Gates at Defense: Pros and Cons
If the reports that Robert Gates will be kept on as Defense Secretary for the first year of the Obama administration are true, it raises all kinds of questions -- on nuclear weapons policy, on Iraq, on military spending, on the balance between military and civilian tools of foreign assistance, and on policy towards Iran.
Gates is no Donald Rumsfeld, but nor is he an inspired choice. If Obama felt the need to appoint a Republican to his national security team, I would have much preferred Chuck Hagel at the State Department, with someone like Sam Nunn at Defense (assuming either or both of them would have been open to serving in these positions). But, we are where we are. What might the Gates appointment mean for the evolution of U.S. defense policy during Obama's crucial first year?
Gates is a realist, with all the pros and cons that designation entails. On the positive side of the ledger, he is not scouring the planet looking for dragons to slay, as indicated by his quiet but clear opposition to taking military action against Iran. And although he is a proponent of the surge in Iraq, he also served on the Baker-Hamilton commission, which took a much more pragmatic view of how to disentangle the U.S. from this ill-advised war. Gates' good relations with Gen. David Petraeus and other military leaders could cut either way -- he might be a good messenger for President Obama in pushing forward on troop reductions in Iraq; or, his very appointment might signal that Obama is already thinking of going slower on withdrawal than he has so far indicated.
Another positive has been Gates' advocacy of more funding for diplomacy generally and the State Department in particular. In a speech at Kansas State University, he noted, among other things, that there are more personnel in the average aircraft carrier battle group (of which the U.S. has a dozen) than there are trained diplomats in the U.S. foreign service. He also indicated -- not surprisingly -- that he was not suggesting that the funds to pump up State come at the expense of the Pentagon budget, even though military spending (counting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan) is now nearly twenty times as much as the budget for the State Department and related international affairs programs. In fact, Gates' has embraced the neo-con inspired call for a floor on Pentagon spending of 4% of Gross Domestic Product, regardless of what happens in Iraq and Afghanistan. That would imply a substantial increase from current levels, which are already at the highest point since World War II. The idea of a "4% solution" on defense has been thoroughly debunked by Travis Sharp of the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation (see previous link).
So, a year of Gates could impede the best elements of Obama's foreign policy vision, or he could be a reasonably skilled "implementer" of clear directives from the White House.
The one area where a Gates extension is most troubling to me is on the issue of nuclear weapons. At a pre-election speech at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Gates endorsed the concept of building a next generation nuclear weapon, the so-called "Reliable Replacement Warhead," while pouring cold water on the idea of ever achieving a world free of nuclear weapons (an Obama campaign pledge). He did, however, indicate that there should be a new agreement with Russia to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals below the levels currently promised, and that there should be an extension of the important verification regime that is embodied in the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), which is otherwise set to expire in the fall of 2009. But as Joseph Cirincione of the Ploughshares Fund has suggested, the Obama administration should take advantage of the current political climate to take a "transformationalist" rather than an "incrementalist" approach to eliminating nuclear weapons. And Gates is nothing if not an incrementalist.
Early in the new year, members of Congress should create opportunities to firmly but respectfully question Gates on all of these issues -- plans for withdrawal from Iraq, policy towards Iran and its nuclear program, the balance between military and non-military tools of security, the appropriate level of military spending, and the best "path to zero" on nuclear weapons. As noted above, President Obama will be making policy. But Gates will have real influence, and he should be pressed to exert that influence in the right direction -- which would mean an about face on key issues like military spending and nuclear weapons policy.













I hate this idea. It just feeds the phony notion that Democrats are too weak on defense to handle it themselves. There are plenty of Dems qualified for this post, Gates should make way for them and go back to scamming Fidelity's mutual fund shareholders as a do-nothing board member (of over 300 funds at one time).
November 26, 2008 3:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Though I really detest Gates in many ways, this choice could be a wise move on Obama's part. This is based on the following supposition. Obama is sincere in his promise to pull out all of the troops in 16 months and he has Gates's understanding that he will carry out this directive. We all should be aware that once we do pull out of Iraq and it will perfectly clear to any cognizant person on the planet that we will have not only have not won that war but lost it. The ultra right will take up the cry of betrayal. Having a Republican Party hack like Gates administer the withdrawal will help deflect some of these charges.
The US lost badly in Vietnam and the Republicans through Reagan helped portray that lost as a lack of will if not downright betrayal by the democrats. This helped them hold the whitehouse for 12 years. The communist victory in China in 1949 gave the Republicans the "who lost China' cry, and they got 8 years of rule from that. We must fully expect another attempt by the Republicans to claw back into power on America's failure to prevail in Iraq. Obviously Gates is not enough but if that is part of the calculus that went into his appointment it is a good sign because it shows our people are preparing for the future.
November 26, 2008 4:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
"And Gates is nothing if not an incrementalist."
Isn't Obama one too, in addition to being a "visionary minimalist"?
http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=bc903601-5eaa-4631-803e-6d47f83bf4ca (also cited at TPM recently but I can't find the link)
November 26, 2008 5:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
The person I think we need to work to keep out of the Obama team at all costs is Richard Holbrooke, who although a Democrat is a much more worrisome figure than Robert Gates. Holbrooke is being pushed for various positions in the administration, including an all purpose Middle East envoy position. But given his association with this group of Middle East hawks, he should be allowed nowhere near Obama's Middle East portfolio.
Fouad Ajami? James Woolsey? Dennis Ross? Karen Hughes? Henry Sokolski? Walter Russell Mead? This is essentially a neoconservative and liberal hawk group modeled on the same outfits that agitated for a war in Iraq, like the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq. These are Holbrooke's friends. If we get snowed again by agents provocateurs of this ilk, and sit by while Obama's Middle East foreign policy is handed over to essentially the same gang who snookered the country into Iraq, we all deserve to be taken out and shot.
November 26, 2008 9:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Please calm down Dan K. Holbrooke and Dennis Ross have been appointed to nothing yet. Nor do I think they will be. Perhaps I am wrong, but we will find out soon.
November 27, 2008 12:06 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am quite calm. But I believe one constructive way to try to assure that Ross and Holbrooke are not appointed to anything important is to make sure there is some pressure against them coming from Obama's supporters, including in the blogosphere. We heard the other day that John Brennan was forced to withdraw his name from consideration for CIA director due to very sharp criticism from human rights groups and bloggers.
This run of cabinet and staff selections is a process, and it requires engaged participation. Holbrooke's friends, who are powerful, will be trying to work the process and build support in his favor. His opponents need to do the same thing, or else they will lose the battle. It is not sufficient to sit back passively, watch the process and hope Obama doesn't select any bad nominees. He is under enormous pressure from many powerful groups and constituencies, and he needs our voices and help to resist that pressure.
I realize a lot of people are in a bubbly, optimistic mood right now, and and they seem to want to relax, watch and trust. But there are battles for power going on right now, and the decisions Obama makes now are very important ones, which will have a huge influence on how his administration is conducted. We need to fight for our turf, just like Holbrooke is fighting for his.
November 27, 2008 12:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
I think we agree. I have posted elsewhere attacking Holbrook, Ross and Indyk. For reasons that may not be rational I think these guys are no longer in the picture.
November 27, 2008 4:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
Obama gets defensive and says all of his Clintonian nominees are justified since they combine both experience and "towering intellect" but that the buck would stop with him, Obama, saying he would have the final say....... please, how is he going to make the “right” judgments when his closest advisors and cabinet are stacked with Centrists and the War Monger herself, Hillary.
....STOP giving Obama a PASS on these cabinet nomination and wannabe's.
November 26, 2008 11:36 PM | Reply | Permalink
Stop slandering Hillary: in all probability and with increasing evidence, it appears that Obama's military policy is well to her right. Can you imagine her keeping Gates on?
I do not recall her ever suggesting that clearing out the Afghan Pakistan border would end the Al Qaeda problem as Obama has stupidly said. It is clear that any such massive incursion is far more likely to turn all of Pakistan into prime recruiting territory of Al Qada.
November 29, 2008 11:50 AM | Reply | Permalink
Gates encourages the thought that Democrats are unacceptable to the upper levels of Pentagon brass and therefore they should not be placed in charge of the largest part of our government - a really bad place for a democracy to be. Worse, Gates wants to keep his deputies. These are the stovepipe guys, the guys who want to start a war with China, they guys who want a war with Iran, and the list goes on. We explicitly voted not to have them in charge. Keeping them must not be accepted.
November 27, 2008 8:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't mind the thought of Gates being kept on. He seems like he is not an ideologue and is very pragmatic. He is fully up to speed on the issues. He is well respected, competent, and sane...opposing military action being taken against Iran. I see him faithfully and to the best of his ability implementing a President Obama's war policies and not trying to continue the horrible Bush Administration policies. At some point in the not too distant future I would want, and fully expect, to see Obama have his own pick in the Sec'y of Defense position. But for now, and in the context of incidents like what happened in Mumbai, I think something is to be said for keeping someone competent and who is fully up to speed on things in the position until someone else is ready to step in...
November 29, 2008 12:42 AM | Reply | Permalink