Monday, March 15, 2010 - 1:32 AM
Commentary's Jennifer Rubin is reacting way out of proportion to David Axelrod's tour of the Sunday morning talk shows. That said, she's got a germ of a good point:
David Axelrod — a political operative who now seems at the center of foreign-policy formulation (more on this later) — went on the Fox, ABC, and NBC Sunday talk shows to repeat how insulted the Obami were over Israeli building in Jerusalem and what an affront this was to them....
[I]t might have something to do with the fact that Axelrod and the Chicago pols are running foreign policy. It’s attack, attack, attack — just as they do any domestic critic.
Quibble away with Rubin's characterization of "Chicago pols," but she does raise a decent question: why on God's green earth is the Obama equivalent of Karl Rove talking about foreign policy in public?
Since the VP trip from Hell, it's clear that the Obama administration has ratcheted up the rhetoric in private, in public, in press leaks and through multilateral channels to their Israeli counterparts. Given what transpired, it's entirely appropriate that the Obama administration make its displeasure felt publicly.
Why Axelrod, however? Sure, the Sunday morning talk shows wanted to talk health care as well. And it's true that Axelrod, thought of as pro-Israel, could send a tough signal. Still, couldn't the administration have sent Hillary Clinton to one of the Sunday morning talk shows instead? Wouldn't she have been the more appropriate spokesman.
I've spent enought time inside the Beltway to be leery of the gossipy tidbits I collect when I'm down there. That said, there was one persistent drumbeat I heard during my last sojourn -- that Axelrod and the political advisors were acting as Obama's foreign policy gatekeepers.
Now, I am shocked, shocked, that politicians are thinking about foreign policy in a political manner. That said, there is a balance to be struck between political and policy advisors. Even David Frum admitted that this balance got out of whack during the Bush administration. I'd like to see things return to to the pre-21st century equilibrium. It would be disturbing if the new equilibrium is that someone like David Axelrod becomes the foreign policy czar.
UPDATE: You know what's particularly galling about this? When the political operatives fail to do their job and point out politically useful things to do in order to augment American foreign policy:
As an unusual public showdown between the Israeli and American administrations plays out, Hill sources say leading Congressional Democrats would be with the administration on this but would really like to get a phone call from Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell, currently en route back to the Middle East to try to salvage Israeli-Palestinian proximity talks.
As former Senate Majority Leader, Mitchell has credibility with the Senators, one staffer said. It would be really helpful if he makes some phone calls from the plane, to say we really need you to stay with the administration, we are trying to push the peace process forward, and if he would articulate some sort of vision, of where this next sort of piece of tactical fight is going.
This is not the first time one has heard this from Hill Democrats that they are feeling a bit in the dark, but at such a tense moment, it is hard not to be astonished that the administration was not working the phones to the Hill all weekend.
"Same exact mistake of the first two Clinton years with majorities in both Houses," one Washington Democratic foreign policy hand said. "You'd think they would have learned the lesson of 'never take your allies for granted' at least after this year."
I have wondered about this as well, for some time.
Hillary Clinton's appointment as Secretary of State never made much sense to me. I don't put that high a value on celebrity or "star power," and didn't think the fabled Clinton entourage should be inflicted on the State Department. More than that, though, I believed that someone who has made foreign policy his (or her) life's work was the best choice to lead foreign policy in a new administration. We've had some pretty mediocre Secretaries of State who were career foreign policy hands, but most our best ones -- Acheson, Marshall, Kissinger, Schultz -- had done a lot of substantive foreign policy work before getting the job. Clinton had not.
She was given the job anyway, and I kind of wish President Obama would let her do it. She doesn't need to be on the Sunday talkies every week, but when a fairly major foreign policy issue is hot the Secretary of State should be the public face and voice of the administration's foreign policy. Now, in this administration there are obviously situations in which the Secretary of Defense or Vice President would be better, but the President's election campaign consultant?
David Axelrod's foreign policy role would bother me less if he were really good at presenting and explaining the administration's position on difficult issues. He isn't. There's a reason Axelrod has made a career helping other men get elected instead of running for office himself. He looks at the camera, calls his interviewer by his or her first name, and makes his way through a list of talking points. When questioned or challenged, he answers by repeating the relevant talking point, sometimes more than once. This usually gets him through a news cycle, but it doesn't shed much light on what the Obama administration is thinking about foreign policy or why.
None of this would matter if Obama were still a candidate. Staying on message (what the talking points are for) and getting through news cycles are what one does in a campaign, where the goal is to make it across the finish line in one piece. I guess I wonder sometimes whether Obama fully understands that he is President of the United States, and not just a candidate any more; he has to trust people outside his campaign circle to do important things like explain his administration's foreign policy. If he doesn't trust Hillary Clinton to do this (or if, for whatever reason, she doesn't want to do this) he shouldn't have hired her. At any rate, if he's going to have someone poach her turf it should be someone who knows what he's doing -- beyond repeating the talking points.
Axelrod's reaction and his policy statement
Given what transpired, it's entirely appropriate that the Obama administration make its displeasure felt publicly.
Axelrod stated that the US had always been opposed to building in Jerusalem. But this actually represents a significant shift for US policy, which had regarded Jerusalem as "disputed" and a topic for "final status" negotiations. Now he is calling it a "settlement" and causing shock and consternation among Israelis.
In particular this comes after Bibi imposed a temporary building freeze on the West Bank that did not include Jerusalem and got some faint praise from the state dept.
The question is what is really going on here? Was it just an amateurish faux pas? If it's a real change in policy, what is the purpose?
Possibilities: "Regime changing" Bibi out of the picture; sending the message that the US is now "neutral" regarding the Arab/Israeli conflict (as it did with the Falklands conflict); positioning for an imposed solution along the lines being demanded by the Palestinians (ie. full Israel withdrawal to '67 lines, open borders, staged "resettling" for refugee camps)
Gibbs, Valrie Jarret and Axelrod need to be queit
Secretary Clinton on CNN very cleary stated the point of view and used the term insulting when explaining Israel's behavior last week, why Obama let his studdering advisor axlerod go on the morning show baffels me why he lets them go on the morning shows week after week, he should let hid cabinet speak instead of his buddies.
I can't stand when I see Axelrod out there discussing this stuff. That said, I agree that someone like the SOS maybe would have been more apporpriate but given her strong statements to Andrea Mitchell and CNN. perhaps the admin. simply wanted one more[different] person coming out and saying the same thing so as to look even more united? I honestly don't know. Also, the AIPAC conference is next week and Hillary is speaking, maybe they figured it would be awkward enough without sending her out again to deliver the administraton's condemnation.
I can't imagine why Sen. Mitchell hasn't picked up the phone to rally support behind the administration, particularly given the smack down from AIPAC and the ADL and the usual suspects in the op-ed pages of the WSJ, etc.
Now Bibi has announced he's not going to halt settlements irrespective of what the US' concerns are. So, now what? The one thing that might make Bibi stand down is if key members of Congress resisted the urge to have a knee-jerk reaction in defense of Bibi and instead supported the administration on this one, particularly given the fact that the so-called proximity talks are looking less and less likely given this most recent announcement.
David Axelrod is to President Obama as Karl Rove is to President George W. Bush. The only difference is that Axelrod is making it public by going on Sunday morning talk shows.
I personally have no problem with political advisers giving their opinions on foreign-policy issues. In fact, I believe that major advisers have an obligation to make their views known to the President...in private. But taking these same opinions on the airways, especially when you don't have any firm expertise, is not really a smart political move. It gives the Republicans some ammunition for the midterm elections.
http://www.depetris.wordpress.com
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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