On 2013-01-12, at 11:47 AM, Jim Devine wrote:

> it looks to me like Obama chose Hagel so that he could easily get
> dronemeister/torture fan Brennan in to run the CIA. Hagel gets all the
> flack.

Perhaps, but I think there may be wider considerations at play - although not 
the kind perceived by some hopeful liberals and radicals, ie. that the 
nomination signals a bold new departure in Mideast policy by the administration.

Instead, I think Obama chose Hegel because, like Gates before him, Hegel is 
representative of the previously dominant, but now disaffected, faction of the 
Republican party which broke with doctrinaire conservative Republican right 
over Iraq. They correctly perceived the unilateral use of US ground forces 
under Bush as a reckless adventure, and continue to favour multilateral 
intervention relying on sanctions, the use of air power, and the internal 
subversion of regimes opposed to US imperialism. In this sense, far from being 
a maverick, Hagel's "realist" views place him squarely within the bipartisan 
military and foreign policy establishment whose best-known public spokesmen 
have been the Republican Brent Scowcroft and the Democrat Zbigniew Brzezinski. 

The administration concurs with this bipartisan military and foreign policy 
consensus.On the domestic front, Obama and the Democrats have also since 2008 
been trying to peel off discouraged "moderate" Republicans like Hagel, 
Scowcroft, Powell, etc. from the GOP by naming them to the Cabinet and moving 
into their political space. The administration meanwhile takes its liberal base 
for granted because it knows that, while it complains, it has nowhere else to 
go.

Here's Scowcroft on Hagel:

Scowcroft weighs in on the Hagel nomination
By Josh Rogin
Foreign Policy
January 9, 2013

Republican foreign-policy realists haven't changed their tune over the years, 
but some in the GOP have moved away from the realists, such as defense 
secretary nominee Chuck Hagel, according to former national security advisor 
Brent Scowcroft.

"We haven't moved; the Republican party has moved," Scowcroft told The Cable in 
an interview. "I have been a lifelong Republican and I hold to what I are my 
own beliefs, which happen to be core Republican beliefs, but many in the party 
have taken a different course."

Scowcroft is one of several senior former GOP officials, including Secretary of 
State Colin Powell, to back the Hagel nomination in the face of opposition from 
half a dozen GOP senators and groups associated with the neoconservative and 
hawkish sides of the Republican foreign policy community. Scowcroft said the 
GOP is rooted in the realist principles he still espouses.

"The neocons go clear back to the 1970s. They were Democrats, then became sort 
of Republicans," he said. "I'm who I am. Whether the party wants to desert me, 
that's their privilege."

Hagel's controversial comments from years past, such as when he once referred 
to the "Jewish lobby" or his longstanding opposition to unilateral sanctions, 
shouldn't bar him from serving as defense secretary, according to Scowcroft.

"He is first and foremost an American and he takes an American perspective on 
everything he discusses," he said. "I'm frankly surprised [by the controversy], 
because he says what he believes at the time and there is a core in what he has 
said that makes some sense. Would you rather have someone who has never said 
anything?"

Scowcroft joined with several other former officials in both parties to sign a 
letter in support of Hagel las month on the letterhead of the "Bipartisan 
Group," a loose association of former officials that includes Hagel. The Cable 
reported that horse racing gambler Bill Benter paid to have that letter 
advertised in Politico's Playbook newsletter.

But the Bipartisan Group has no further plans to act on behalf of Hagel and is 
not working directly with the Obama administration on the Hagel defense effort.

"This is a group that got together to write a letter to the president in 2008 
about the Palestinian peace process and then got together again to write this 
letter," said Scowcroft. "There's no organization, there's no strategy, there's 
no nothing as far as I am concerned. It was a one-off thing. That's the whole 
story as far as I know."

Scowcroft said it was "strong and brave" of President Barack Obama to choose a 
Republican such as Hagel, but he does not think this necessarily means Obama is 
cementing a foreign policy legacy that tracks with the Republican realist view 
of the world.

"The president on foreign policy is fairly eclectic,' he said. "It's a 
promising move. Whether it represents anything broader than that, I'm not 
prepared to say."

http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/01/09/scowcroft_the_gop_left_me_and_hagel?wp_login_redirect=0
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