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Saturday
Nov222008

Breaking News: Beyond Hillary Clinton

Today's media are likely to be dominated by the celebrity and dramatic value of the appointment of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. All well and good for headlines and viewers, but with respect to foreign policy, almost all of this will be tangential or speculative. Two other appointments, one of which will get little coverage, deserve attention today.

The announcement with most immediate significance is Timothy Geithner, currently New York Federal Reserve Bank Chairman, as Secretary of the Treasury. Although the formula "little-known outside Wall Street" is being used to describe him, Geithner was being touted as a possible choice within days of Obama's election. He is well-respected within financial circles and won praise for his role in the bailout response to the October crisis. He is also an acolyte of Lawrence Summers, Treasury Secretary under Bill Clinton, further cementing the links between the Democratic Administration of the 1990s and that of 2009.

While Geithner will get attention, given the immediacy of the economic crisis and the overload of business coverage on US television, the naming of retired Marine General James Jones as National Security Advisor is likely to come in under the radar. That's an oversight, because Jones' selection is likely to be a significant as that of Clinton.

A former Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, Jones was a prime candidate in the first term of the Bush Administration to become Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He was not selected, in part, because of clear differences with Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld on how to wage the war in Iraq and on broader development of US forces.

Jones' choice, therefore, could be seen as a reaching-out to the military officers and strategists who were close to being ostracised by Rumsfeld and his civilian masterminds. The General should work well with the current Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, whom I think will stay on with Obama for at least the first months of 2009, and he is of course familiar with General David Petraeus, who is now heading US Central Command with oversight of the battles in Iraq and Afghanistan.

That, however, raises an interesting question. I think Jones is the only military officer to serve as National Security Advisor, apart from Colin Powell in the last months of the Reagan Administration. Given Obama's red-meat talk on fighting the fight in Afghanistan, can we expect a hard power emphasis coming out of the National Security Council?

Certainly, there are signals that Jones --- despite the lack of public attention to his selection --- will be more of a policy player in the Obama White House than Condi Rice was in the Bush Administration from 2001 to 2005. As sources told the Washington Post, "Obama is considering expanding the scope of the job to give the adviser the kind of authority once wielded by powerful figures such as Henry A. Kissinger."

Reader Comments (4)

I think Hillary is not a really good choice for the US Secretary of State.

I believe Nowadays, the biggest challenges of the US are in the Muslim regions of Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan,this is why I think Hillary is not suitable for managing such challenges because the US secretary of State should not have affiliations towards Israel, but Hillary is anxious about Israel and its interests like her husband who was the founder of the road map for the Middle East. This would make the Palestinian conflict more complicated.
On the other hand, she does not have positive views towards Iran and has called for more sanctions on Iran therefore I think She would carry such attitude to the foreign ministry as well.

November 22, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMohammad- R

Is the appointment of a woman for Secretary of State another problem or not? Will heads of state in the Middle East take her seriously?

November 23, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDave

Obama's foreign policy picks so far are depressing. Gen. James Jones as NSA?? He backed McCain!! It's a centre right cabinet so far. I recall a comment from Nancy Pelosi--of all people-- in the NYT after the election: "The country must be governed from the middle" (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/06/us/politics/06cong.html) Talk about capitulation. The Democrats finally have a mandate for actual change but they don't want to use it. Govern from the center; appoint Republicans to the cabinet. Can you imagine the Republicans governing 'from the middle' if they had won? In 2001 Bush acted as though he had a landslide mandate.

November 25, 2008 | Unregistered Commentermaria jacinta

The "middle" is what America wants. Obama won, but nearly half of the people voted against him. He's not stupid. He did make serious attempts to portray himself as a centrist when on the campaign trail. Maybe he's a centrist, after all.

November 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDave

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