W Post
Feb 14, 2014
 
The Post’s View
Ambassadorships are President  Obama’s political plums
 
 




 
By _Editorial Board_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-posts-view/2011/12/07/gIQAoEIscO_page.html)
 , 

 
 
< 
NOAH BRYSON Mamet is a political consultant who  raised at least $500,000 
for President Obama and the Democratic Party in the  2012 election cycle. As 
of last week, he had _never visited Argentina_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/post/obama-bundler-mamet-tapped-for-argentina-post/2013/0
7/31/93efce02-fa18-11e2-a369-d1954abcb7e3_blog.html)  — which helps explain 
the  ambassador-designate’s spotty performance before the Senate Foreign 
Relations  Committee at his confirmation hearing. _Mr. Mamet repeatedly 
described Argentina_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/wp/2014/02/11/obamas-ambassador-picks-fumble-the-been-there-question/?tid=hpModule_308f71
42-9199-11e2-bdea-e32ad90da239)  as a U.S. ally,  said it was “a mature 
democracy” and praised its record on human rights. 
That provoked a bipartisan tongue-lashing from Sens. Robert Mendendez  
(D-N.J.), the committee chairman, and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who pointed out 
that 
 the Argentine government under Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has 
compromised  freedom of the press and the judiciary, refused to pay debts to 
the 
U.S.  government and American bondholders, seized equipment from a U.S. 
military  training mission, undermined an investigation of an Iranian-sponsored 
terrorist  bombing and aligned itself with the rabidly anti-American 
governments of Cuba  and Venezuela. “This is the most unique ally I think we 
have in 
the world,” Mr.  Rubio dryly noted.



 
Mr. Mamet probably was only retailing, clumsily, talking points given to 
him  by the State Department, which has a policy of avoiding criticism of 
Latin  America’s populist authoritarians. But his glaring lack of familiarity 
with the  nation where he will soon be the top U.S. official was another 
illustration of  the cavalier nature of President Obama’s recent ambassadorial 
appointments. 
All presidents appoint some ambassadors who are not professional diplomats. 
 Most have been harmless; a few have been stellar. Mr. Obama, however, has  
considerably stretched the boundaries of _previous  presidential records_ 
(http://www.afsa.org/ambassadorswbush.aspx) , both in quantity and in 
apparent disregard for  quality. The president promised in 2009 to increase 
professional appointments,  and the State Department said last Friday that it 
aims 
for a 70-30 split between  career and political ambassadors. Yet, so far in 
his second term, _53 percent of Mr.  Obama’s appointments have been 
political_ (http://www.afsa.org/secondterm.aspx) , according to the American 
Foreign 
 Service Association. A third have been fundraisers for his campaigns. 
The bundlers are going not just to London, Brussels and Vienna, where their 
 roles may be largely decorative, but also to countries where relations 
with the  United States are troubled. In addition to Mr. Mamet, Mr. Obama is 
dispatching  fundraiser and soap-opera producer _Colleen Bradley Bell_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/wp/2013/11/07/the-bold-and-the-beau
tiful-on-location-in-budapest/)  to Hungary, a NATO country whose  
government has a disturbing record of undermining democratic institutions. At  
her 
confirmation hearing, Ms. Bell was unable to spell out U.S. interests in  
Budapest other than “to promote business oppportunities, increase trade.” 
Mr. Obama’s new ambassador to Norway, _George Tsunis_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/02/11/a-fix-guide-on-how-not-to-pick-an-ambas
sador/?wprss=rss_congress&clsrd) , raised $1.3 million for the Democratic  
Party in 2012 but didn’t know at the time of his hearing last month that 
Norway  has a king but not a president. 
Ambassadorial appointments for small allies such as Norway or tough 
partners  including Hungary and Argentina matter because their governments 
rarely 
receive  the attention of high-level officials in Washington and yet require 
skilled  diplomacy. It’s no wonder that Argentina, the _third-largest 
economy in Latin America_ 
(http://icma.org/en/international/regions/Country/1013/Argentina)  but a 
perennial  trouble spot, was tended by career diplomats 
under the four presidents who  preceded Mr. Obama. His use of the Buenos Aires 
embassy and so many others as  political plums signals a disregard for U.S. 
foreign interests. 
 
 
 

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