Dec. 1, 2008

Hawks For Hillary

The New Republic: Why Are Conservatives Praising Obama's Pick For Secretary Of State?

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    President-elect Barack Obama stands with Secretary of State-designate Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y.; right, at a news conference in Chicago, Monday, Dec. 1, 2008.  (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

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(The New Republic)  This column was written by Barron YoungSmith.
When news first leaked that Hillary Clinton was being considered for secretary of state, some of the most vocal responses came from the right--and they weren't exactly negative. Newt Gingrich told Fox News that she would be "a very formidable secretary of state, and frankly, a lot tougher in defending American interests than some of the liberal secretaries of state we've had in the past." Republican Senator Jon Kyl lavished her with praise, calling her "a very good selection." The Weekly Standard gushed that she had become "The Great Right Hope."

What's with the right's newfound love for Clinton? I spoke with a number of conservative foreign-policy eminences to find out. Many of them were surprisingly optimistic about Obama's new top diplomat. "On the whole I'm quite pleased," explains Richard Perle, former chairman of the Defense Policy Board and an architect of the Iraq war. "She seems to me quite tough-minded. That's not a worldview, but it is a predisposition. That's a good thing. It's not an easy world out there."

Perle says he would rather have a hawkish Democrat than a Chuck Hagel-style Republican as a token bi-partisan appointment. "I heard about others on the list [for secretary of state] that I wouldn't be happy about," he says. "Those were mostly Republicans."

Indeed, Perle muses, Obama's new cabinet may be an improvement on Bush's. "Bush suffered from a State department and CIA who never liked his policies. State ignored him and the CIA actively undermined him," he says. "I think Hillary can potentially deal with that. I think she can get the State department to do what she and the president want it to do. That has not been true of Condi."

Perle predicts that Clinton will likely perpetuate the foreign policy approaches that have typified Bush's second term, when the president pursued goals such as tighter sanctions on Iran. "I'm relieved," he says. "There's not going to be as much change as we were led to believe. I think she's very much in the mainstream. By now, I think the Bush foreign policy is, as a practical matter, the same policy as the policy of the Department of State--which is what I'd expect it to be under Hillary Clinton. Contrary to expectations, I don't think we would see a lot of change."

George Shultz, Ronald Reagan's secretary of state, also lauds the Clinton appointment. "I think she could be a very good secretary of state," he says. "She is well-informed, she's got lots of energy--intellectual energy and physical energy--to do the job. She's curious. She reads. She works very hard. She can listen. And she's known around the world, so she has standing. All those things would stand her in good stead."

Shultz's major concern is not with her abilities or positions, but rather the dynamic between the two former nemeses. "The key is her relationship with the president. That has to be close," he says. "It has to be very clear that they're close, and it has to be clear to all the people she's dealing with that there is no daylight between her and the president, otherwise the whole thing falls down."

Shultz downplays the importance of major policy differences between Obama and Clinton. "It always seems to me that your first criterion has to be high competence," he says. "And obviously you want someone who is, philosophically and politically, reasonably in tune with you. But when you sacrifice the former for the latter, you get in trouble."

He also thinks that Obama is a strong enough leader to set the policy agenda for his administration. "In the end, he's the one who will have to decide," Shultz says. "And she's the one who has to recognize that he's the one who got elected. When you win an election, that's what happens."

But not all conservatives are breaking out the champagne for a Secretary of State Clinton. George W. Bush's former UN ambassador, John Bolton, is less enthusiastic than many of his colleagues, saying that the appointment raises more questions than answers. "The idea that he'd bring Hillary Clinton in as secretary of state completely confuses me," he says. "The basis of his nomination was his opposition to our presence in Iraq, and his principal competitor--at least until she lost the nomination--supported the overthrow of Saddam."

Beyond their disagreements on Iraq, Bolton points to concrete policy differences between Obama and Clinton. "I don't know how he can get to this from some of the positions he took during campaign," he says. "Take the contrast on Iran. How do you bridge those differences? Is she going to implement his policy of negotiating with [Ahmadinejad]? ... Will the policy be something halfway in between? Will it be something else?"

The committed Reaganaut reminds us that just because Clinton differs from Obama doesn't mean he supports her policies either. "I didn't like the Clinton administration, so to the extent that we're 'merely' reverting to the Clinton policy, I don't think that's good," he says. "But that would be very different from what [Obama] advocated during the campaign."

Bolton suggests that perhaps Obama is appointing someone with such a different worldview in order to "keep all his options open." But at the end of the day, he's not convinced the two will diverge dramatically. "I knew her in law school--the two Clintons were the year ahead of me," Bolton says. "If you go back to what I saw as her formative principles while she was in law school, then she's very consistent with early Obama campaign."

By Barron YoungSmith
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic.



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Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by centerfall94 December 1, 2008 12:36 PM PST
Hillary''s a great choice. Obama''s doing really well!!!!
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by centerfall94 December 1, 2008 12:36 PM PST
Hillary''s a great choice. Obama''s doing really well!!!!
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by noloyalisti December 1, 2008 1:15 PM PST
This is why we could not have Hillary for pResident. We have started two fiasco genocides for oil and she was in favor of them. The right wing wacko party also wanted her as the nominee so they could Kerry her.

We should make her be the Secretary of the Department of Peace.
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by es48 December 1, 2008 1:25 PM PST
Article 1, Section 6 of the Constitution prohibits legislators from raising the salary of a cabinet position and then taking the position. The Senate that Hillary was a part of raised the salary of the Secretary of State last year.

We found out what happens when you get swept off of your feet with Bush who used terror as his broom. Instead of getting swept off of our feet with Obama''s smile, we should remember that out loyalty is to the country and keep an eye on this guy.

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by ldvuong December 1, 2008 1:31 PM PST
How well did Colin Powell do as Secretary of State under George W. Bush''s first term, the Iraq war??
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by noloyalisti December 1, 2008 4:16 PM PST
I agree, our work only STARTED when Obama was elected. We need to make sure he fights the fascist forces that have taken over America. We need to hold his feet to the fire to make sure he becomes the liberal progressive that we so desperately need.
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by dburfears December 1, 2008 6:07 PM PST
Bolton reveals himself again. He is incredibly rigid, unimaginative, and blinded by extremist ideology. Bolton is an incurious man with no intellect. Why he is even quoted is beyond me. He has nothing to offer beyond the same old lines he has uttered for 30 years. This man is a perfect example of neocon failure- someone who will never alter his ideological policies, even to the end of driving this country into the ground. Quoting him is a waste of space.
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by pvperson December 1, 2008 6:10 PM PST
websmith1, the last time the salary conflict came up, they simply reduced the salary for SOS until after the Senator took the office, then raised it back again.

No problem.
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by hober_mallow December 2, 2008 11:21 AM PST
Hillary Clinton is very smart and could make an excellent Secretary of State...

Unless she starts treating the position as a personal profit center.
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by promaclaura December 2, 2008 4:43 PM PST
This article is correct, as a conservative I do think that Hillary will be more hawkish. She''s tough, put up with Bill, and really fought hard in her campaign. I don''t believe she will recommend leaving Iraq to soon, and today in his 1st speech since his re-selection, Secretary Gates told a reporter that Barack was going to take the recommendations of his General''s. This is not the "voice" of immediate pull-out or 16 months for that matter. We''ll see.
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by vhammon December 2, 2008 4:54 PM PST
John Bolton speaks true when he says that Obama''s approach to problem solving confuses him. We''ve had plenty of evidence that he and the administration he represented are genuinely unable to understand how decisions can be made by listening and understanding and debating diverse options, instead of relying on ideology, secrecy and group think. It is the difference between an immature and a mature approach to resolving differences. Since better decision-making reaches better long-term decisions, it is important to pay attention to the decision-making style of elected officials, and vote for maturity, rather than an ideological match.
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