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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
08.10.2008
Why Kerry Shouldn't--and Won't--Be Secretary of State

Just about everybody in the other camp now concedes that Barack Obama will be the next president of the United States. But most of us don't have to concede anything: we'd felt it in our bones from the beginning.

Many political people are so certain, in fact, that they are already appointing themselves and each other to coveted posts in the Obama administration. There's no one in my circle, however, who wants to be secretary of agriculture. But there are many (really many many) who want to be secretary of state or national security adviser, although most of them have the self-discipline to curb their ambitions when talking to others. More middle level aspirants have had their appetites whetted by being appointed by Susan Rice to the vast but informal network of what Washington invariably calls task-forces. I'm told by savvy individuals there may be as many as 300 men and women disbursed around these outfits. There probably is one for the southern Pacific, and from its ranks will come the ambassador to Micronesia and Tonga, maybe in one person. These folk are really totally irrelevant to a campaign. Yet they doubtless have been writing and passing around position papers which no one of any significance will have time, patience or interest to read after the campaign has been won.

The most obvious of these supplicants is John Forbes Kerry. As he tells it (obviously not to me but to several people I deeply trust), he confronted Obama with a deal: Kerry's endorsement in exchange for his appointment as secretary of state. Obama, he tells people, took the offer. Slam dunk.

Actually, I don't believe it. Oh, I believe that Kerry put the question to him, What I don't believe is that Obama took the bait. One reason is that Obama is too savvy to designate someone whose mind is so indentured to abstractions like the United Nations and "soft power" after what the candidate has learned during the campaign about how combustible foreign affairs is. Moreover, you don't appoint a secretary of state without knowing who will be secretary of defense and national security adviser. International relations for the president is a balance among trusted heads and hands, and Obama doesn't know whose they will be. And imagine how disorienting it would be to plan your cabinet when you're still yourself from the dirt MCain has allowed his people to throw.

Choosing Kerry as secretary of state would also be political nit-wittish. He is not exactly liked by his colleagues in the Senate. That is, liked as a human being. He is a preener, and almost no one appreciates a preener. His politics are simply too left-wing for the Democratic majority which Obama will have cobbled together for his victory. Imagine starting out your term on January 20 with an appointment fight over this J.F.K.

The fact is that a campaign is a campaign. It's about positioning the candidate within the bounds of truthfulness about how he will govern. But it is not about governing. Obama has made only one decision that is about governing. It was his choice of vice president, Joe Biden, a perfect choice that also militates against John Kerry being secretary of state.

Posted: Wednesday, October 08, 2008 12:33 AM with 25 comment(s)

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jacobt1 said:

Marty, Who do you want to be Secretary of State? Samantha Powers? Tell me any name  among Obama advisers that you like?

The most senior include several ranking Clinton administration officials, the Brookings Institution's Susan E. Rice, former National Security Adviser Anthony Lake, and former Navy Secretary Richard Danzig.

www.newsweek.com/.../1

October 8, 2008 3:06 AM

jacobt1 said:

"The fact is that a campaign is a campaign. It's about positioning the candidate within the bounds of truthfulness about how he will govern. But it is not about governing."

Yes, I know you hope that Obama will govern as Lieberman.  

October 8, 2008 3:13 AM

Rhubarbs said:

What about Dennis Ross? I'd be curious about Marty's thoughts on "that one."

Also, Hillary for UN Ambassador. That's an absolute must. Ends her elected political career, opens a NY Senate seat for new blood, and she can't very well say "no." Plus, our European and Asian allies seem to really like the Clintons, so it puts her to the most effective possible use. Also sets her up to be the fall-guy if unpopular action against Iran becomes necessary. It's win-win-win for everyone except Clinton's presidential ambitions.

October 8, 2008 10:15 AM

csmiller said:

Actually, I hope Samantha POWER does get a spot in the administration.  She is one of the most accomplished foreign policy experts in the country.

October 8, 2008 11:58 AM

blackton said:

Let's wait until after the election shall we, please before we begin discussing cabinet posts. 4 weeks is not long to wait. We sure as hell can't get cocky about it, not as long as we have racist scum like Jacob trolling about.

October 8, 2008 12:44 PM

johnhanderson said:

Hillary Clinton is the most qualified to be Secretary of State.

October 8, 2008 1:31 PM

selish70 said:

"Hillary Clinton is the most qualified to be Secretary of State."

Wow.  Uh, maybe we'd better define the pool of candidates then.

October 8, 2008 1:44 PM

akjacobson said:

Sen. Richard Lugar.  

October 8, 2008 4:09 PM

baxterjones said:

Richard Holbrooke would be a good choice. Sam Nunn as National Security Advisor, and Wesley Clark as Secretary of Defense.

Kerry should stay in the Senate.

October 8, 2008 4:23 PM

jacobt1 said:

"Richard Holbrooke would be a good choice."

Anthony Lake and the Obama core supporters hate him.

I would not have a problem with a President who listens  to Richard Holbrooke .

October 8, 2008 4:46 PM

jacobt1 said:

Wesley Clark  can't be  Secretary of Defense. He is a general.

October 8, 2008 4:46 PM

jacobt1 said:

Rhubarbs  said

"Also, Hillary for UN Ambassador It's win-win-win for everyone except Clinton's presidential ambitions."

Rhubarbs and Marty, soul mates.

October 8, 2008 4:48 PM

mbholman said:

Wes Clark WAS a general. But so was Marshall.

October 8, 2008 6:18 PM

blackton said:

mbholman, Powell was a General too, took leave to become National Security Advisor under Reagan, went back to being a top general under Bush and Clinton, then became Sec. of State.

October 8, 2008 6:58 PM

flynnb_az said:

Aaaaaahhhh!  I can't believe we're talking about this!  27 days left, folks!

(by the way, my vote is for either Dick Lugar or Sam Nunn -- who better to bring loose nukes back into the forefront than one of these guys.

And for God's sakes, keep Bob Gates at Defense, if only for a year or two).  

October 8, 2008 7:41 PM

dude111 said:

Marty wants to continue the success of the neocon foreign policy....

October 9, 2008 12:58 AM

butchie b said:

Holbrooke is the best choice out there, and it would calm people like me, who hope to God the Chosen One knows what he's doing, considering his complete lack of experience and accomplishment at the national level.

As far as who can be SecState, the only qualification I know of is a pulse.

October 9, 2008 11:26 AM

teplukhin2you said:

Holbrooke for sure.

October 9, 2008 2:07 PM

3mjesus said:

Kerry isn't qualified to be mayor of Wasilla, Alaska.

October 9, 2008 2:08 PM

whpriol1 said:

"Hillary Clinton is the most qualified to be Secretary of State." I couldn't agree more. Given her experience of landing under sniper fire in Bosnia, the game-changing role that she played in the Irish peace process, and her statement that we should "obliterate" Iran if Israel were attacked makes her eminently qualified for the position. Oh, and how could I forget the speech on women's rights that she gave to China. The great deception of Condi Rice is that she has a professional, presentable appearance. Hillary can't even pass that superficial threshold. Obama has plenty more experienced, knowledgable choices who would not make male foreign dignitaries fearful of losing a specific organ from their body.

October 9, 2008 5:42 PM

aquamon said:

Who for Secretary of Peace?  It's time already.  I like Bill Moyers.

October 9, 2008 7:54 PM

AlanSP said:

Main problem for Holbrooke politically would be his ties to the financial sector. Having been on the board of AIG until this summer and having been managing director of Lehman before that, he could become a target for a lot of anger. Not that it's particularly relevant to his possible job as Secretary of State, but he could still get caught up in the backlash.

October 10, 2008 12:26 AM

Robert Powell said:

Holbrooke is a fine choice, and who cares if he's popular? He's COMPETENT.

Wesley Clark can't be Secretary of Defense (or anything else) not because he's a general, but because he's an idiot. Ditto Kerry.

Hillary would have no trouble at all saying "no" to the UN job, which is even more of a hopeless dead-end than ever these days. She should take the Majority Leader reins from the palsied hands of Hopeless Harry Reid

Bill Clinton is far too talented to waste. He'd be an inspired choice as Secretary of State, and could probably even do some good at the UN. But my preference is that he picks up a seat in the House and takes the Speaker job from the disastrous Nancy P.

October 10, 2008 3:50 PM

Soccer Dad said:

David Bernstein: Rather, since the Iraq War, critics of the Bush Administration's policies have been promiscuously throwing the term "Likudnik" around to describe any person of Jewish origin who happens to disagree with their views and is generally perceived

November 9, 2008 1:13 PM

The Plank said:

Marc Ambinder floats what I can only assume is a trial balloon from John Kerry (or some people close

November 18, 2008 11:28 AM

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