Reports that Trump "grew irritated" with his national security team during a meeting Tuesday, when they warned against an immediate withdrawal from Syria, could be another sign of policy discord between the President and Defense Secretary James Mattis. Heather Hurlburt suggests in New York Magazine that this raises a troubling question: Are his days in the job numbered? "Of course, American history is full of conflict between presidents and their military advisers. But what you don't find in our history, or in the 71 years since the creation of the Department of Defense, is a president and a civilian secretary in this much public conflict. We've learned there were disagreements between LBJ and the Pentagon, but much less was known at the time," Hurlburt says. "In times past, a secretary of defense who had this many differences with his boss would either quit on his own or be told to do so. Mattis and Trump, though, are both well aware of the high regard in which Mattis is held across Washington — even by those who, in a different administration, would strongly oppose his policy beliefs." "It may be time to start thinking about Mattis as the Robert Mueller of national security policy. Republican officials in particular should ask themselves what they are willing to do to ensure Mattis remains in the Trump administration." - Mattis is a reassuringly stable presence in a turbulent White House. We should all hope he stays put, Fareed says, not least so he can act as a counterweight to the hawkish impulses of the incoming national security adviser, John Bolton.
"The national security adviser is the gatekeeper through whom all influence on foreign policy comes. He is the guy who shapes the options the President has. And on Monday, that role will be taken up by a man who is arguably the most extreme hawk within the US foreign policy establishment of the last 30 years," Fareed says. "Just look at the approach to North Korea. Bolton has argued in favor of an unprovoked war against North Korea. We're not talking about a pre-emptive strike on a country that is imminently set to strike the United States. We're talking about a preventive war, an unprovoked attack against a country that could retaliate with nuclear weapons. "To have somebody like that with a President who, I think it's fair to say, has a thin grasp of international affairs, is very worrying. That's why General Mattis could be seen as the most important person in the American government right now – and why we need him to stay." |
No comments:
Post a Comment