Former Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel Says White House Tried to ‘Destroy’ Him
by
John Hayward 19 Dec 2015
Former
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel gave an
interview to Foreign Policy, billed as his first public
interview since he was forced out of office in February. Hagel said the
White House sought to personally “destroy” him during his final days.
Hagel
also said President Obama has no strategy for Syria, no credibility with world
leaders, and no real understanding of how the Pentagon works, despite an
insatiable urge to micro-manage it.
“They
already had my resignation, so what was the point of just continuing to try to
destroy me?” Hagel asked, recalling how there were “certain people just really
vilifying [him] in a gutless, off-the-record kind of way.”
Hagel
said he was “mystified” by how the White House treated him, although Foreign
Policy surmises it had to do with a clash between Hagel and National
Security Adviser Susan Rice.
“Hagel’s
former aides, and former White House officials, say the defense secretary
frequently butted heads with Rice over Syria policy and the U.S. military
prison at Guantánamo,” FP writes.
It
would be a mistake to blame Rice entirely for Hagel’s treatment, though. This
is a famously vindictive President and administration, deeply invested in the
idea of personal destruction and discrediting critics. They wanted to make sure
Hagel would have a hard time dishing dirt to the media after he left, so they
launched a preemptive strike to set him up as a bitter mediocrity with axes to
grind. That also positioned him nicely for use as one of the many scapegoats
for Obama’s foreign policy failures. Hagel should have seen all this coming,
since one of the major reasons he got the job was to serve as a nominally Republican
punching bag for anger over Obama’s military budget cuts.
Hagel is dishing
now, and part of his criticism tracks with complaints of Pentagon
micro-management and political interference from his predecessors, Robert Gates
and Leon
Panetta, as well as former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey. Hagel complained about White
House staffers pestering generals with “fifth-level questions” they should not
have been involved in, layers of bureaucracy piling up at the National
Security Council, and political concerns taking priority over
military efficiency.
Hagel
said he was afraid to speak his mind at the excessively numerous, long, and
large meetings held by the White House because “the more people you have
in a room, the more possibilities there are for self-serving leaks to shape and
influence decisions in the press.” He said he was often surprised to arrive at
“private” meetings with President Obama, only to find “others in the room.”
Much
of the former Defense Secretary’s critique relates to the image of
fecklessness, indecisiveness, ignorance, and dishonesty that Obama’s foreign
policy has projected to the rest of the world. He portrayed the “red line”
debacle in Syria as a particularly devastating example; Obama and his die-hard
supporters are the only people in the world who think he was able to back down
from his chemical-weapons bluster without inflicting severe damage on American
credibility.
(The
most surreal part of the Foreign Policy piece is when a
nameless administration official tried to stick up for President Obama’s
handling of Syria by claiming he paved the way for Russia to work out a
diplomatic arrangement with the Assad regime, and “the end result” was “a Syria
that’s free of its chemical weapons program.” Back here in the real world,
there are still chemical
weapons deployments in Syria.)
“There’s
no question in my mind that it hurt the credibility of the president’s word
when this occurred,” Hagel said of the chemical-weapons climbdown by Obama,
adding that foreign leaders still tell him they were stunned and shaken
that President
Obama broke his word. Along
the same lines, he said President Obama’s tepid support for U.S.-aligned Syrian
rebels, and refusal to commit to defending them against the Assad regime (and
later Russian airstrikes), left prospective allies around the world wondering
if teaming up with Obama’s America was a wise move.
The
White House was angry with Hagel for (accurately) undercutting its narrative
about the Islamic State (ISIS/ISIL) being an irrelevant junior varsity
terrorist squad and for pointing out the administration had nothing resembling
a coherent policy on Syria, ISIS, or Russian aggression in Ukraine. However, he
said his worst conflict with the White House came over President Obama’s mad
drive to close Guantánamo Bay at all costs. Given authority by Congress to
approve inmate transfers, Hagel was hesitant to approve some that President
Obama wanted, and refused others, which infuriated the White House.
“It
got pretty bad, pretty brutal. I’d get the hell beat out of me all the
time on this at the White House,” said Hagel, who maintained that he agreed
with the notion of closing Gitmo, but wanted to do it more slowly and
carefully.
Also
pretty bad and brutal: President Obama’s freed Guantánamo detainees have
turned up on the battlefield again. The latest example
is Ibrahim al-Qosi, Osama bin Laden’s cook, chauffeur, and bookkeeper,
who just popped up in a new al-Qaeda video. Of course, the same White
House that does not think President Obama’s blunders make America look bad
was obsessed with the idea that, as Foreign Policy puts
it, “security concerns had to be weighed against the damage done to America’s
image abroad as long as Guantánamo remained open and the ammunition it
provided for extremist propaganda.”
Gitmo
was the “last straw that led to Hagel having to step down,” although FP
ironically notes that his successor, Ashton Carter, is approving
considerably fewer detainee transfers than Hagel did.
Hagel
throws some punches at congressional Republicans in his Foreign
Policy interview, as well, claiming that much of their opposition to
his confirmation was partisan political theater, and some of them privately
contacted him to apologize afterward.
FP’s account of his
bitter confirmation hearing leaves up the most substantive criticisms
leveled against Hagel, which involved specific criticisms of his past
positions, including opposition to sanctions against Iran and support for
negotiations with anti-Israel terror groups like Hamas, in addition to concerns
about his overall qualifications–his performance during those confirmation
hearings was unquestionably dismal–and fears that he would be used in precisely
the way he was: as a bipartisan fall guy for President Obama’s agenda.
Foreign
Policy concludes
its interview with Hagel by noting that he shares President Obama’s skepticism
about using military force, and continues to give the President “high marks for
not over-reacting to terrorist threats, for pursuing a strategic ‘rebalance’
toward the Asia-Pacific, and for clinching a landmark agreement with Iran to
curtail its nuclear
program.”
Foreign Policy
Richard C. Holbrooke was a managing editor for
Foreign Policy, a director at the Atlantic
Council of the United States (think tank), the United Nations U.S. ambassador, and a 2008 Bilderberg conference
participant (think tank).
Note: Graham
Holdings Co. is the owner of Foreign
Policy.
Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. is a stockholder in the Graham
Holdings Co.
Warren
E. Buffett is the chairman & CEO for Berkshire Hathaway Inc., and an adviser for the Nuclear Threat Initiative (think tank).
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the Nuclear
Threat Initiative (think tank).
Jessica Tuchman Mathews is a director at the Nuclear Threat Initiative (think tank),
was the president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (think
tank), a director at the American Friends of Bilderberg (think
tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
Ed Griffin’s interview with Norman Dodd in 1982
(The investigation into the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace uncovered the plans for population control by involving the
United States
in war)
Moises
Naim is a senior associate, International Economics Program for the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think tank), and was an editor &
publisher for the Foreign Policy.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace (think tank), and the Atlantic Council of the United
States (think tank).
George
Soros is the founder & chairman for the Open Society Foundations.
Susan E. Rice was
a director at the Atlantic Council of the United States (think tank), the United
Nations U.S. ambassador, is the White House national security adviser for
the Barack Obama administration, and
a friend of Madeleine K. Albright.
Madeleine K.
Albright is a friend of Susan E.
Rice, an honorary director at the Atlantic Council of the United States
(think tank), a professor at Georgetown
University, was the president of the Center
for National Policy, a United
Nations U.S. ambassador.
Leon E. Panetta
was the chairman for the Center for
National Policy, and the defense secretary for the Barack Obama administration.
Chuck Hagel was the
chairman for the Atlantic Council of the United States (think tank), a
professor at Georgetown University,
and is the Defense secretary for the Barack
Obama administration.
Richard C. Holbrooke was a director at the Atlantic
Council of the United States (think tank), the United Nations U.S. ambassador, a managing editor for Foreign Policy, and a 2008 Bilderberg
conference participant (think tank).
Graham
Holdings Co. is the owner of Foreign
Policy.
Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. is a stockholder in the Graham
Holdings Co.
David Rothkopf is
the CEO & editor-at-large for the Foreign
Policy, and was a managing director at Kissinger
Associates, Inc.
Brent Scowcroft
was the vice chairman for Kissinger
Associates, Inc., is the interim chairman; chair, international advisory
board for the Atlantic Council of the United States (think tank), and a
friend of Henry A. Kissinger.
Henry A. Kissinger is the founder of Kissinger
Associates, Inc., a director at the Atlantic Council of the United
States (think tank), a director at the American Friends of Bilderberg
(think tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
J. Stapleton Roy
was the vice chairman for Kissinger
Associates, Inc., and is a trustee at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace (think tank).
Moises Naim is a
senior associate, International Economics Program for the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace (think tank), and was an editor & publisher for
the Foreign Policy.
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the Nuclear
Threat Initiative (think tank).
Warren E. Buffett
is an adviser for the Nuclear Threat
Initiative (think tank), and the chairman & CEO for Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. is a stockholder in the Graham
Holdings Co.
Graham
Holdings Co. is the owner of Foreign
Policy.
Richard C. Holbrooke was a managing editor for
Foreign Policy, a director at the Atlantic
Council of the United States (think tank), the United Nations U.S. ambassador, and a 2008 Bilderberg conference
participant (think tank).
Chuck Hagel was the
chairman for the Atlantic Council of the United States (think tank), a
professor at Georgetown University,
and is the Defense secretary for the Barack
Obama administration.
Madeleine K.
Albright is an honorary director at the Atlantic Council of the United
States (think tank), a professor at Georgetown
University, a friend of Susan E.
Rice, a co-chairman for the Albright
Stonebridge Group, was a United
Nations U.S. ambassador, a member of the National Security Council, Suzanne
A. George was her special assistant & assistant counsel, and Ben Chang was her special assistant.
Suzanne A. George
was Madeleine K. Albright’s special
assistant & assistant counsel, a principal at the Albright Stonebridge Group, is the executive secretary for the National Security Council, and the
deputy
assistant to the president for the Barack
Obama administration.
Melody C. Barnes
is a senior adviser for the Albright
Stonebridge Group, Barack Obama’s golf partner, and
was a domestic policy council, director for the Barack Obama administration.
Carol M. Browner
is a senior counselor at the Albright
Stonebridge Group, and was the energy czar for the Barack Obama administration.
Ben Chang is the SVP
for the Albright Stonebridge Group,
and was Madeleine K. Albright’s special
assistant, a deputy White House spokesman for the Barack Obama administration, and Colin L. Powell’s special assistant.
Colin L. Powell’s
special assistant was Ben Chang, the
chairman for the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
and is an honorary director at the Atlantic Council of the United States
(think tank).
Martin E. Dempsey
is the chairman for the Joint Chiefs of
Staff.
Michael G. Mullen
was the chairman for the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and is an advisory board member for Everytown for Gun Safety.
Everytown
for Gun Safety is a “Gun Safety, Gun
Control” group for guns.
Warren E. Buffett
is an advisory board member for Everytown
for Gun Safety, an adviser for the Nuclear
Threat Initiative (think tank), and the chairman & CEO for Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think
tank) was a funder for the Nuclear
Threat Initiative (think tank).
Moises Naim is a
senior associate, International Economics Program for the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace (think tank), and was an editor & publisher for
the Foreign Policy.
Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. is a stockholder in the Graham
Holdings Co.
Graham
Holdings Co. is the owner of Foreign
Policy.
No comments:
Post a Comment