical and biological weapons … Iraq is developing
unmanned aerial vehicles capable of delivering chemical and
biological warfare agents."
Richardson, whose Iraq plan during his 2008 presidential campaign
was more progressive and far-reaching than Obama's, served as
Bill Clinton's ambassador to the UN. In this capacity, he supported
Clinton's December 1998 bombing of Baghdad and the U.S.-led
sanctions against Iraq. "We think this man is a threat
to the international community, and he threatens a lot of the
neighbors in his region and future generations there with anthrax
and VX," Richardson told an interviewer in February 1998.
While Clinton's Secretary of Energy, Richardson publicly named
Wen Ho Lee, a scientist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory,
as a target in an espionage investigation. Lee was accused of
passing nuclear secrets to the Chinese government. Lee was later
cleared of those charges and won a settlement against the U.S.
government.
Robert Gates
Washington consensus is that Obama will likely keep Robert
Gates, George W. Bush's Defense Secretary, as his own Secretary
of Defense. While Gates has occasionally proved to be a stark
contrast to former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, he
would hardly represent a break from the policies of the Bush
administration. Quite the opposite; according to the Washington
Post, in the interest of a "smooth transition,"
Gates "has ordered hundreds of political appointees at
the Pentagon canvassed to see whether they wish to stay on in
the new administration, has streamlined policy briefings and
has set up suites for President-elect Barack Obama's transition
team just down the hall from his own E-ring office." The
Post reports that Gates could stay on for a brief period
and then be replaced by Richard Danzig, who was Clinton's Secretary
of the Navy. Other names currently being tossed around are Democratic
Sen. Jack Reed, Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel (a critic of the
Iraq occupation) and Republican Sen. Richard Lugar, who served
alongside Biden on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Ivo H. Daalder
Daalder was National Security Council Director for European
Affairs under President Clinton. Like other Obama advisors,
he has worked with the Project for the New American Century
and signed a 2005 letter from PNAC to Congressional leaders,
calling for an increase in U.S. ground troops in Iraq and beyond.
Sarah Sewall
Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Peacekeeping
and Humanitarian Assistance during the Clinton administration,
Sewall served as a top advisor to Obama during the campaign
and is almost certain to be selected for a post in his administration.
In 2007, Sewall worked with the U.S. military and Army Gen.
David Petraeus, writing the introduction to the University of
Chicago edition of the Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field
Manual. She was criticized for this collaboration by Tom Hayden,
who wrote, "the Petraeus plan draws intellectual legitimacy
from Harvard's Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, whose director,
Sarah Sewall, proudly embraces an 'unprecedented collaboration
[as] a human rights center partnered with the armed forces.'”
"Humanitarians often avoid wading into the conduct of
war for fear of becoming complicit in its purpose," she
wrote in the introduction. "'The field manual requires
engagement precisely from those who fear that its words lack
meaning."
Michele Flournoy
Flournoy and former Clinton Deputy Defense Secretary John White
are co-heading Obama's defense transition team. Flournoy was
a senior Clinton appointee at the Pentagon. She currently runs
the Center for a New American
Security, a center-right think-tank. There is speculation
that Obama could eventually name her as the first woman to serve
as defense secretary. As the Wall Street Journal recently
reported:
"While at CNAS, Flournoy helped to write a report that
called for reducing the open-ended American military commitment
in Iraq and replacing it with a policy of 'conditional engagement'
there. Significantly, the paper rejected the idea of withdrawing
troops according to the sort of a fixed timeline that Obama
espoused during the presidential campaign. Obama has in recent
weeks signaled that he was willing to shelve the idea, bringing
him more in line with Flournoy's thinking." Flournoy has
also worked with the neoconservative Project for the New American
Century.
Wendy Sherman and Tom Donilon
Currently employed at Madeline Albright's consulting firm,
the Albright Group, Sherman worked under Albright at the State
Department, coordinating U.S. policy on North Korea. She is
now coordinating the State Department transition team for Obama.
Tom Donilon, her co-coordinator, was Assistant Secretary of
State for Public Affairs and Chief of Staff at the State Department
under Clinton. Interestingly, Sherman and Donilon both have
ties to Fannie Mae that didn't make it onto their official bios
on Obama's change.gov website.
"Donilon was Fannie's general counsel and executive vice
president for law and policy from 1999 until the spring of 2005,
a period during which the company was rocked by accounting problems,"
reports
the Wall Street Journal.
***
While many of the figures at the center of Obama's foreign
policy team are well-known, two of its most important members
have never held national elected office or a high-profile government
position. While they cannot be characterized as Clinton-era
hawks, it will be important to watch Denis McDonough
and Mark Lippert, co-coordinators of the Obama
foreign policy team. From 2000 to 2005, McDonough served as
foreign policy advisor to Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle
and worked extensively on the use-of-force authorizations for
the attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq, both of which Daschle supported.
From 1996 to 1999, McDonough was a professional staff member
of the House International Relations Committee during the debate
over the bombing of Yugoslavia. More recently, he was at the
Center for American
Progress working under John Podesta, Clinton's former chief
of staff and the current head of the Obama transition.
Mark Lippert is a close personal friend of Obama's. He has
worked for Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, as well as the Senate
Appropriations Committee and the Democratic Policy Committee.
He is a lieutenant in the Navy Reserve and spent a year in Iraq
working intelligence for the Navy SEALs. "According to
those who've worked closely with Lippert," Robert Dreyfuss
recently wrote
in The Nation, "he is a conservative, cautious
centrist who often pulled Obama to the right on Iraq, Iran and
the Middle East and who has been a consistent advocate for increased
military spending. 'Even before Obama announced for the presidency,
Lippert wanted Obama to be seen as tough on Iran,' says a lobbyist
who's worked the Iran issue on Capitol Hill, 'He's clearly more
hawkish than the senator.' "
***
Barack Obama campaigned on a pledge to bring change to Washington.
"I don't want to just end the war," he said early
this year. "I want to end the mindset that got us into
war." That is going to be very difficult if Obama employs
a foreign policy team that was central to creating that mindset,
before and during the presidency of George W. Bush.
"Twenty-three senators and 133 House members who voted
against the war -- and countless other notable individuals who
spoke out against it and the dubious claims leading to war --
are apparently not even being considered for these crucial positions,"
observes Sam Husseini of the Institute
for Public Accuracy. This includes dozens of former military
and intelligence officials who spoke out forcefully against
the war and continue to oppose militaristic policy, as well
as credible national security experts who have articulated their
visions for a foreign policy based on justice.
Obama does have a chance to change the mindset that got us
into war. More significantly, he has a popular mandate to forcefully
challenge the militaristic, hawkish tradition of modern U.S.
foreign policy. But that work would begin by bringing on board
people who would challenge this tradition, not those who have
been complicit in creating it and are bound to continue advancing
it.