Does the appointment of Secretary of Defense James Mattis represent a break with the Obama administration?
The easy confirmation of James Mattis as President Donald Trumps defense secretary entails no small amount of irony. Senate Democrats perceive the retired Marine general as someone who will speak unvarnished truth to a new White House team they fear will try to insulate Trump from unpalatable news and disagreeable perspectives. But left unremarked upon is that his earlier tenure as head of the US Central Command (CENTCOM), which oversees US military operations in the Middle East, was cut short by the Obama administration for doing precisely that.
By summer 2012, as multilateral talks on Irans nuclear ambitions geared up, General Mattis was instructed by his civilian superiors to tone down the weekly assessments he sent to Washington about the destabilizing role Tehran was playing in the Middle East, including its support for terrorism. As a notes: To the White House, these threats were secondary to restricting Irans nuclear program, and Mattiss hard-nosed approach, as outlined in the weekly letters, was seen by some as out of step with the presidents top foreign diplomatic priority.
By early 2013, tensions between the White House and Mattis had grown such that he was unceremoniously removed from his post. According to The Post, Mattis is convinced that he had been dismissed early for running afoul of the White House. Commenting on the event, Thomas E. Ricks, a defense journalist generally sympathetic to the administration,at the time: The message the Obama Administration is sending, intentionally or not, is that it doesnt like tough, smart, skeptical generals who speak candidly to their civilian superiors.
Indeed, the charge that the White House was not above squelching dissenting views was voiced regularly even by those who were not among the Obama administrations conservative critics. Veteran journalist James Mann, for example, noted in his 2012 book,, that: The Obama White House didnt like independent actors or internal discord. It also didnt like to be challenged, certainly not in public, and not on the foreign policy issues of greatest sensitivity for Obama.
Former administration officials have amplified these views. Leon Panetta, who served as Barack Obamas Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director and defense secretary, wrote in histhat the former presidents reliance on senior White House staffers was so heavy that Cabinet members were largely frozen out of the policy formulation and implementation process. Speaking at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library two years ago, he: Because of that centralization of authority at the White House, there are too few voices that are being heard You go there, and by the time you get to the White House, the staff has already decided, or tried to influence, what the direction should be.
Vali Nasr, who worked on Afghanistan-Pakistan issues in Obamas first term, offered a scathing critique of policymaking in his 2013 book,. According to Nasr, a phalanx of gatekeepersor as he called them, a Berlin Wall of staffersoperated in the White House, shielding Obama from any option or idea they did not want him to consider.He added: [Furthermore,] thehabit of funneling major foreign-policy decisions through a small cabal of relatively inexperienced White House advisors whose turf was strictly politics. Their primary concern was how any action in Afghanistan or the Middle East would play on the nightly news, or which talking point it would give the Republicans.
Likewise, Rosa Brooks, who served as a political appointee in the Pentagons policy shop in Obamas first term,in 2012 that the White House national security apparatus was a tiny fiefdom and that dissenting voices are regularly shut out, along with the voices of specialists who could provide valuable information and insights.
In a, Brooks called attention to the growing tensions between President Obama and his top military advisers.She quoted one retired senior general as saying: I dont understand the process by which the White House is making strategic or foreign-policy decisions Theres an appearance of consultation, but you know you wont be listened to.
MATTIS AT CENTCOM
The example made of Mattis provides context to the scandal that emerged at CENTCOM following his removal, when a large group of the commands intelligence analysts complained that their superiors altered assessments about the Islamic State and al-Qaeda in order to adhere more closely with the Obama administrations public line that the military campaign against these groups was progressing well. , which took the lead in breaking the story in mid-2015, the analysts described a work climate in which they could not give a candid assessment of the situation in Iraq and Syria.Some felt it was a product of commanders protecting their career advancement by putting the best spin on the war.
Following its initial coverage, TheDaily Beast that two senior analysts at CENTCOM, including the top expert on Syria, had been ousted from their positions due to judgments casting doubt on the viability of the Obama administrations plans to arm rebel groups fighting the Bashar al-Assad regime.
In August 2016, a congressional investigation issued an charging that:
漍藻 structural and management changes made at the CENTCOM Intelligence Directorate starting in mid-2014 resulted in the production and dissemination of intelligence products that were inconsistent with the judgments of many senior, career analysts at CENTCOM. These products were consistently more optimistic regarding the conduct of U.S. military action than that of the senior analysts [and] was also significantlymore optimistic than that of other parts of the Intelligence Community (IC) and typically more optimistic than actual events warranted.
The report also concluded: The leadership environment within CENTCOM and its Intelligence Directorate deteriorated significantly following the 2013 departure of Marine General James Mattis and his senior intelligence leaders.
At his confirmation hearing, Senator Elizabeth Warren : [I]f you end up in this job, our national security may well depend, in part, on your willingness to voice your opinions even when others disagree, even when you are under pressure to remain silent. We are counting on you. She made the statement seemingly unaware of the irony involved.
The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect 51勛圖s editorial policy.
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